Mythology
has been the bread and butter of Telugu film industry during its
golden era. The three main epics remained invaluable repositories
of stories of all rasas. How else could one explain Sabari, a
passing character in Ramayana, being a source of a full length
movie? Same are the cases with babruvaahana, ushaa pariNayam,
meghanaadha and the rest that followed the lot. Movies made
during as late as mid 80s, still relied on those revered books,
for freshness in the topics and topical in their contexts. Case
in point - Vijaya Lakshmi Productions' "chaTTam tO pOraaTam"
(1984) (written by Paruchuri Bros.) which was an intelligent adapatation
of Satee Savitri story.
Coming
back to the 50s and 60s, Samudraala Sr. (Samudraala Raghavaachari)
was considered the wizard at weaving interesting screenplays around
popular mythological lines. His body of works ranged from the
Aswaraj Productions' Vinayaka Chaviti (that's correct,
they made an entire movie out of this popular festival, and an
entertaining one at that), DeepaavaLi, seetaa raama kalyaaNam,
bhookailas etc. Though he started off with social themes -
Vijaya's Shavukaaru, Vinoda's Devadaasu, Annapoorna's
Donga Raamudu, it was in narrating the age old texts that
he was adept at. Samudraala, like Pingali (or it can be the other
way around), weilded his pen, in both forms of written text -
paaTa, maaTa. His lyrical content overflowed with "tatsama
telugu" (words that are synonymous). Aadi praasa
and antya praaasa stood out in his dialogues. Consider
the song "deva daeva dhavalaacala mandira" song
from bhookailas. The song is nothing but a compilation
of various names of Lord Shiva - and every name is either a parayaa
padam (synonym) or a vyutpatthi (derivative). N.A.T.'s
seetarama kalyaaNam, hailed as one of the best mythological movies
ever made, was text book samudraala. Narada (Kanta Rao)
never sounded more calculating, cunning and witty in Samudraala's
words.
Observe
the lyrical flow in the dialogue of Ravanaasura to Rambha - "nee
ooruvula sOyagam coosi daanavae anukunnaanu. mahaendrudu tana
vajraayudham tO nilabeTTa laeni vaibhavam, nee sOyagam tO kaaduTae
daapeTTu kunaedi". From abstract ("kalimee laemulu
kasTa sukhaalu, kaavaDi lO kunDalani bhayamaelOyi" -
devadaasu) to eternal ("sree seetaraamula kalyaanamu
cootamu raaranDee" - seeta rama kalyaaNam), Samudraala
was the true commander of the printed word.
If
composition was samudraala's stength, precision and brevity were
Aatraeya's forte. Another pen, which wielded command and respect,
both in oratory poetic form or oratory prose form, Aatraeya was
famous for his socialistic themes. A product of the then famous
telugu theater scene, Aatraeya (kiLaambi Venakata Narasimhaachaaryulu),
in his long and fruitful association with Annapoorna movies, created
and adapted (mostly from Bengali works and popular telugu novels)
screenplays that remain eternal, fresh and unparalleled. With
Adurthi Subba Rao (director) and DukkipaaTi Madhusudhana Rao (producer),
he was driving force behind tODikODaLLu, maangalya balam, daakTar
chakravarthy, chaduvukunna ammaayilu (with gollapooDi marutee
rao) and with aadurthi, he marched along penning mooga manusulu
(with muLLapOODi), manchi manasulu, with P.Pullayya, Jayabhaeri,
Venkateswara Mahatyam (not to be confused with Ramakrishna
Studio's Sri Venkateswara Mahatyam) and the like and the
like. Though he remained a spent force during his twilight part
of the career, Aatreya nevertheless, was associated behind successful
movies that included Prem Nagar, Prema, Abhinandana etc.
His association with K.Balachander during the mid 70s, that brought
out Antulaeni Katha, Idi Katha kaadu, marO caritra, aakali
raajyam brought his vitriolic best against the then prevailing
social conditions. Sarada pictures Jayabheri, arguably
his best social theme set in a folk milieu, talks about the rise,
fall and subsequent rise of struggling artiste, while encompassing
other social themes like untouchability, drinking awareness, caste
barriers. Through the words of one of the characters, he pours
his heart out, pointing out the mutual exclusivity between money
and art, that plagued him through out his real life "aem
talli (to Lord Saraswati), nee putrulni lakshmi kaTaakshimcaDam
nuvvu coochi Orvalaevaa". Aatraeya - manasu kavi
- mana sukavi.
During
the late 60s, a small movie which neither boasted of a popular
star cast, nor a great theme, made its way to the silver screen.
That it was called Sakshi, which won an award at the Tashkent
Film Festival, was beside the fact to the arrival of comic word
and a genius eye. The former went by the name of mullapooDi venkaTa
ramana, and the latter called himself Bapu (Sattiraaju Lakshmi
Naarayana). Sakshi, to quote mullapOODi was an "aardhika
kaLaakhanDam" - a euphemism to box-office failure. But
it brought them to the attention of Akkineni, and buddhimantuDu
took shape. A scribe by occupational nature, ramaNa remained a
true friend and an life long associate of Bapu, a scribbler by
nature. Muthyaala muggu, balaraaju katha, snaeham, andaala
raamuDU (one of their most un(der)-appreciated work), Sampoorna
Ramayanam, Sreenatha Kavi saarvabhouma (NTR's last and memorable
movie), peLLi pustakam (a reverential twist of Missamma),
seeta kalyaNam (a director's movie in the truest sense)
etc. The memorable characters that Ramana has created - appaa
rao, teetaa (teesaesina taasildaaru), buDugu
(kalyaana taamboolam), raadha gOpaalam, baasu kuTTi
(peLLi pustakam), naitaas (reverse for saitaan,
in raajaadhi raaju), continue to relate to us and regale
us. Though famous for his zany sense of humor ("naitaasu!
(addressing satan), nuvvu devuDuvayya!", "naenoo....
aDDagaaDidalaku, aa maaTa meerae annaaru, udYogaalu ivvanu")
, ramaNa reserved his sentimental best for poignant characters
within his movies - Kantaa Rao (muthyaala muggu, goranta deepam)
"siphaarasula tOTi kaapuraalu nilabaDavu", "prati
gunDelOnU gOranta deepam unTundi, adae dhairyam", Jhansi
(peLLi pustakam) - "aidu vaeLLu okalaa unDaka pOyinaa,
anni kalistaenae gaani annam tinalaeka pOtunnaam", "kaLLu
kaayalu kaayinci ee raegi paLLakOsam vaccaavaa tanDree"
(sabari in Sampoorna Ramaynam) etc. From satire to sarcasm, from
irony to philosophy, from practicality to pure sentimentality,
mullapOODi was a consummate writer, peerless and par elegance.
(Click
here for Part - 3)
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