Kathakali and Bharatanatyam are two of India’s most iconic classical performing arts. Both originate in South India, both use elaborate costumes and makeup, and both tell stories from Hindu mythology. Yet they are profoundly different in origin, training, purpose, and aesthetic.
This guide breaks down the seven most important differences between these two traditions — and explains why conflating them is one of the most common mistakes people make about Indian classical arts.
1. Origin: Kerala vs Tamil Nadu
Kathakali is Kerala’s art form. It developed in the 16th-17th centuries in the courts and temples of Kerala’s coastal kingdoms, drawing on earlier traditions like Krishnanattam and Ramanattam. Its history is specifically Keralite — shaped by the Zamorin rulers of Calicut, the style of Malayalam language, and the martial arts tradition of Kalaripayattu.
Bharatanatyam is Tamil Nadu’s classical dance. It evolved in the temples of Tamil Nadu — particularly the Devadasi tradition of temple dancers who performed for deities. After a period of suppression during British colonial rule, it was revived and codified in the early 20th century by E. Krishna Iyer and Rukmini Devi Arundale, who gave it its current concert format.
2. Is It Dance or Theatre?
This is the most fundamental difference. Kathakali is primarily a theatre form — it performs complete dramatic narratives with characters, plot, conflict, and resolution. A Kathakali performance presents stories (often from the Mahabharata) with different performers playing distinct roles. The combination of dance, music, and drama is inseparable from its theatrical storytelling.
Bharatanatyam is primarily a dance form — though it includes expressional elements (Abhinaya) that qualify as theatre. A Bharatanatyam recital (Margam) follows a structured concert format: pure rhythmic dance (Alarippu), compositional pieces (Jatiswaram, Varnam), devotional items, and a closing piece. A single dancer performs all of it, alternating between pure movement and narrative expression.
3. Makeup: The Most Visible Difference
Kathakali’s makeup is extraordinary — and takes 3 to 8 hours to apply. It uses natural pigments mixed with coconut oil, applied in thick layers to create a painted face. The makeup is character-specific: green face (Pacha) for noble heroes, green-and-red (Katti) for arrogant villains, black face (Kari) for demons. The costume includes massive headgear (kireedam) and elaborate skirts. A Kathakali performer in full costume may be six feet wide.
Bharatanatyam makeup, while elaborate, is essentially stage makeup — heavy kohl, precise eyebrow definition, and a decorative vertical mark on the forehead (pottu). The costume is a specially stitched silk sari in a fan-like pleated arrangement at the front. The focus is on clearly seeing the dancer’s facial expressions and hand gestures — not on character disguise.
4. Training: 10 Years vs 7 Years
Both require years of rigorous training, but Kathakali training is typically longer and more physically demanding. Traditional Kathakali training begins at age 8-10 with years of daily physical conditioning: full body oil massage followed by intensive stretching that forces the body into extreme flexibility. Eye exercises to develop independent eye muscle control alone take years. Complete training takes 10-15 years.
Bharatanatyam training typically takes 7-10 years to reach performance level. Students begin with footwork (adavus) at the barre, progress through mudras and abhinaya, and work toward an Arangetram (debut recital) that marks completion of basic training. A professionally performing Bharatanatyam dancer will have trained for a minimum of 7 years.
5. Performers: Group vs Solo
Kathakali is always a group performance. A complete Kathakali production requires multiple performers for different roles, plus an orchestra of at least two percussion instruments (chenda and maddalam), two vocalists, and a cymbalist. It is never a solo art form — the theatrical nature requires multiple characters.
Bharatanatyam is typically a solo performance. One dancer performs the entire recital, alternating between pure dance and narrative expression. The orchestra (nattuvangam cymbals, mridangam drum, violin or veena, vocalist) accompanies but the dancer is the centre of the performance. Group Bharatanatyam exists but is less common.
6. Language and Story Source
Kathakali is deeply connected to Malayalam language and literature. Its stories (Attaprakaram) are written in Manipravalam — a mixture of Sanskrit and Malayalam. The vocalists sing in Malayalam, and the hand gesture vocabulary specifically encodes Malayalam linguistic meanings alongside Sanskrit ones.
Bharatanatyam uses primarily Tamil and Telugu composition, with significant Sanskrit devotional poetry (particularly compositions of the Carnatic music tradition — Tyagaraja, Dikshitar, Syama Sastri). Many Bharatanatyam items are set to Carnatic classical music compositions.
7. Spiritual Purpose
Kathakali evolved as a form of devotional offering — watching Kathakali was considered equivalent to reading the sacred epics. It was performed in temple courtyards for entire communities as an act of collective devotion. The performer becomes a sacred vessel for divine stories.
Bharatanatyam evolved from Devadasi tradition — temple dancers who dedicated their lives to a specific deity, performing daily as an offering. The Arangetram (debut) was traditionally a ceremony in which a girl was “married” to the temple deity. After Rukmini Devi’s revival, it became a concert art form, but its connection to devotional offering remains central to its aesthetic.
Summary: Key Differences at a Glance
| Feature | Kathakali | Bharatanatyam |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | Kerala | Tamil Nadu |
| Type | Theatre + Dance | Dance + Theatre |
| Format | Group performance | Solo recital |
| Makeup time | 3–8 hours | 45–90 minutes |
| Training | 10–15 years | 7–10 years |
Both Kathakali and Bharatanatyam are world-class art forms that deserve global recognition. Understanding their differences — rather than grouping them as “Indian classical dance” — is the first step toward appreciating the extraordinary range of India’s performing arts heritage.
