Explore Sri Lanka
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • What’s On
  • What’s On April 2024
  • What’s On August 2024
  • What’s On December
  • What’s On July 2024
  • What’s On June 2024
  • What’s On March 2024
  • What’s On May 2024
  • What’s On October 2024
  • What’s On September 2024
  • Home
  • Issues
    • 1983 - 1990
      • 1987
        • May 1987
        • June 1987
        • July 1987
        • August 1987
        • September 1987
        • October 1987
        • November 1987
        • December 1987
      • 1988
        • January 1988
        • February 1988
        • March 1988
        • April 1988
        • May 1988
        • June 1988
        • July 1988
        • August 1988
        • September 1988
        • October 1988
        • November 1988
        • December 1988
      • 1989
        • January - March 1989
        • April 1989
        • May 1989
        • June 1989
        • July 1989
        • August 1989
        • September 1989
        • October 1989
        • November 1989
    • 2010 - 2019
      • 2010
        • January 2010
        • February 2010
        • March 2010
        • April 2010
        • May 2010
        • June 2010
        • July 2010
        • August 2010
        • September 2010
        • October 2010
        • November 2010
        • December 2010
      • 2011
        • January 2011
        • February 2011
        • March 2011
        • April 2011
        • May 2011
        • June 2011
        • July 2011
        • August 2011
        • September 2011
        • October 2011
        • November 2011
        • December 2011
      • 2012
        • January 2012
        • February 2012
        • March 2012
        • April 2012
        • May 2012
        • June 2012
        • July 2012
        • August 2012
        • September 2012
        • October 2012
        • November 2012
        • December 2012
      • 2013
        • January 2013
        • February 2013
        • March 2013
        • April 2013
        • May 2013
        • June 2013
        • July 2013
        • August 2013
        • September 2013
        • October 2013
        • November 2013
        • December 2013
      • 2014
        • January 2014
        • February 2014
        • March 2014
        • April 2014
        • May 2014
        • June 2014
        • July 2014
        • August 2014
        • September 2014
        • October 2014
        • November 2014
        • December 2014
      • 2015
        • January 2015
        • February 2015
        • March 2015
        • April 2015
        • May 2015
        • June 2015
        • July 2015
        • August 2015
        • September 2015
        • October 2015
        • November 2015
        • December 2015
      • 2016
        • January 2016
        • February 2016
        • March 2016
        • April 2016
        • May 2016
        • June 2016
        • July 2016
        • August 2016
        • September 2016
        • October 2016
        • November 2016
        • December 2016
      • 2017
        • January 2017
        • February 2017
        • March 2017
        • April 2017
        • May 2017
        • June 2017
        • July 2017
        • August 2017
        • September 2017
        • October 2017
        • November 2017
        • December 2017
      • 2018
        • January 2018
        • February 2018
        • March 2018
        • April 2018
        • May 2018
        • June 2018
        • July 2018
        • August 2018
        • September 2018
        • October 2018
        • November 2018
        • December 2018
      • 2019
        • January 2019
        • February 2019
        • March 2019
        • April 2019
        • May 2019
        • June 2019
        • July 2019
        • August 2019
        • September 2019
        • October 2019
        • November 2019
        • December 2019
    • 2020 - 2024
      • 2020
        • January 2020
        • February 2020
        • March 2020
        • September 2020
        • October 2020
        • November 2020
        • December 2020
      • 2021
        • January 2021
        • February 2021
        • March 2021
        • April 2021
        • May 2021
        • June 2021
        • July 2021
        • August 2021
        • September 2021
        • October 2021
        • November 2021
        • December 2021
      • 2022
        • January 2022
        • February 2022
        • March 2022
        • May 2022
        • April 2022
        • June 2022
        • July 2022
        • August 2022
        • September 2022
        • October 2022
        • November 2022
        • December 2022
      • 2023
        • January 2023
        • February 2023
        • March 2023
        • April 2023
        • May 2023
        • June 2023
        • July 2023
        • August 2023
        • September 2023
        • October 2023
        • November 2023
        • December 2023
      • 2024
        • January 2024
        • February 2024
        • March 2024
        • May 2024
        • April 2024
        • June 2024
        • July 2024
        • August 2024
        • September 2024
        • October 2024
        • November 2024
        • December 2024
    • 2025-2029
      • 2025
        • January 2025
        • February 2025
        • March 2025
