Continued
from part 4
Part
5
Do
words punctuate emotions or emotions emphasize words? Viswanath's
economy of expressions is as renowned as his clarity with words.
Having worked with the likes of Adurthi, Mullapoodi, Dukkipaati,
Gollapoodi in the early stages of his career, Viswanath honed
his ear in picking up the right word for the right situation
and play it for that exact moment of time. Take any slice of
the most emotional moments of his movies, the dialogue plays
right into it and does not over-stay its welcome. Yaajulu walks
into the shack briskly and notices his grand-daughter, Hema,
not yet prepared for the dance performance later that evening.
"aemiTi ammaayi inkaa tayaaru kaalaedu"? thunders
his voice. "aa talanTu inkaa pOyalaedu" comes the
reply from his docile daughter-in-law, from behind the door.
"aemiTi evarannaa posaedundaaa, laekaa adee naenae pOyaalaa"
remarks Yaajulu and walks away. The son sandwiched between his
father's commandeering and his subservience irratatedly comments
"aemiTo, vedhava Slaeshalu, ardham kaaka chastunnaam".
The little trinkets of information that seep into such dialogues
not only serve the purpose of advancing the plot but also lets
the viewer under the dynamic between the characters. That which
could be played over reams and reams of dialogues and emphasized
over scenes and scenes of raw stock, is simply replaced by understanding
the true nature of the characters and supplying them with the
right word. "aDagaDam aemiTayyaa, kaDigaestaanu. veyyi
marDarlu chaesina vaaDinainaa kaLLallOki kaLLu peTTi nijam cheppinchaeyagalanu.
vaaDanTae naakaemannaa bhayamaa! unnaaDaa lOpala?" asks
Madhava in a tone that smacks of bravado. "aa pakka gadilOne
unnaru" pat comes the reply from gOpaalam. "nee moham
manDa, cheppavaemayyaa aa maaTa. naa maaTalu vinnaaDanTaavaa?"
cowers Madhava. Just a little line that explains completely
about the relationship between Sankara Sastry and his childhood
friend Madhava.
Of
all the pens that have worked with Viswnath on the majority
of his ventures, Jandhyala, Aakella, MVS Haranadha Rao and Sainath,
Jandhyala's understanding of Viswnath's characters extends beyond
the rest of his peers. Penning for sirisiri muvva, seetamaalakshmi,
SankaraabharaNam, saptapadi, SubhOdayam, Subhalaekha, saagara
sangamam and AapatbaandhavuDu, Jandhyala's craft, under
Viswnath's tutelage, can see a marked transition from one movie
to the next, peaking with saagara sangamam, which, arguably,
has the best words that any writer has breathed into the characters'
lives. "naenu ekkuva taagalaedu vadinaa", a slouched
Balu looking at the Krishna paadaalu in front of the house refusing
to come in. "naenu aDagalaedae", an even more understanding
sister-in-law with a dinner plate in her hand, settling beside
Balu. As much as the situation can bear the burden of the extra
words and over-emotions, Viswanath reigns the both of them and
renders one of most heart-rending scenes of the movie. "talent
okkaTae saripOdu, raasi peTTi unDaalanDee. abbO birju maharaaj,
great dancer, Shoba Naidu, abbO pedda pedda vaaLLantaa vastunnaaranDee"
marvels Balu as he leafs through the invitation and stops at
one leaf. "eena kooDa pedda dancer ae" observes Madhavi.
The cue stops the flows of words to hammer the point further
and it almost feels like Jandhayla knew the exact instant, when
he should stand back and let Kamal, Jayaprada and Illayaraja
have their moment.
"Music
is divine whether it is Western or Indian. sangeetaaniki bhashaa
bhaedaalu, swapara bhaedaalu unDaalu, adoka ananta jeevana vaahini.
ae jaati vaaraina ae matam vaaraina andulO daaham teerchukOvacchu"
starts Sankara Sastry when trying to teach some sense into the
reckless youth, bent on ridiculing "swadharmam" while
blindly embracing and aping the western culture. A look at Viswanath's
creations, it is quite obvious that the dominant tone of his
characters is one of sensibility, that is rooted in wisdom,
experience and intelligence. Even after Sambayya slaps Chinna
hard across his face for picking up a cigarette, more out of
fear that he too would follow the tracks of his drunkard father
Govindu, he repents immediately for his rush of blood unable
to come to terms as how to the "spare the rod, spoil the
child" tenet would work against a child, who does not understand
his doings (wrong or right) in the first place. "inta chaesinaa,
inta koTTina, aa pasi manasuki enduku ardham kaavaTam laedO
teliyaDam laedu" laments Sambayya, teary-eyed, confessing
his surge of unruly emotions to his beloved, Ganga. When the
entire village is finally up in arms against the atrocities
of neelakanThaiah, and wants to settle the score in terms of
flesh and blood, a calming voice of Hanumanthadaasu appeals
to the sensibilities of the mob, arguing how a violence only
begets violence the greedy appetite for blood and flesh can
never be quenched nor can it never be quelled. While it is quite
easy to play up the situation and fan the emotions of the characters,
feeding it with "powerful" dialogues, it is all the
more difficult to see the speck of sensibility amid the unruliness,
a spark of intelligence in the face of insanity and a tinge
of wisdom buried under the heap of foolishness.
Any
mention of Viswanath's movies flashes the images of dance, culture,
music, words and emotions. As subtle as his penchant for emotional
words, humor is very much an ingredient of his characters' worlds
and a healthy dose of comedy is sprinkled all throughout, that
which is un-obtrusive and un-obstructive to the regular proceedings.
Wit, sarcasm, satire, innocence and all the different variations
of comedy find place in his worlds. "ekkaDainaa, illu kaalipOyina
vaaDini choosunTaavu, voLLu kaalipOyina vaaDini choosinTaavu,
ilaa bhakti tO kaali pOyina vaaDini ekkaDanna choosaavaa naayanaa"
- a blackened face with a mirthless laugh (Swarna Kamalam).
"sundOpasundulaa? vaaLLevaru?", "inkevaru, sundulu
meeru, upsundulu vaaru". "aemiTO nanDee, rOgam paerutO
deeniki, deeni moguDu hOdaalO naaku baagaanae maryaadalu jarugutunnaayi"
(Sagara Sangamam). "adi rishabhamaa, vrushabhamaa",
"abbae rishabhamaenanDee, rishabhamae. akkaDa rishabham
paDitae hindOLam endukavutunDanDee, charukaeSi avutundi gaani",
"chaarukaeSaa???", "abbae, chaarukaeSaa, kaaphee,
kaaphee avutundanDee", "nuvvu mundu lae ikkaDi ninchi"
(SankaraabharaNam). "ammo ammO, noone elaa pilla kaalavallaaga
pravihinchaestOndO, Oraey vedhava aapu aapu", "aravaddu
anTae vinalaedu gaa, eddu chooDu koorchunDipOyindi. ippuDu aa
ganuga nee meDalO vaesukuni nuvvu tirugu" (Swati mutyam).
There were no separate comedy tracks, there were no specialist
comic actors, there were no separate comedic words. An observation
of the lifestyle of the characters, the situations there are
thrown in, and the events that happen around them, proved plenty
enough raw material to Viswanath to extract the comedic ore
that is refreshing, heartening and more importanly, plain funny.
(Cont'd
in the part 6)
(To
be cont'd)
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