'''''' () is a Balinese dance which is often performed as a preface to legong and accompanied by the semar pangulingan style of gamelan. The term also refers to a stock character, a quintessential representation of the maidservant, found in the condong dance as well as the legong, gambuh, and arja dances.
'''' () is a Balinese dance which is often performed as a preface to legong and accompanied by the semar pangulingan style of gamelan. The term also refers to a stock character, a quintessential representation of the maidservant, found in the condong dance as well as the legong, gambuh, and arja dances.
==History== thumb|left|A condong figure in wayang kulit (before 1900) The condong dance originated in the palaces of Bali in the mid-19th century. Its creator is not known, but folk history suggests that a prince of Sukawati, deathly ill, saw a vision of two beautiful girls dancing gracefully while accompanied by gamelan music; upon regaining his health, this prince recreated the dance he had seen. It originally told the story of two bidadari'' (nymphs) named Supraba and Wilotama. By the 1930s, the story had been modified, telling of a king or queen and their subject.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).