Shobana and Anoushka Shankar were cast in the film due to their expertise in Bharatanatyam.[4] After liking Arif Zakaria's performance as a eunuch in Darmiyaan (1997),[5] he was cast in this film and underwent training in Bharatanatyam. The film was shot in Bangalore akin to the play.[6][7] Shobana didn't watch the play because she didn't want to be influenced by it.[8]
Reception
Critical response
Film critic Subhash K. Jha wrote that "Unlike Mahesh Dattani, who has deliberately denuded his film Morning Raga of the theatrical element, Pamela Rooks seems to revel in the staginess of the original material".[9] A critic from Rediff.com and wrote that "Dance Like A Man can be lauded for trying, though it could have done much better to rise above the bookishness that often hampers the script".[10] Reviewing the film at its Chennai screening in October 2004,[5] a critic from The Hindu wrote that "On the whole the story and the time zones lend themselves to visual poetry at times eventhoughthe dialogue is painfully studied. The director uses the past and present in alternating sequences to tell the story and the visual imagery contrasts and merges with the narration. Adding mood to the striking frames are the classically tuned background score by Ganesh-Kumaresh, which heightens the sense of time and ambience in an artiste' s environment. But this is the kind of film that will attract only a niche audience".[11]
^Mahesh, Chitra (1 October 2004). "Dance Like A Man". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 27 November 2007. Retrieved 8 October 2023.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)