Patruni Sastry is an Indian classical dancer, drag performer, actor, and model. He is known for founding the online drag platform DragVanti. He is also considered the first drag queen of India. [1]Zee Zest
Wiki/Biography
Patruni Chidananda Sastry [2]Instagram- Patruni Chidananda Sastry was born on Friday, 25 December 1992 (age 29 years; as of 2022) in Kharagpur, West Bengal. Later, he moved to Hyderabad, Telangana. His zodiac sign is Sagittarius.
In his childhood, his father noticed that he was interested in dancing, so he asked Patruni to join the Kuchipudi dance classes under Patruniâs aunt. From class 1 to class 7, he pursued his training in Bharatanatyam under his guru Kalamandalam Venkitt in Kolkata. In 2001, he attended Kendriya Vidyalaya and studied there till 2008. From 2008 to 2010, he studied at the State Board of Technical Education and Training, West Bengal. He did a Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) from West Bengal University of Technology, Kolkata, from 2010 to 2014. He did a post-graduation diploma in telecom management from Maharashtra Institute of Technology, Pune (2015-2017). Patruni then did a diploma in Bharatanatyam from Kalai Kaviri College of Fine Arts, 18 Benwells Road, Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu. From 2015 to 2017, he pursued a Master of Business Administration in Telecommunications Management from Jaipur National University, Rajasthan. [3]LinkedIn- Patruni Sastry
Physical Appearance
Height (approx.): 5′ 6″
Hair Colour: Black
Eye Colour: Black
Gender & Sexual Orientation
Firstly, Patruni identified him as gender fluid, [4]YouTube- Narthaki Official and he then identified him as a Pansexual. [5]Telangana Today In 2021, he said that he was Pomosexual. [6]Livemint
Family
Parents & Siblings
His father, Patruni Dharmayya, is a Carnatic singer. He has an elder sister named Nishika Patruni.
Wife & Children
On 18 August 2021, Patruni got married to a heterosexual girl named Rajeswari Raji. During an interview, he shared how he met Raji for the first time. He said,
During lockdown, I hosted live shows online during Pride month and noticed an unfamiliar account following my every move and showing up at every live show I put on. Months later, at a family function where a relative put a little too much kumkum on my forehead, which then went into my eyes, I met Raji. I felt a warmth Iâd never experienced and then realised she was offering me a towel to clear my eyes. A few minutes into the conversation, she asked me an amusing question, What is drag? I thought it came out of nowhere. I didnât realise at the time that my âadoring social media fanâ was none other than Raji.â
After talking on social media for a few days, they exchanged their phone numbers and started talking. Initially, they became friends and soon, fell in love with each other. One day, Patruni sent a message to Rajji talking about his sexuality. During an interview, Patruni talked about it, he said,
I dropped her a text one day: I am pansexual. The next day, I got back two weblinks about pansexuality and a question: Is this what you meant? I needed to know whether she understood me, so I called her. It doesnât matter what your sexuality or gender is. I may not fully understand these words and feelings, but it only matters whether you love me and wish to be with me.â
Caste
Patruni was born in a Tamilian Brahmin Hindu family. [7]YouTube- Narthaki Official
Career
Dancer
Patruni is trained in various dance forms such as Odissi, Contemporary, and Butoh. He is trained in Bharatanatyam under his gurus such as Sri Kalamandalam Ventak in Kolkata, Smt Vaidehi Subhash, and Sri Hari Mangalampalli from Hyderabad. He did his training in the Oddisi dance form under Swayam Pragyan Shahoo and Preeti Mohapatra. He did his training in Kuchipudi dance from Sri Siva Kumar. He is trained in Butoh (an Avant grade art form) under Adam Koan from Japan.
