Oba Thaung
Oba Thaung (Burmese: ဩဘာသောင်း; born Thaung Tin, 11 April 1898 – 13 January 1971) was an eminent Burmese anyeint dancer and singer, who is credited for codifying the previously undocumented Burmese dance repertory.[1]
Oba Thaung | |
---|---|
ဩဘာသောင်း | |
Burmese Dancer Oba Thaung | |
Born | Thaung Tin April 11, 1898 Pazundaung Township, Rangoon, British Burma |
Died | January 13, 1971 72) | (aged
Nationality | Myanmar |
Known for | Kabya Lut Aka (Dance without Verse) |
Spouse(s) | Htun Wai ( m. 1936–1941) |
Awards | Wunna Kyawhtin |
She started her dancing career since she was fourteen and had had twenty four years of experiences. In 1953, the State School of Fine Arts was open in Mandalay and Oba Thaung served as first dance instructor for female students. There, she codified 125 steps of the traditional Burmese choreography, literally named Kabya Lut Aka (ကဗျာလွတ်အက; Dance without Verse), which consists of five dance courses intended as a five-year term of study. Each of the five courses is broken into 25 dance sequences comprising a total of 125 stages, with each stage of precisely ten minutes.[2]
She was awarded the title Wunna Kyawhtin, the highest honor given to an artist by the Burmese government.
See also
Further reading
- Oba Thaung: Who Systematized Myanma Dance, Zaw Pale and Khin Win New, (translated to English by Than Tun, 1995)
References
- Ludu Daw Amar (1973). Anyeint. Ludu Kyi-bwa-yay Press. p. 69.
- "Training Exercises in Classical Myanmar Dance". Retrieved 2016-03-15.