A myth older than the kingdom
Hanuman arrives in Cambodia via India, but the Khmer people made him their own. The Reamker (រាមកេរ្តិ៍, "Glory of Rama") is Cambodia's adaptation of the Sanskrit Ramayana, and it departs from the Indian source in revealing ways. Where the Hindu Hanuman is celibate and purely devoted, the Khmer Hanuman has a romantic life, a sense of humor, and a talent for getting into trouble.
The earliest evidence of his mask dates to inscriptions from the late 10th century under King Jayavarman V. His acrobatic form appears even earlier on the bas-reliefs of Angkor Wat and the Bayon, frozen mid-leap in stone, five centuries before the French ever saw him.
In the Reamker, Hanuman is the white-faced general of the monkey army, fighting for Prince Preah Ream against the demon king Krong Reap. He is the most powerful warrior on the field, capable of swallowing the sun and moon, leaping across oceans, and seducing the golden mermaid Sovann Maccha while ostensibly building a causeway to Lanka.
Layers of lacquer, layers of meaning
A traditional Lakhon Khol mask is a full helmet built over a clay mold. Craftsmen apply layer after layer of papier-mâché, modeling wax jewels and foliage into the surface, then sealing everything with lacquer tapped from Melanorrhea laccifera trees in Kratie. Gold leaf is pressed on last.
Color in the Khmer mask tradition is not decorative, it is a language. Green for Rama. Yellow for Lakshmana. Brick red for Ravana. White for Hanuman and his eighteen monkey warriors. Each performer is identifiable across a temple courtyard at night, even by firelight.
Survival, loss, and revival
The Khmer Rouge nearly destroyed everything. Between 1975 and 1979, masters were killed, costumes burned, traditions severed. Only the troupe at Wat Svay Andet had survived intact. The reconstruction was led by Princess Norodom Buppha Devi, who spent decades rebuilding what had been lost.
UNESCO inscribed the Royal Ballet of Cambodia in 2008. In 2018, Lakhon Khol Wat Svay Andet joined the Urgent Safeguarding List. Audiences at recent festival performances have exceeded 120,000 people.