Ranganayaki (1981 film) explained

Ranganayaki
Director:Puttanna Kanagal
Producer:B. Thimmanna
Screenplay:Puttanna Kanagal
Yoganarasimhamurthy
Starring:Aarathi
Ambareesh
Ramakrishna
Ashok
Rajanand
Music:M. Ranga Rao
Cinematography:S. Maruthi Rao
Editing:V. P. Krishna
Distributor:Sri Ashok Arts
Country:India
Language:Kannada

Ranganayaki is a 1981 Indian Kannada language film directed by Puttanna Kanagal starring Aarathi, Ambareesh, Ramakrishna, Ashok, Rajanand. The film is based on the novel of the same name by Ashwattha.[1]

Plot

Ranganayaki is a theater artiste who plays the lead female role in all the plays staged by the drama company owned by her foster-father. When a rich man, Nagaraja, falls in love with her, she marries him and draws the curtain on her career. The drama company falls on tough times after her departure. On one occasion, when the drama company faces an emergency with the new actress absconding, Ranganayaki dons the grease paint to save her father's reputation. This one act ends her marriage, and her husband leaves town with their year-old son.

Ranganayaki returns to theater but with the death of her father, and in the face of mounting losses is forced to close the drama company. Supported by her foster-brother Ramanna she goes onto become a popular movie heroine 'Mala'. Twenty years later, Shekhar, a college student, not only becomes her most ardent fan but also becomes besotted by her. Neither is aware of their true relationship – that they are mother and son. A chance meeting with her ex-husband makes 'Mala' yearn to meet her son. While circumstances make sure this does not happen, by the time Shekhar realizes the truth about her identity, 'Mala' who suffers from bouts of depression, would have taken her own life.

Cast

Soundtrack

Song Title Singer (s) Lyrics
"Mandhara Pushpavu" Vijaya Narasimha
"Hrudaya Jhenkara" K. Prabhakar Shasthry
"Premadalli Snehadalli" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam M. N. Vyasa Rao
"Jai Jagadambe" S. Janaki Vijaya Narasimha
"Kannada Naadina" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. P. Sailaja K. Prabhakar Shasthry

Reception

After watching the film Mangalore, Sreekumaran Thampi, a friend of Kanagal, was impressed with Ambareesh's performance in the film and cast him in Gaanam (1982).[2]

Awards

1980–81 Karnataka State Film Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Menon . Neelima . 2018-12-02 . Ambareesh: The Rebel And His Cause . 2023-12-13 . . en.
  2. News: Ambareesh lives on in memories of Malayalis. The Hindu. 25 November 2018. Kumar. P. K. Ajith. https://web.archive.org/web/20230906045805/https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/ambareesh-lives-on-in-memories-of-malayalis/article25592530.ece. 6 September 2023.