        • April 2025
        • May 2025
  • For Digital Subscription
  • About Us
  • What’s On
    slide
No Result
View All Result
Explore Sri Lanka
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Issues
    • 1983 - 1990
      • 1987
        • May 1987
        • June 1987
        • July 1987
        • August 1987
        • September 1987
        • October 1987
        • November 1987
        • December 1987
      • 1988
        • January 1988
        • February 1988
        • March 1988
        • April 1988
        • May 1988
        • June 1988
        • July 1988
        • August 1988
        • September 1988
        • October 1988
        • November 1988
        • December 1988
      • 1989
        • January - March 1989
        • April 1989
        • May 1989
        • June 1989
        • July 1989
        • August 1989
        • September 1989
        • October 1989
        • November 1989
    • 2010 - 2019
      • 2010
        • January 2010
        • February 2010
        • March 2010
        • April 2010
        • May 2010
        • June 2010
        • July 2010
        • August 2010
        • September 2010
        • October 2010
        • November 2010
        • December 2010
      • 2011
        • January 2011
        • February 2011
        • March 2011
        • April 2011
        • May 2011
        • June 2011
        • July 2011
        • August 2011
        • September 2011
        • October 2011
        • November 2011
        • December 2011
      • 2012
        • January 2012
        • February 2012
        • March 2012
        • April 2012
        • May 2012
        • June 2012
        • July 2012
        • August 2012
        • September 2012
        • October 2012
        • November 2012
        • December 2012
      • 2013
        • January 2013
        • February 2013
        • March 2013
        • April 2013
        • May 2013
        • June 2013
        • July 2013
        • August 2013
        • September 2013
        • October 2013
        • November 2013
        • December 2013
      • 2014
        • January 2014
        • February 2014
        • March 2014
        • April 2014
        • May 2014
        • June 2014
        • July 2014
        • August 2014
        • September 2014
        • October 2014
        • November 2014
        • December 2014
      • 2015
        • January 2015
        • February 2015
        • March 2015
        • April 2015
        • May 2015
        • June 2015
        • July 2015
        • August 2015
        • September 2015
        • October 2015
        • November 2015
        • December 2015
      • 2016
        • January 2016
        • February 2016
        • March 2016
        • April 2016
        • May 2016
        • June 2016
        • July 2016
        • August 2016
        • September 2016
        • October 2016
        • November 2016
        • December 2016
      • 2017
        • January 2017
        • February 2017
        • March 2017
        • April 2017
        • May 2017
        • June 2017
        • July 2017
        • August 2017
        • September 2017
        • October 2017
        • November 2017
        • December 2017
      • 2018
        • January 2018
        • February 2018
        • March 2018
        • April 2018
        • May 2018
        • June 2018
        • July 2018
        • August 2018
        • September 2018
        • October 2018
        • November 2018
        • December 2018
      • 2019
        • January 2019
        • February 2019
        • March 2019
        • April 2019
        • May 2019
        • June 2019
        • July 2019
        • August 2019
        • September 2019
        • October 2019
        • November 2019
        • December 2019
    • 2020 - 2024
      • 2020
        • January 2020
        • February 2020
        • March 2020
        • September 2020
        • October 2020
        • November 2020
        • December 2020
      • 2021
        • January 2021
        • February 2021
        • March 2021
        • April 2021
        • May 2021
        • June 2021
        • July 2021
        • August 2021
        • September 2021
        • October 2021
        • November 2021
        • December 2021
      • 2022
        • January 2022
        • February 2022
        • March 2022
        • May 2022
        • April 2022
        • June 2022
        • July 2022
        • August 2022
        • September 2022
        • October 2022
        • November 2022
        • December 2022
      • 2023
        • January 2023
        • February 2023
        • March 2023
        • April 2023
        • May 2023
        • June 2023
        • July 2023
        • August 2023
        • September 2023
        • October 2023
        • November 2023
        • December 2023
      • 2024
        • January 2024
        • February 2024
        • March 2024
        • May 2024
        • April 2024
        • June 2024
        • July 2024
        • August 2024
        • September 2024
        • October 2024
        • November 2024
        • December 2024
    • 2025-2029
      • 2025
        • January 2025
        • February 2025
        • March 2025
        • April 2025
        • May 2025
  • For Digital Subscription
  • About Us
  • What’s On
Home February 2023

