Kunchan Nambiar is considered by many as the master of Malayalam satirist poetry and is credited with the popularisation of a performing art known as
Ottan Thullal. The word,
thullal, means 'dance/jumping', but under this name Nambiar developed a new style of verse narration, interspersed with occasional background music and dance-like swaying movements. Popular belief is that Nambiar devised this art form for avenging the ridicule he had to suffer from a
Chakyar Koothu performer who chastised Nambiar when he dozed off while accompanying the koothu performance on
Mizhavu. He used pure Malayalam as opposed to the stylised and
Sanskritized Malayalam language of Chakyar Koothu, and adopted many elements from
Padayani and
Kolam Tullal as well as some of the other local folk arts. There are three kinds of Tullal distinguished on the basis of the performer's costume and the style of rendering, viz.,
Ottan,
Seethankan and
Parayan.
Dravidian metres are used throughout although there is a quatrain in a
Sanskrit metre. Kunchan Nambiar is known to have written 64 thullal stories. He also developed new metres (for example;
Vaytari metres) based on the vocal notation for various talas. The language is predominantly
Malayalam with a large admixture of colloquial and dialectal forms. == Honours ==