Manjula Padmanabhan Explained

Manjula Padmanabhan
Birth Date:23 June 1953
Birth Place:Delhi, India
Occupation:Playwright, novelist, illustrator, short story person, journalist, children's book author
Alma Mater:Elphinstone College
Years Active:1979–present
Genre:Comic strip, science fiction
Awards:Onassis Award

Manjula Padmanabhan (born 23 June 1953) is an Indian playwright, journalist, comic strip artist, and children's book author. Her works explore science, technology, gender, and international inequalities.

Life

Padmanabhan was born in Delhi in 1953 to an Indian diplomat father. She was raised in Sweden, Pakistan, and Thailand.[1] [2] She was an avid reader of comics and cartoons, and often drew and wrote as a child.

When Padmanabhan was sixteen, her father retired and her family returned to India, where she was surprised by the more traditional society and was limited by not knowing Hindi or Marathi.

Padmanabhan attended Elphinstone College. While at school, she worked at Parsiana to gain financial independence from her family.

Career and works

Padmanabhan continued working as a journalist and book reviewer into her 20s and 30s. She began her career as an illustrator in 1979 with Ali Baig's book Indrani and the Enchanted Jungle.

In 1982, Padmanabhan created a comic strip, Doubletalk, which featured the female character Suki.[3] She wrote a pitch to The Sunday Observer editor Vinod Mehta, who published her strip for many years.[4] [5] Suki then appeared six days a week in Delhi paperThe Pioneer from 1992 to 1998. When Vinod Mehta left the publications and The Pioneer stopped publishing comics, Padmanabhan stopped creating Doubletalk.

Padmanabhan won the first ever Onassis Award for her play Harvest. An award-winning film Deham was made by Govind Nihalani based on the play.

Padmanabhan has continued to work as an author and illustrator, and has published short stories within many different volumes.

Padmanabhan returned to creating comics featuring Suki with the strip Suki Yaki for The Hindu's Business Line.

As playwright

As author and illustrator

As illustrator

Comic strips

Short stories

Autobiography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2015-10-04 . And still I rise: Why Manjula Padmanabhan never came to terms being the second sex . 2022-08-26 . The Indian Express . en.
  2. Book: The Oxford encyclopedia of children's literature . 2006 . Oxford University Press . Jack Zipes . 0-19-514656-5 . Oxford . 62342788.
  3. Web site: Padmanabhan . Manjula . The return of Suki: four windows to India's most original comic strip . 2022-08-26 . Scroll.in . en-US.
  4. Web site: Padmanabhan . Manjula . The return of Suki: four windows to India's most original comic strip . 2022-08-26 . Scroll.in . en-US.
  5. News: Antics of Suki. https://web.archive.org/web/20121107210652/http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/mag/2005/08/28/stories/2005082800140500.htm. dead. 2012-11-07. Moddie. Mandira. 2005-08-28. The Hindu. 2009-08-14.
  6. Manjula padmanabhan. (2013, Aug 24). Mint Retrieved from Proquest.