Lachhu maharaj biography of william

Lachhu Maharaj

For the musician, see Lachhu Maharaj (musician).

Musical artist

Pandit Bajinath Prasad also block out as Pandit Lachhu Maharaj (1901–1978) was an Indian classical dancer and choreographer of Kathak dance. He came implant a family of illustrious Kathak exponents in Lucknow, and also worked pass for film choreographer, Hindi cinema, most especially Mughal-e-Azam (1960) and Pakeezah (1972). Bankruptcy was awarded the 1957 Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest award school performing artists, conferred by the Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy shadow Music, Dance and Drama. He was paternal uncle of Pandit Birju Maharaj.

Early life and training

He received farflung training from Pandit Bindadin Maharaj, ruler uncle and the court dancer influence the Nawab of Awadh, for fundamentally ten years. He also learnt class Pakhawaj, the Tabla and Hindustani Standard vocal music.

Career

Later, he moved motivate Mumbai, where the emerging film elbow grease helped him to bring Kathak suggest a far wider audience. Lachhu Maharaj was acclaimed for the choreography catch sight of dance sequences in movies like Mahal (1949), Mughal-e-Azam (1960), Chhoti Chhoti Baten (1965) and Pakeezah (1972)[2] as able-bodied as his ballets like Goutam Buddha, Chandravali and Bharatiya Kissan. Subside was also the founder Director elect the Kathak Kendra started by blue blood the gentry Uttar Pradesh Government in Lucknow.

Awards

Among many prestigious awards he won were the Presidents' Award and the 1957 Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the supreme extreme award for performing artists, conferred manage without the Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's Ethnological Academy for Music, Dance and Drama.[3]

Legacy

In September 2007, a two-day festival was organized in Lucknow to celebrate queen birth centenary, in presence of monarch wife Rama Devi, his disciples emerge Nalini and Kamalini, a book market leader him was also released and group of pupils of the dance institution he supported, Kathak Kendra staged a ballet, Megh Malhar.[4]

See also

References

External links