On a recent bright, cold morning, dancer Aparna Ramaswamy stepped into her company's airy studio on Lake Street in south Minneapolis. As she rehearsed "They Rose at Dawn," her most important solo show to date, she filled the room with power and energy.
Her face had the serenity of Mona Lisa, while her feet, decked with ankle bells, laid down a volley of stomps. Her mother, accompanying her on percussion, struggled to keep up. "Aparna keeps going faster and faster," Ranee Ramaswamy said.
Chalk it up to confidence and passion, traits that have won Aparna Ramaswamy admirers across the country.
Minnesota fans finally will get to see "Dawn" on Friday and Saturday at the Cowles Center in downtown Minneapolis. The show made audiences and critics swoon when it premiered in New York City in October, with the New York Times gushing over her "impeccable technique and incandescent beauty."
For most of her life, Aparna Ramaswamy, 40, and her mother have been artistic partners. They are co-artistic directors of Ragamala Dance Company, which has become the nation's leading purveyor of Bharatanatyam dance, the millennia-old Indian style that has the same roots as yoga.
But with "Dawn," her first full-length solo show in three years, Ramaswamy is stepping out and owning the spotlight.
"This is part of my evolution as an artist," she said. "Every step to me is a challenge and a responsibility. And as someone who takes everything very seriously, this is a major step."
"They Rose at Dawn" is anchored in Bharatanatyam's ancient themes of humans seeking to connect with the divine.