Mollywood actor cum Bharatanatyam dancer Paris Laxmi, who
is from France, talks about her short film on Mother Earth and reflects on the
changes in Kerala and Indian society
Pics: Paris Laxmi in a still from the film; with her husband Pallippuram Sunil
By Shevlin Sebastian
When the Kerala-based actor/dancer Paris Laxmi went to
Dubai in January for a show, during her spare time, she roamed around the
Global Village. In a shop, she came across an Afghan tribal necklace. It had a
length of 6 inches and a width of 9 inches. There were many enamel stones and
beads, in German silver, with coins hanging in a straight line at the bottom.
“It was expensive, but I could not resist it,” she says.
Little did she know that when she would make a five-minute
film called Mother Earth a few months later, (available on YouTube) she would
be wearing this eye-catching necklace.
The film opens with images of Laxmi’s fingers, as she
caresses leaves, fruits, flowers, plants, the stem of a banana plant and the
bark of a tree. The soundtrack is Mollywood composer Rahul Raj’s instrumental
composition, ‘Celestium’. A Mahatma Gandhi quote appears: ‘The Earth provides
enough to satisfy every man’s needs, but not every man’s greed.’
When her full figure appears, Laxmi is clad in a blouse
with long sleeves and a blue skirt. And she had a reason to choose this colour.
“People have said that the Earth looks blue from space,” she says.
As she dances, with a tranquil look on her face, swivelling
around, leaning sideways, running forward, in a green area, smoke emerges and
the forest breaks out into a fire. People rush forward and garland her. But
these are unusual garlands.
It is a mix of plastic bottles, toothpaste, biscuit
packets, toothbrushes, soap covers, wires, and clips. “These are not recyclable,”
says Laxmi. “One of my students Gayathri made it.” Later, men and women throw
bundles of plastic packets and bottles at her face. She runs away and
collapses. Then she screams. Soon, a boy and a girl clad in resplendent white
come and kiss her on the forehead.
“Youngsters are the ones to take mankind in a different
direction,” she says.
Laxmi is worried about the future. “The planet is like our
mother,” she says. “But we don’t realise how much harm we are doing to her. We
have to change our ways. I wanted to personify her so I could show her dismay
at the way the planet is being polluted by her children.”
People are too self-absorbed and don’t realise the damage
they are doing. “But now Mother Nature has started to destroy us,” says Laxmi.
“She only way for her to survive is to get rid of human beings. So, that’s why
there is global warming and climate change.”
Laxmi says that governments should do something radical.
“We could have four days a month when we do nothing,” says Laxmi. “That will
enable the earth to heal as it has happened during the coronavirus pandemic. We
need many novel ideas.”
Laxmi stays at Vaikom with her husband, the Kathakali
dancer Pallippuram Sunil. They have been married for eight years and run the
Kalashakti School of Arts. Amazingly, Laxmi met Sunil for the first time when
she was only seven years old and he was 21. Sunil performed at a theatre in Fort Kochi. Laxmi had come
on a holiday in 1998 with her parents, Yves, a stage artist and poet, mother
Patricia, a sculptor, and brother Theo Narayan from Aix-En-Provence in France.
“Sunil’s dancing amazed me,” says Laxmi, who trained later to become a
Bharatnatyam artist. “When we met the performers, I liked Sunil the most. He
seemed kind and calm. I always remember that performance.”
She met him again when she was 16 years old and fell in
love. Eventually, the marriage took place on September 14, 2012. A few months
before, Laxmi converted to Hinduism through a Vedic puja, conducted by the Arya
Samaj, at Vaikom.
Asked how India and Kerala have changed over the decades,
Laxmi says, “People have become materialistic. They have more money. Earlier,
in North India, there were so many cycles and cycle rickshaws on the roads.
Later, the Bajaj and Vespa scooter replaced the cycles. And the car was the
Ambassador. Those who had a car were considered wealthy. Now there are so many
cars. In some families, they have two cars.”
In Kerala, she would see girls wearing a half-saree. But
now nobody wears that now. Most wear Western clothes and salwar kameez. She
would enjoy seeing girls going to school wearing their hair in plaits and
coloured ribbons. Now that has also gone out of fashion.
She says Malayalis, as well as Indians are travelling
abroad a lot more than in the past. “They have imbibed a global culture,” says
Laxmi. “Thanks to the Internet, everybody can access unique aspects of the
world.”
At her home, because of the pandemic, Laxmi is learning the
techniques of scriptwriting. She knows how to speak Malayalam, so she has been
able to act in a few Mollywood films. These include ‘Big B’, ‘Bangalore Days’,
‘Salt Mango Tree’, ‘Olappeeppi’ and ‘Tiyaan’.
Like all artists worldwide, the pandemic has hit them hard.
“Without stage performances, we artists cannot earn a living,” she says. “I am
hoping the situation will stabilise in a few months.”
(Published in The Kochi Post)
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