Oopali Operajita

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Oopalee Operajita
Oopali Operajita (cropped).png
Born
EducationCarnegie Mellon University, Dalhousie University, Delhi University, Rishi Valley School
OccupationDistinguished Fellow, Carnegie Mellon University (appointed by President Richard Cyert;

Adviser, International Relations, Public Policy, Communications;

Classical Odissi and Bharatanatyam Dancer and Choreographer
Parent(s)Bidhu Bhusan Das
Prabhat Nalini Das
RelativesSarala Devi (paternal great aunt)
Nityanand Kanungo (great uncle)
AwardsList of awards
Websitehttp://www.cicerotransnational.com

Oopalee Operajita (also spelt Oopali Operajita) is a Distinguished Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University,[1][2][3][4] a senior advisor to world leaders on Public policy, communication and International relations,[5] polymath and a virtuoso classical Odissi and Bharatanatyam dancer[6] and choreographer. She was trained intensively by Guru Kelucharan Mohapatra in Odissi and by S Meenakshi and B. Ram Gopal in Bharatanatyam.[7][8] She is Chair and Founder of The Al Gore Sustainable Technology Venture Competition, founded in 2006, which brings new, clean and sustainable technologies to market through entrepreneurship, to combat climate change and fortify energy security.[9]

Education[]

Operajita went to Rishi Valley School at age six, and studied there for nine years, graduating with the GCE 'O' levels (Indian School Certificate) from the University of Cambridge. At Rishi Valley School, she studied Bharatanatyam of the rigorous Pandanallur style - playing lead roles in dance dramas staged under Rishi Valley's Banyan Tree for its founder, Jiddu Krishnamurti, whose favourite classical dancer she was.[10]

She received her higher education at Carnegie Mellon University, USA; Dalhousie University, Canada (where she was a Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Fellow); Delhi University; and Utkal University. At Dalhousie University, she wrote her dissertation on Lawrence Durrell's Alexandria Quartet.

Family[]

Operajita belongs to a prominent political, intellectual and aristocratic family from India, and is the daughter of Indian public intellectuals, educators and Vice Chancellors, Professor Bidhu Bhusan Das and Professor Prabhat Nalini Das.

She is a granddaughter of Rai Bahadur Durga Charan Das of the Indian Administrative Service, IAS, and poet Nirmala Devi, who belonged to a well known Zamindari (aristocratic) family. Nirmala Devi's father, Basudev Kanungo, held the title of Dewan, and was renowned for his philanthropy.

Her maternal grandparents are Krushna Priya Devi and Professor Radha Krushna Das, who was head of department and professor of Physics at Ravenshaw University and a classmate and friend of Satyendranath Bose. They belonged to a Zamindari family from Puri district in Odisha.

Her paternal great aunt is freedom fighter and feminist Sarala Devi, a colleague and friend of Mahatma Gandhi, the first woman Member of the Odisha Legislative Assembly as well as its first woman Speaker. Her great uncle, Nityanand Kanungo, was a member of the first post Independence cabinet of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and successive Nehru cabinets. He was also appointed governor of the provinces of Gujarat and Bihar by Nehru.

Operajita is a goddaughter of actress Leela Naidu and her husband, the writer Dom Moraes. Naidu met Operajita in Rishi Valley when she was ten, and requested her parents to let her be her godmother.[7]

Career[]

Operajita has been a Distinguished Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University where she was appointed by its President Dr Richard Cyert.[9][7] She is a Senior Adviser on International Affairs, Public Policy and Communication to several of India's senior leaders in the Lok Sabha in the Parliament of India.[5]

Oopalee Operajita is Chair and Founder of Asia's first Sustainable Technology Venture Competition, since 2007, The Al Gore Sustainable Technology Venture Competition, which brings new, clean and sustainable technologies to market through entrepreneurship, to fight climate change, enhance sustainability, and fortify energy security on the planet. The competition is held every year and draws teams from Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs).[9][11][4][3]

Dance[]

Odissi[]

A leading disciple of Odissi Guru Padma Vibhushan Kelucharan Mohapatra, and Guru Deba Prasad Das,[12] Operajita has performed[13] worldwide and has been called "the best Odissi interpreter" by dance critic P V Subramaniam (Subbudu) of The Statesman. When Mohapatra returned to the performing stage, after a hiatus of twenty years, in the dance drama "Konarka", he cast Operajita to play the female lead opposite him. Operajita studied Odissi for twelve consecutive years with Mohapatra. Earlier, she trained under Guru Deba Prasad Das for five years; and Guru Pankaj Charan Das for two years. Her innovative choreographic pieces for Odissi have been set to music since 1979 by vocalist Pandit Chhannulal Mishra of Varanasi. A winner of many international and national awards for dance, Operajita is also a critic and scholar of the arts.[8]

Operajita belongs to the school of Aesthetics and Art Criticism of Arthur Danto, Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University and art critic for The Nation. She is the first classical Indian artist to have performed at the Carnegie Music Hall in Pittsburgh. Operajita was invited by the Ministry of External Affairs (India), and the Office of the Prime Minister of India, to choreograph the Rashtrapati Bhavan concert for President Barack Obama in 2010.[14]

Bharatanatyam[]

Operajita started learning Bharatanatyam, at age six, in the grand Pandanallur style at Rishi Valley School from Guru S. Meenakshi and studied it for nine continuous years. In the early 1980s, she took master lessons in London from B. Ram Gopal who taught her guru, S. Meenakshi. Operajita and her dance partner are the most prominent of Rishi Valley's dancers.

