Photography: Fayyaz Ahmed | Hair & makeup: Mizka’s Studio | Coordination: Madeeha Syed
They say you should dance like no one’s watching. But in Pakistan, if you do decide to go down this road and pursue dance as an art form, the one thing you will always get is a lot of attention — and often not the most positive kind. Exposed mostly to racy Bollywood numbers designed to give cheap thrills, the common person’s association to dance is just that — sleazy entertainment. And that those associated with it, especially women, are not the ‘right’ type.
It takes nerves of steel to push through all of the pressure and judgements and pursue the art form you feel you were born to do. Dancer and actress Suhaee Abro has been dancing since she was barely seven years old. She performed on her first stage when she was eight.
Going on stage and opening yourself up to people must have been a very intimidating prospect. “Initially it was really hard,” she says. “I would want to cry. I was dancing with Sheema [Kermani] Ji and if she said you have to perform, then you had to perform.” At that tiny age, she would wear her yellow Bharatnatyam costume and a bright red lipstick and proceed to do her piece. “Sheema Ji would be standing on the side saying ‘Suhaee muskurao!’ [Suhaee smile!] and I would have a fake smile on my face.”
“But eventually I realised that this moment was special, of giving the audience something personal, a piece of yourself,” added Suhaee. “With time, I started to enjoy that a lot. Now the stage is my favourite place. I love performing. Till today, I get nervous when I’m about to perform but I often talk to myself. I look into my eyes in the mirror and tell myself that the audience is there for you. It’s all about trust. I have to trust you guys, and myself, and be honest.”
The young dancer opens up about overcoming discrimination and a neurological disorder. Through it all, the one thing she never stopped doing was dancing
She has recently returned from an almost one year haitus that she spent learning dance in Torino, Italy at the Nuova Officina Della Danza. One of the first things she did was use her recently acquired education in building a self-choreographed performance called Goonj [Echo], the first part of which was held at the Arts Council. She was supposed to perform in Lahore the following weekend but a death in the family prevented her from doing so. Suhaee performed Goonj again at T2F earlier this year. Unlike her show at the Arts Council which was free and open to the public, this was a ticketed event.
“It was very different,” says Suhaee about her performance. “I don’t think anyone has seen me dance this way.” She did mostly interpretive dance, throwing caution to the wind and incorporating movements that were otherwise considered racy or vulgar by other people, if only to prove one point: they are not.
And between pieces she would talk to the audience. “I decided to speak about personal things because in an audience of hundreds of people it would help them connect and be aware of their emotions,” she said. “I felt this was important because people don’t speak about their stories.
“I spoke about the feeling of being in love and not caring that I’m not married,” Suhaee adds. “My parents were watching this show. I don’t care what people say. It’s a natural feeling and had a huge impact on my life.
“My point was for ordinary people to ‘feel’ it,” she says. “For me, that was a big thing because it was really contemporary. No beautiful costumes or hair and make-up, nothing like that. It was interpretative.”
It wasn’t just emotions experienced by most people and not talked about openly by Pakistani society in general that the artist touched upon. “I also made a piece about my epilepsy,” she relates. “These are things people don’t want to hear about. I’ve been at shoots and people have told me ‘Aap pey jinn charrh jata hai.’ [You have been possessed.] Or a well-known director said to me, “Don’t you pray to Allah?” It’s got nothing to do with that.” The ignorance and the stigma surrounding a physical condition that she has no control over was not only surprising but discouraging as well.