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The
Topeng Dance
The
most popular afternoon (matinee) entertainment, especially
with the more serious type of men, is the topeng, a masked
play dealing with the exploits of local kings and warriors,
episodes of the wars and intrigues of Balinese history (babad)
. Two or three actors, usually aged men, play all the parts
and impersonate all sorts of characters with great skill,
from the halfwitted servants and petulant prime ministers,
to the heroic kings and cultured young princes. It was like
magic to see an old man transform himself into a graceful
young prince simply by putting on a mask and dancing with
delicacy, only to come out again as a lisping and idiotic
clown.
There
is a curious variety of topeng, the padjegan, played by a
single actor who impersonates all the characters. For this
the usual curtain booth for the actors' changes is erected
at one end of the " stage," while the orchestra
plays at the other end. The actor sits inside'the booth, already
in costume but not yet wearing a mask; there he prays, making
an offering to the characters about to be played. He lights
a stick of incense, dedicates the small offering be has brought
with him, and decapitates a small chicken, spilling the blood
on the ground. The gamelan begins to play. The masks are arranged
in the required order on a basket, each wrapped in a piece
of cloth. The actor takes the first mask, puts it on, still
wrapped, holding it with his teeth by a wooden knob, or a
leather strap, fixed to the back of the mask. Before uncovering
it, he stiffens and seems to go into a sort of trance, "
to enter into the character," making dancing gestures
with his head and hands. Suddenly he tears off the cloth,
gets up, and after dancing for a short while behind the curtain,
makes his appearance. This is done for each character, and
each mask is carefully wrapped and put away after it is used.
This is not for showmanship since it is always done inside
the booth and out of sight of the public.
As the
play develops, the various characters are introduced, starting
with the usual clowns, the servants of the prime ministers
of the kings involved.Only the clowns speak in topeng performances
and they wear half-masks that leave the mouth free, while
the finer characters use pantomime. The absurd clowns are
clumsy, with stiff wild hair and bulbous noses: one is a shy
little man with eyes bulging, who lisps and moves with birdlike
gestures; the other is a coarse character with terrifying
hollow eyes, large holes in his mask, through which the- actor's
own eyes can be seen. He has an unkempt moustache:and a monstrous
-hare-lip. After them appear the refined old men with red
faces and masses of white hair, high-tempered prime ministers,
and young princes with smiling, delicate white features. The
personality of each character is sharply defined, with peculiar
mannerisms expressed in stylized acting and through extremely
realistic masks.
But
the curious part of the performance comes at the close. Children
in the front ranks begin to show alarm and, when the play
is about to end, some get up and leave. The gamelan plays
a special melody and the curtains part again. This time the
pengedjokan appears; be wears the white mask of a grinning
old man with protruding teeth, a mysterious smile, friendly
and terrifying at the same time. He shakes constantly with
laughter and shows a large roll of kepeng, pennies, with which
be tries to lure the children, who all run as if for their
lives. He goes after them, chasing them far into the road,
and if he captures one, carries him back to the dancing-place
and gives the money to his frightened victim. I asked repeatedly
for the significance of this curious character, but I never
received a satisfactory explanation. The pengedjokan's other
names are Djero Dalam Pegek and Djero Dalam Truna (truna:
bachelor), perhaps derived from some authentic character,
a bachelor king of legend who liked children, but frightened
them because of his appearance. To be a bachelor after middle
age is considered abnormal in Bali. The mask is very holy,
or rather has magic power, and no one would dream of selling
it. In general a good set of topeng masks is a treasure, since
only the bests sculptors can make them. Learned Balinese have
a high regard for the top6ng as an art.
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