Current:Home > ContactHow a mother and her daughters created an innovative Indian dance company -Ascend Wealth Education
How a mother and her daughters created an innovative Indian dance company
View
Date:2025-04-18 23:38:52
Ranee Ramaswamy believes her oldest daughter was put upon the planet to dance.
"We all talk about previous births and reincarnation," says Ramaswamy. When it came to her eldest, Aparna Ramaswamy, she had no doubt. "I think she was a dancer in her previous birth, so it was natural to her. From the age of 3 to now, she has never deviated."
So 30 years ago, Ranee founded the Ragamala Dance Company in Minneapolis, partly as a vehicle for her talented daughter. In the decades since, Ragamala has become famous among U.S. fans of India's oldest classical dance form, bharatanatyam. The dance company regularly gets rave reviews for the dancers' technical precision and spiritual transcendence, as well as for innovative collaborations with other artists.
The company is Ranee's life's work — which she now shares with her daughters. Ranee and Aparna are the co-artistic directors, and Aparna's younger sister, Ashwini Ramaswamy, works for the company as dancer, choreographer and communications director. Each woman brings a specific set of talents to the family business. If Aparna is the head of the company and Ranee is its soul, then Ashwini is, perhaps, its heart.
"There is a feeling when I'm with my mother and sister. ... It's intangible — it's a high," says Ashwini Ramaswamy. "When I watch them onstage from the wings, when I'm onstage and I see them watching me from the wings, when we're together on the stage — it's incredible. And I don't know any other way that I would have that feeling if we didn't work together."
The Ramaswamy family practices bharatanatyam, a sacred form of dance designed to evoke a sense of spiritual bliss and that's demanding to perform. It combines precise footwork, hand gestures, facial expressions and even eye moments. What draws this mother-daughter team to this work and keeps them going are their shared values, says older sister Aparna Ramaswamy.
"This deep love for this art form, this deep value of discipline, dedication, excellence and reaching for something that is so much bigger than us," she says.
Being a family makes the dance stronger, Aparna says. But younger sister Ashwini adds that it's not always easy. She points out that her mom and Aparna had a relationship grounded in dance that started before she was even born.
"So I'm kind of fighting against that," she says. "I'm like, 'What can I do that's different than what's already been handed to me?'"
Wrestling with that question is part of the soul of their dancing. It helps, Aparna says, that they're the rare kind of family that can provide each other with honest feedback and take criticism with the security that it's grounded in love.
"And that's a wonderful thing," she says. "Because when you're a creative person or when you're an artist, it can be a very lonely journey. And so the fact that you have built-in companions on that journey is such a gift."
Mother Ranee Ramaswamy recently turned 71, but she says she has no intention of leaving the stage anytime soon.
"The one thing, to have two daughters in the company, is that they will tell me when I should get out, I am confident," she says, laughing. "Because you can't trust others! They'll just tell you, 'Oh, you look good.' But I know I have two people who will tell me, 'Mom, you should stop' — then I will stop."
Until then, mother and daughters will continue to dance together, evoking the divine and urging each other on to greater heights.
veryGood! (584)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Police identify man found dead in Nebraska apartment building chimney
- Buyer be scared: Patrick Stewart sold haunted Los Angeles home without revealing ghosts
- Mom convicted of killing kids in Idaho will be sent to Arizona to face murder conspiracy charges
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- The rise of the four-day school week
- The Masked Singer's Jenny McCarthy Is Totally Unrecognizable in Dumbledore Transformation
- Biden says he 'did not demand' Israel delay ground incursion due to hostages
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Israeli hostage released by Hamas, Yocheved Lifshitz, talks about ordeal, and why she shook her captor's hand
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- The problem with canceling Jon Stewart: Apple bowed to Chinese government censorship
- Jonathan Majors' domestic violence trial gets new date after judge denies motion to dismiss charges
- An increase in harassment against Jewish and Muslim Americans has been reported since Hamas attacks
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Medical school on Cherokee Reservation will soon send doctors to tribal and rural areas
- South Korean scholar acquitted of defaming sexual slavery victims during Japan colonial rule
- Ex-NFL player Sergio Brown, charged with killing mother, has been denied release
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
RHOBH: Kyle Richards & Mauricio Umansky Have Tense Confrontation About Control Prior to Separation
DeSantis is sending some weapons to Israel in move that could bolster him in the GOP primary
NHL rescinds ban on rainbow-colored Pride tape, allowing players to use it on the ice this season
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
The National Museum of Women in the Arts relaunches
Surprised bear attacks security guard inside kitchen of luxury resort in Aspen
NHL rescinds ban on rainbow-colored Pride tape, allowing players to use it on the ice this season