Ramlila

The Performance in Ramnagar

रामलीला

 

   


The Ramlila performances are dramatizations of the Ramayana  and the first Ramnagar Ramlila  occurred sometime in the nineteenth century. Udit Narayan Singh,the  Maharajah of Banaras, usually receives credit for the creation of the Ramlila of Ramnagar. The Maharajah resided in Ramnagar and there are three well-known stories regarding his  participation in the Ramlila formation.

The first tells of his habit of attending a Ramlila in Banaras that was disrupted by a flood of the Ganga. In response, he sponsored a Ramlila closer to home in the village of Chhota Mirzapur that eventually became the Ramnagar Ramlila. The second story revolves around the infant son of the ruler. Legend holds the infant became ill and a garland from the Ramlila in Banaras saved him. In gratitude, Udit Narayan Singh continued patronizing the Ramlila at Chhota Mirzapur until it finally evolved into the Ramnagar Ramlila. The last version of the story has the ruler upset over arriving late to the Ramlila at Chhota Mirzapur. When he returned home to Ramnagar, the Maharani, sensing his displeasure suggested the ruler initiate a performance of the Ramlila in Ramnagar and provided the funds for the endeavor.  Whatever the actual sequence,  Udit Narayan Singh most definitely had a hand in the creation of the Ramlila at Ramnagar.

The Ramlila of Ramnagar lasts for 30-31 days and covers approximately one square mile. Audience members may follow the performers to several different sites during just one day of the performance.  Svarupas, the characters who play Rama, Lakshmana, Bharata, Shatrughna, and Janaki are chosen by the Maharajah through an audition process. The role requires the presence of certain physical characteristics such as height, beauty, age, and voice and only Brahman boys, those belonging to the highest social caste in India, may audition for these roles. Boys as young as eight qualify for the role of Shatrughna and most young men only hold their positions as Svarupas for three to four years in light of the rule that Svarupas must not have any facial hair nor voice changes. Families often inherit certain roles such as Ravana. In 1990, the same family had held the role of Ravana since 1835. In addition, the roles of Hanuman, Jatayu, and Janaka traditionally belong to one Vyasa family and young male children with adequate time allotments play the smaller roles including the Queen roles. Various children fill the roles of the demon and monkey armies each year.

 Ten days before the beginning of the annual performance, the Svarupas and other performance members gather on the roof of a specially built and intentionally located house in the main square of Ramnagar. Thus begins a ten-day worship ritual that includes a full reading of the Ramacharitamanasa. A group of 12 men called by the name of Ramayani and an individual responsible for playing the mridanga (a large double-sided drum) sings a predetermined, specific number of the Ramayana couplets each day. On the tenth day, the Ramayanis will stop their recitation at the 175th couplet and the Ramacharitamanasa reading/singing will begin again the next day, the first day of the Ramlila. The singing continues as a part of the performance, connecting and narrating each of the scenes .

At the beginning of each day’s performance, the  Maharajah appears dressed in royal regalia to a crowd chanting, “Hara Hara, Mahadev” which translates to “Shiva, Shiva, the great God.” The performance then continues on with various dramas occurring each day with as many as 100,000 audience members in attendance on the most popular performance days. When the Ramayanis reach the 51st couplet of the last book of the Ramacharitamanasa, the singing stops, the character representing Narada departs, and the Ramlila performance ends. However, additional couplets remain in the last book. In order to bring an official end to the Ramlila, the Ramayanis begin a self-paced, silent reading of the remaining couplets while the Svarupas reside as guests with the Maharajah. Once the Ramayanis finish the reading, the final arati, a burning of incense and oil lamps in honor of a deity, is held at the site of Ayodhya symbolizing an official end to the performance.


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Revised: 05 Dec 2007 16:52:27 -0600