As a professional classical dancer, she was always cast in the lead role of the dance dramas in Sanskrit, Telugu and Tamil staged each year under the school's banyan tree for its founder, Jiddu Krishnamurti. The music for these productions was composed by Veena G Visalakshi, a disciple of Vizianagaram Venkataramana Das, and the text was chosen or composed by Pandit Chundi Hanumantharao. Operajita studied the veena for seven years and Carnatic vocal music for nine years with Visalakshi.[15] Operajita was invited by Rishi Valley to choreograph a dance drama for the school. She produced an episode from Kalidasa's Kumarasambhavam for which the original score had been composed exclusively for her by Pandit Chhannulal Mishra of Varanasi, thereby resuscitating the Rishi Valley dance tradition which had lain dormant for decades.

Author, translator and columnist[]

Together with her parents, Operajita has translated Odia author, Gopinath Mohanty's award-winning novel, Amrutara santana, widely regarded as his magnum opus[citation needed], into English - the translation is called, Amrutara Santana: The Dynasty of The Immortals. It has been published by the Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi, the Indian Government's official, apex literary body, in 2016. Operajita is a columnist who writes Op-ed pieces for major Indian newspapers and magazines such as The Economic Times, The Indian Express, The Times of India and India Today.[16][1][17] Operajita was invited to read excerpts from the translation of Amrutara Santana at the Jaipur Literature Festival, 2017, in a session she shared with actress-author Nandana Sen.[18] [19] [20]

Awards and nominations[]

  • Canada Council Arts Award[8]
  • Senior Performing Arts Fellowship, Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute[8]
  • Nominated for a Harry Schwalb Award for Excellence in the Arts from Pittsburgh Magazine[8]
  • Nominated for an Outstanding Established Artist Award from the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust[8]
  • Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Fellowship
  • National Science Talent Scholar
  • National Scholar
  • Chancellor's Prize Winner for Debating
  • Selected to represent India at the English Speaking Union of the Commonwealth
  • Singar Mani from Sur Singar Samsad
  • Swami Haridas Award from Sur Singar Samsad
  • 'A' Grade Top Ranked Artist of Doordarshan, National Television, 1990
  • Empanelled Ranking Artist of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, 1992
  • Top-ranked Young Artist of the National Sangeet Natak Akademi, 1982, nominated by Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay
  • Special Award for performing at the Diamond Jubilee of the Prayag Sangeet Samiti, Allahabad
  • Voted one of the top 10 classical dance performances at the Rangos Ballroom, Carnegie Mellon University, by the Pittsburgh Post Gazette, 1996[21]
  • The first classical Indian artiste to perform at the Carnegie Music Hall, Pittsburgh

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "The new India demands that the not-so-veiled Eurocentrism and American-centrism undergo rigorous scrutiny". economictimes.com. Jul 9, 2021. Retrieved 3 Aug 2021.
  2. ^ "Oopalee Operajita". economictimes.com.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "The Al Gore Sustainable Technology Venture Competition India". cicerotransnational.com. Prof. Oopali Operajita ... Former Distinguished Faculty Fellow
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "IIM Bangalore-IIT Bombay team win first prize at Al Gore Sustainable Technology Venture Competition 2009". www.iimb.ac.in. Retrieved 2 Aug 2021. ...a former Distinguished Faculty Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Concern over healthcare". newindianexpress.com. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  6. ^ Staff Reporter (2010-01-14). "American band to feature in Saarang". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c Gupta, Namita (16 October 2016). "Sari tales from Benaras". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Dance as Fluid Sculpture: The Example of Odissi". nypl.org. New York Public Library. 4 November 2006. Retrieved 3 Aug 2021.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c University, Carnegie Mellon (30 April 2010). "Operajita (MAPW'95) Works for Global Sustainability - Department of English - Carnegie Mellon University". Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  10. ^ Balasundaram. S (2012). Non - Guru Guru. (1st ed.). 57, Taormina Lane, Ojai, California: Edwin House Publishing, Inc. ISBN 978-0-9760006-3-1.
  11. ^ "Green campus: IIT-Madras students show the way!". news18.com. 26 September 2011. Archived from the original on 28 June 2021.
  12. ^ ALKA PANDE (2003-05-04). "New Delhi". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 2013-01-25. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  13. ^ "Woods talk and rock". The Hindu. 2010-01-18. ISSN 0971-751X. Archived from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  14. ^ "Oopali Operajita (MAPW '95) Plays Key Role in India's Concert for President Obama". Carnegie Mellon University. 9 December 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  15. ^ Balasundaram 2012, p. 77.
  16. ^ Mohanty, Gopinath. Amrutara Santana: The Dynasty of The Immortals. Translated by Bidhubhusan Das, Prabhat Nalini Das and Oopali Operajita, Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi 2015. ISBN 978-81-260-4746-8
  17. ^ Choudhury, Chandrahas (2016-10-07). "Book review: The Dynasty Of The Immortals by Gopinath Mohanty". www.livemint.com. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  18. ^ https://changingtimes.media/2017/01/28/mesmerising-poets-harrowing-stories-and-heated-debate-jaipur-festival-sends-sparks-flying/
  19. ^ https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/central-vista-project-critics-fact-check-anish-kapoor-covid-crisis-7355169/
  20. ^ https://www.dailyo.in/variety/covid-19-coronavirus-in-india-covid-second-wave-western-media-pm-modi/story/1/34595.html
  21. ^ Bagmi Das (13 November 2006). "Odissi by Operajita". The Tartan (Carnegie Mellon University). Retrieved 4 September 2021.

External links[]

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