The Colombo Cultural Show: A Soiree into Sri Lanka’s Heart

by
0
363
SHARES
2.8k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
PDF Button

As the rays of dusk slowly seeped into the waning day, the glow of flaming torches illuminated the ground under the shelter of the banyan tree. The warmth from the flambeaux evoked charm and nostalgia. Then a spectacular cultural cavalcade of Sri Lanka’s finest dances unfolded to the sound of drums and cymbals. The Colombo Cultural Show was brought back to life and made its fresh debut to an enthusiastic audience’s applause.

Words Jennifer Paldano Goonewardane.

Gini Sisila (Fire Dance).

It was an evening of color. A place where culture fused into nature’s magnificence. Of many sounds and voices. Of movements. Of folk dance and music. Of costumes, exaggerated and flamboyant, shining torsos, ostentatious skirts, necklaces and bangles, and burnished headgear. Men were twisting and turning firesticks, running them against their bodies, consuming them, and performing rhythmically to the sound of drums. Bejeweled women and men in glitzy crowns performed the famed purification ritual of the “Ves” dance of the Kandyan tradition. The rib-tickling performances of the masked dancers with their constant hip movements gave rise to the ceaseless chatter from jingling anklets. Men danced gloriously. There was passion in every action, women and men dancing in ritualistic piety, the mirthful “kolam” dancers teasing the audiences with their humor. The foreground to this evening of theatrics was adorned with décor made from tender coconut palms with lamps adding to the solemn yet strident evening of celebrating Sri Lanka’s culture through the Colombo Cultural Show.

The Colombo Cultural Show is a magnificent pronouncement of Sri Lanka’s readiness to welcome visitors to whom the island has myriad surprises waiting to be explored and discovered.

The debutant show in an arena by the banyan tree was more than a show-stopper. It was an all-consummate expression and demonstration of native lives to fruitfulness. To the novice who desires to savor the richness of this tropical island famously known as Sri Lanka, dance is an expression of who we are. Dance, as a physical manifestation of Sri Lanka’s culture, is what its people offer the world in a more dramatized, stylized, and schematized form. Our dances provide a window to the bond between dance and culture, of the essential mutuality between the two, rhythmic masteries, and shifts of the body aligning with culture as a ritualistic performance, preserved for posterity and merged to their life activities on varying levels.

The Colombo Cultural Show is a delightful hour of entertainment every Wednesday at six-fifteen in the evening in Colombo, where ten recitals from the three dance genres of low, up-country, and Sabaragamuwa are performed by a troupe of 15 dancers who provide the audiences with an authentic and opulent aesthetic fair.

The Colombo Cultural Show transcends the mundane, elevated to a spiritual realm by a group of artists passionate about their work, with a deep understanding of the significance of every act beyond its conceptual level to influence the practical domain of human existence. From delivering folk songs to a final pulsating drum orchestra, the show was a tapestry of vivacious recitals. The harvesting dance through the Goyam Natuma to the comical shawl dance (Salu Paliya), the dancer engaging with the audience in humorous action while waving the shawl around the shoulder through the air dancing to the beat of drums was an animated recital. The drama-packed “Yakun Natima” or devil dance ritual, a kind of liberation from malefic forces, is a well-known and often conducted ceremonial performance from the lengthy Shanthi Karma ritual practiced in villages to bring healing to the individual and to the community.

The Colombo Cultural Show is a beautiful distraction and a delightful evening of entertainment that every visitor should watch. They could get a grandiose foretaste of Sri Lanka’s culture…

The dedicated team behind the Colombo Cultural Show is led by Kishan De Silva, Managing Director/ CEO, Transcend Drive, Sudeshika De Silva, Director, and Ranjan Josiah, Head of Operations and Administration, Transcend Drive. They decided to break the post-pandemic lull and embark on a new journey to showcase Sri Lanka’s immense wealth of dance forms, a window into the cultural heritage of its people through a dedicated cultural show in Colombo.