Drag Queen
Patruni performed his first drag performance at the age of 14 in a traditional Kuchipudi dance competition. Since then, his parents supported him. His mother did his makeup for his performance, and his father clicked his pictures. While he was working in Hyderabad in 2014, he decided to make his career as a drag queen. He gave his performance as a drag queen for the first time at a local cafĂŠ in Hyderabad. However, it did not turn out to be fruitful for him. During an interview, Patruni said,
I wanted to quit this time since I couldnât resonate with the aesthetics of beauty standards and glamour of the traditional drag which we, as a country, have adopted from the West. The dissonance was more apparent because I had always looked up to traditional artists like Bal Gandharva and Chapal Bahadur as my inspiration. These aesthetics werenât suitable for the changing identity of my body as I kept exploring gender fluidity.â
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In June 2020, Patruni started an online platform for budding drag queens with the name âDragVanti.â
He adopted the drag name âSuffocated Art Specimenâ (S.A.S) and performed at various drag events. He termed his style of dance form as âIndian Expressionism.â In the dance form, a person expresses his emotions through various dance forms. In an interview, he talked about the same, he said,
One thing I found out is that people were not aware of the subjects like polymorphism, gender fluidity etc. and televisions regularly misinterpretations of LGBT+ individuals, which bogged me down. A constant fight of the right of identity made me think of using art as a medium to create awareness, activism, education, and experience. I reconfigured Expressionism dance which was used as a tool at the time of World War 2. Using the same art form into the Indian context of classical dance, I created Indian classical expression to showcase subject from gender binary to sexual education, gender fluidity to gender rights and so on.â
He has also included various social messages in his dance forms and has performed for various organisations such as Mobbera Foundation, Mental Health Organization, Good Universe, Human Library, and the Humsafar trust. Patruni has performed at many dance festivals like Golden Beach Festival and Kalpashree Dance Festival. He has also appeared in the theatre play âSkepticismâ directed by the theatre director Amaan Ahemad from Hyderabad. He has also performed at various Traminal Drag events. His popular drag productions are Pancha Pandhakas (Untold Queer characters of Indian Mythology), La Nari (why women suffer), Kavach (all about safe sex), Nir Rod (Condom), and Aratrika (Indulging with Alcohol Addiction).
Some of the popular performances of Patruni as a drag queen are âFour Playâ (2019), âStrip Teaseâ (2019), âMatiâ (2019), and â69â (2020).
Patruni has worked as a drag queen in many events such as âQueer And Allie Film and Art Festivalâ (2014 and 2019), âInternational Story Telling Festivalâ (2017), âMenstrual Festival, Hyderabadâ (2018), and âHyderabad Dance Festivalâ (2021).
Corporate Sector
In June 2014, Patruni started working at Wipro, Kolkata, as an associate. He worked there for 3 months and then worked as a trainee system engineer at the IT firm Armia Systems Inc. in Cochin. In May 2015, he joined Tech Mahindra as an associate. He worked as an associate analyst at Deloitte, Hyderabad, from June 2015 to February 2016. He then joined HSBC Retail Banking and Wealth Management, Hyderabad, as a customer service representative. He worked there for almost 9 months and then joined Deloitte Consulting, Hyderabad. After working there for 4 years, he joined a private firm CGI, Hyderabad, as a senior business analyst. Patruni then joined a private firm FactSet as a product development specialist.
LGBTQ Activist
Patruni Sastry has also been working for LGBTQ rights. In 2018, a Telugu YouTube channel uploaded a few videos against the LGBTQ community and against them Patruni filed a petition. In 2020, Patruni was invited as a guest in an episode of âBigg Boss Teluguâ where he talked about transphobia. Later, in an interview, he shared his opinions on government policies framed against the LGBTQ community. He said,
I cannot believe that people who are involved in making polices are being this irrational about the basic gender rights of a human being. We expect our fellow citizens to stand with us in this as itâs a threat to the existence of entire community.â
In 2021, Patruni talked about DC Marvelâs bisexual superman. He said,
The whole Superman thing made me feel empowered after a long time. He came out as a bisexual which is not so usual. People usually come out as gay or a trans person. When a protagonist like Superman reveals his sexual identity, it triggers a conversation about gender diversity and inclusion. People need to understand that gender fluidity is not about costume play. Wearing a ghaghra or putting a nail paint from a cis-het privilege doesnât make someone gender fluid. Such things are quite insulting and disqualifying to the actual lives of people who are gender fluid. It leads to a lot of trauma and disqualification of a personâs existence.â
During an interview, he shared his opinion on the portrayal of the LGBTQ community in Hindi films. Patruni said,
Even if Ram Gopal Vermaâs Lesbian-based movie Dangerous is released in PVR and multiplexes, who is benefiting-RGV or the community? Is it message-oriented like Badhai Do or Chandigarh Kare Aashiqui? In a media interaction, he wanted to discuss only lesbian and not gay-related issues. If he donates half of his earnings to the community, then yes we can support him. Yet another shameless robbery of trans role was in Gangubai Kathiawadi. The only roles trans people get is to play are like this one and when some cis person plays a trans role, they take away the only opportunity.â
Other Work
Patruni has acted in the English short film âPolar Nightâ (2020).
