Balinese theatre
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Balinese theatre and dramas include Janger dance, pendet dance performances, and masked performances of Topèng. Performances are also part of funeral rituals involving a procession, war dance, and other rituals before the cremation of the patulangan. [1] Balinese use the word sesolahan for both theatre and dance.[1]
- Arja (dance), Balinese dance-opera
 - Barong dance performances featuring Rangda, a dancer with keris, Jero Gede (black masked figures), and Jero Luh (white masked performers)
 
- Barong Ket: lion barong, the most common Barong, is the symbol of a good spirit.
 - Barong Landung: giant barong, the form is similar to Betawi Ondel-Ondel
 - Barong Celeng: boar barong
 - Barong Macan: tiger barong
 - Barong Naga: dragon (or serpent)
 
- Gambuh plays with chanting and music including the use of long flute-like instruments
 - Topèng, masked theatre
 - Calonarang, performances at temples during times of danger or difficulty that involve stories
 - Drama Gong, popular theatre developed in the late 1960s
 - Sendratari, a group ballet form that emerged in the 1960s includes a dhalang puppeteer giving dialogue and often a gamelan (orchestra), Sendratari, or Kècak chant
 
Javanese Wayang shadow plays are performed in Bali.
Gallery
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Staged battle in Tenganan - 
			
Actors dressed as giants and evil spirits for a Barong Landung performance - 
			
Siege of a gate play in Bali (1910-1920) - 
			
Balinese performance 
See also
References
- ^ a b "About theatre and dance in Bali". Balinesedance.org. Archived from the original on 2015-08-10. Retrieved 2015-08-04.