The Colombo Cultural Show is a magnificent pronouncement of Sri Lanka’s readiness to welcome visitors to whom the island has myriad sur- prises waiting to be explored and discovered. The trio is banking on the fact that people travel to experience many things, with history, culture, and cuisine on top of their lists. The new gig, they hope, will become an animated and jocund way to titillate the senses of the travel buff and spur the curiosity to not just learn more about the country but they will take back fond memories. That would encourage more people to visit Sri Lanka as an exceptionally vibrant destination worth exploring. The Colombo Cultural Show is a beautiful distraction and a delightful evening of entertainment that every visitor should watch. They could get a grandiose foretaste of Sri Lanka’s culture and then embark into the island’s heart to experience more visual glamour entrenched in paddy fields, cascading waterfalls, tea gardens, perpetual mountains, and the dwellings of the natives.

Soon the weekly cultural show will extend to twice a week with the organic growth of this initiative. Kishan and his team plan to have more shows a week eventually. As they focus on continuing the show, the team at Transcend Drive is positive and hopeful as they have invested time and resources to ensure that the best performers play their part dedicatedly and let the show do the talking. Accompanying their upbeat sentiment is the support they hope to receive from the travel and tourism industry in the private and public sectors. They seek more players on board to help promote this revived initiative sponsored solely by the company to make it a sustainable program that they hope would become a visitor’s itinerary staple in time to come.

Watching the artists perform the different recitals, one realizes that there are no superstars in the show but passionate dancers committed to giving a once-in-a-lifetime experience coupled with the hospitality the country is known for. The initiative is also a bold step in sustaining Sri Lanka’s diverse dance forms. While it’s an opportunity to provide local artists an avenue to showcase the art they are conversant in, as Sri Lankans, we’re also committed to their longevity, said Kishan. From women and men aged 17 to 40, selected solely for their passion for art and commitment to preserving it for posterity, the process was painstaking, the show meticulously practiced and organized. The debutant show was more than an ode to Sri Lankan culture and antiquity. Under the shade of the banyan tree, the performers spoke to their audiences skillfully swaying, singing, and drumming and displayed their prowess as the torchbearers of our culture’s endurance.

It was an enthralling evening that cast a spell on everyone present. The sound of drums stirred the celebration of symbiotically stylistic movements and lyrical and rhythmic whirling of bodies that narrated bits and pieces of people’s lifestyles and shed light on the indigenous psyche. Drums and dances harmoniously demonstrated the celebration of life’s moments. The literal song and dance that natives put on at the beginning of an activity, how they use dance rituals to bless and subdue maleficence and heal and rejuvenate. They depict people at work and make belief affirmations. That evening of dance unfolded a dynamic spectacle – colorful, interactive, funny, and sacred.

Colombo Cultural Show

Nuga Sevana Cathedral Premises 368/3A, Bauddhaloka Mawatha Colombo 07;

(+94) 715 215 215

Wednesdays from 6.15pm onwards

info@colomboculturalshow.com

colomboculturalshow.com

Kandyan Ves – Kandyan dance from the hill capital.
Naga gurulu.
Pandam Paliya (Mask dance).
Rabana (Raban dance).
Goyam Natuma (Harvest dance)
Salu Paliya (comical shawl dance).
Thelme dance (Low country traditional dance).
Pooja natuma (Traditional welcome dance).
Tags: cultural showCulturedanceEventfeaturedgeneralLeisuremusicTradition
Previous Post

Kandy Central Market: The epitome of local ambiance

Next Post

A Walk Down Cobblers’ Street

Next Post
A Walk Down Cobblers’ Street

A Walk Down Cobblers' Street

No Result
View All Result

Categories

exlpore-sri-lanka-logo

Location

20-2/1 Lauries Place Facing R A de Mel Mawatha Colombo 04.

Contact

(+94) 715 134 134

Email

info@btoptions.com

© 2023 BT Options. All Rights Reserved.