In 2020, he directed the short film âShoonyamâ as a director. He then worked as an editor for the short film â70/100Ⲡ(2020). Patruni authored two books named âDressing as a Goddess: A Drag Photo Bookâ and âMy Experiments with Dragâ in 2020.
He has also sung a few songs such as âPride Masam Annaâ (2021), âCheeranjiva Sukhibhavaâ (2021), and âChudu Sexy Gurlâ (2021).
In 2022, he was featured in a few music videos such as âKaun Batayeâ by Dastaan Live and âSunshine on the Streetâ by Peekay and Andrea Tariang.
Facts/Trivia
- Patruni is also known as Sas IIIÂ [8]Facebook- Patruni Sastry and SAS [9]Instagram- Patruni Sastry.
- In an interview, he shared that when he was around 7 years old, he watched a Telugu dubbed Tamil film âPadayappaâ (1999). In a scene in the film, the Indian actor Rajinikanth rejected Ramya Krishnan after which screamed loudly and danced continuously to burst out her anger. After watching the scene, Patruni related the character of Ramya with his own life. He said,
What fascinated me the most in the movie was a character called âNeelambariâ which was played by Ramya Krishnan. In a sequence, upon being rejected by the hero, she screams loudly and dances vehemently. That was the very first time I saw someone dancing and I thought that if I wanted to be taken seriously, I needed to scream out loud and dance. It started when my mom didnât give me my favourite chocolate. I started to dance in range to ensure that I got one.â
- In an interview, Patruni shared that he was mocked by his PT teacher for choosing dance over PT. He said,
I remember being this way even when I was a child. When I was in class V, we had choice of attending PT class or dance class. I chose dance. I even learnt dance for about three weeks, until my PT teacher stormed into class one day and started abusing me for taking dance instead of PT. âPT is meant for boys and dance is for girlsâ, he said. That is my first memory of being exposed to gender stereotypes. Since then, Iâve been encountering these stereotypes everywhere, throughout my life. I still donât understand why everything from what we wear to the work we do to how we behave is given a gender colour.â
- Patruni once shared that while he was in college, he had a girlfriend. They dated for almost two years, and the first year of their relationship went well, but she then started asking him to change his dressing style and mannerism to a man. In an interview, he said,
I was studying B Tech when I first fell in love. It was with a girl from my college. We were in a relationship for nearly two years. The first year went by okay. But soon, she started telling me what kind of clothes I should wear and what kind of mannerisms I should to adopt as a âmaleâ person. That left me perplexed. The problem was that though I looked like a man physically, my sexual orientation and gender identity were not fixed. But at that time, there was no awareness about gender spectrum or gender orientation. If this battle within myself wasnât enough, there was a battle to be fought outside as well. I was even the victim of ragging and bullying in college â mostly thanks to how I looked and behaved. Thatâs when I first began to use dance as a tool of activism.â
- For more than five times, he has been invited by TedX as a guest speaker.
- According to his Facebook account, his favourite quote is,
Life is a popcorn . it shows both highest and lowest. life is a water bubble it doesnât grantee its existing. life is a game. has equal probability of success and failure life is a song .. has many scales . i am my life. i am what i want.â