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nautanki : ウィキペディア英語版
nautanki
Nautanki ((ヒンディー語:नौटंकी)) is a famous folk theater and operatic drama form, popular in northern India especially in Uttar Pradesh. Before the advent of cinema in India, it was the most popular form of entertainment prevalent in these areas. Usually a nautanki consisted of folklore and mythological dramas with interludes of folk songs and dances. Now it has taken other forms. In many areas it has been restricted only to female dance shows. Consequently, this art is losing popularity and goodwill among admirers day by day.
== History ==
Nautanki has its origins in the folklore of North India about a princess with incomparable beauty who was so delicate to weigh only as much as a flower. This folklore took the shape of a drama then known as ''sangeets'' (musicals) by the name, ''Nautanki Shehzadi'' ("The Story of Princess Nautanki"), soon it became so popular that the name became that of the genre itself. The word, ''nautanki'', comprises two words, ''nau'' meaning "nine" and ''tank'' referring to a "silver coin weighing four grams", and thus metaphorically implies that the graceful princess weighs only 36 grams (9 X 4 grams).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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