Updated On: 02 May, 2023 08:54 AM IST | Mumbai | Aakanksha Ahire
"Lavani is my mother. It gave birth to the dancer in me, and for that, I am forever grateful," says Megha Ghadge, a popular Lavani dancer and actress who also speaks at large about where this folk dance of Maharashtra is headed

Ghadge first performed Lavani in Shirdi, which was when she decided this was what she was born for. Photo courtesy: Official Instagram account of Megha Ghadge
This dance form, besides being a folk dance of Maharashtra, has many bold and dark shades. Rightly so, it was again laced in controversy recently, and yet, somehow, we cannot help but groove to its beats the moment the mere sound of its ‘dholkis’ and ‘ghungroos’ fall on our ears. Lavani, even today, continues to be centric to the culture of Maharashtra, just like Bharatnatyam is in Tamil Nadu, Odissi is in Odisha, or Mohiniyattam is in Kerala.
Donning a nine-yard saree famously known as a ‘nauvari saree’, Lavani dancers pair it up with heavy ornaments like necklaces, earrings, waistbands, rings, bangles, and the most important, ghungroos. Their hair is neatly tied up in a bun and decorated with `gajras`.