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Thiruvilaiyadal

Thiruvilaiyadal (transl. The Divine Game) is a 1965 Indian Tamil-language Hindu mythological film written, directed and co-produced by A. P. Nagarajan. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan, Savitri, and K. B. Sundarambal, with T. S. Balaiah, R. Muthuraman, Nagesh, T. R. Mahalingam, K. Sarangapani, Devika, Manorama, and Nagarajan in supporting roles. K. V. Mahadevan composed the film's soundtrack and score, and Kannadasan and Sankaradas Swamigal wrote the song lyrics.

Thiruvilaiyadal
Theatrical release poster
Directed byA. P. Nagarajan
Screenplay byA. P. Nagarajan
Based onThiruvilaiyadal Puranam
by Paranjothi Munivar
Produced by
  • A. P. Nagarajan
  • A. M. Shahul Hameed
Starring
Narrated byA. P. Nagarajan
CinematographyK. S. Prasad
Edited by
  • M. N. Rajan
  • T. R. Natarajan
Music byK. V. Mahadevan
Production
company
Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures
Distributed bySivaji Films
Release date
  • 31 July 1965 (1965-07-31)
Running time
155 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Thiruvilaiyadal was inspired by the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam: a collection of sixty-four Shaivite devotional, epic stories, written in the 16th century by Paranjothi Munivar, which record the actions (and antics) of Shiva on Earth in a number of disguises to test his devotees. Thiruvilaiyadal depicts four of the stories. The first is about the poets Dharumi and Nakkeerar; the second concerns Dhakshayani. The third recounts how Shiva's future wife, Parvati, is born as a fisherwoman; Shiva, in the guise of a fisherman, finds her and marries her. The fourth story is about the singers Banabhathirar and Hemanatha Bhagavathar.

Thiruvilaiyadal was released on 31 July 1965 to critical praise for its screenplay, dialogue, direction, music and the performances of Ganesan, Nagesh and Balaiah. The film was a commercial success, running for over twenty-five weeks in many theatres and becoming a silver jubilee film. It was also responsible for a resurgence in devotional and mythological cinema, since it was released when Tamil cinema was primarily producing social films.[a] Thiruvilaiyadal received the Certificate of Merit for the Second-Best Feature Film in Tamil at the 13th National Film Awards and the Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil. A digitally-restored version was released in September 2012, which was also a commercial success.

Plot edit

The Hindu god Shiva gives a sacred mango fruit, brought by the sage Narada, to his elder son Vinayaka as a prize for outsmarting his younger brother Muruga in a competition. Angry with his father, Muruga (dressed as a hermit) goes to Palani. He meets Avvaiyar, one of his devotees, along the way. Despite her attempts to convince Muruga to return to Mount Kailash, he remains adamant about his decision to leave his family. His mother, the goddess Parvati, arrives there and tells the stories of four of Shiva's divine games to calm Muruga.

The first story is set in Madurai, the capital city of the Pandya Kingdom. Shenbagapandian, the king, wants to find the answer to a question posed by his wife (whether the fragrance of a woman's hair is natural or artificial), and announces a reward of 1,000 gold coins to anyone who can come up with the answer. Dharumi, a poor poet, desperately wants the reward, and starts to break down in the Meenakshi Amman Temple. Shiva, hearing him weeping, takes the form of a poet and gives Dharumi a poem containing the answer. Overjoyed, Dharumi takes the poem to Shenbagapandian's court and recites it; however, the court's head poet Nakkeerar claims that the poem's meaning is incorrect. On hearing this, Shiva argues with Nakkeerar about the poem's accuracy and burns him to ashes when he refuses to relent. Later, Shiva revives Nakkeerar and says that he only wanted to test his knowledge. Realising it was Shiva's will that Dharumi should get the reward, Nakkeerar requests Shenbagapandian to give it to Dharumi.

The second story focuses on Shiva marrying Sati against the will of her father, Daksha. Daksha performs a Mahayajna without inviting his son-in-law. Sati asks Shiva's permission to go to the ceremony, but Shiva refuses to let her go because he feels that no good will come from it. Sati disobeys him and goes, only to be insulted by Daksha. She curses her father and returns to Shiva, who is angry with her. Sati says that they are one; without her, there is no Shiva. He disagrees, and burns her to ashes. He then performs his Tandava, which is noticed by the Devas, who pacify him. Shiva restores Sati to life (who is reborn as Parvati) and accepts their oneness.

In the third story, Parvati is banished by Shiva when she is momentarily distracted while listening to his explanation of the Vedas. Parvati, now born as Kayarkanni, is the daughter of a fisherman. When she is playing with her friends, Shiva approaches in the guise of a fisherman and tries to flirt with her. The fishermen are troubled by a giant shark who disrupts their way of life, and Shiva says that he alone can defeat the shark. After a long battle, Shiva subdues the shark (who is the bull deity Nandi in disguise) and marries Parvati.

The last story is about Banabathirar, a devotional singer. Hemanatha Bhagavathar, a talented singer, tries to conquer the Pandya Kingdom when he challenges its musicians. The king's minister advises the king to seek Banabathirar's help against Bhagavathar. When the other musicians spurn the competition, the king orders Banabathirar to compete against Bhagavathar. Knowing that he cannot win, the troubled Banabathirar prays to Shiva—who appears outside Bhagavathar's house in the form of a firewood vendor the night before the competition, and shatters his arrogance by singing "Paattum Naane". Shiva introduces himself to Bhagavathar as Banabathirar's student. Sheepish at hearing this, Bhagavathar leaves the kingdom immediately and leaves a letter for Shiva to give to Banabathirar. Shiva gives the letter to Banabathirar, and reveals his true identity; Banabathirar thanks him for his help.

After listening to the stories, Muruga realises that this too was one of Shiva's divine games to test his patience; he then reconciles with his family. The film ends with Avvaiyar singing "Vaasi Vaasi" and "Ondraanavan Uruvil", in praise of Shiva and Parvati.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

In 1965, after the critical and commercial success of Navarathri (1964), its director A. P. Nagarajan and producer A. M. Shahul Hameed came together to make a film entitled Siva-Leela, later retitled Thiruvilaiyadal. It was inspired by the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam, a collection of sixty-four 16th-century Shaivite devotional epic stories by Paranjothi Munivar, which describe the actions (and antics) of Shiva on Earth in a number of disguises to test his devotees.[6][7]

Four of the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam's stories are depicted in the film,[6][8] including the story where the Tamil poet Nakkeerar confronts Shiva over an error in his poem, exaggerating his sensitivity to the right and the wrong. Nagarajan had previously used this story as a play within a film in K. Somu's Naan Petra Selvam (1956).[9] In addition to directing, Nagarajan co-produced Thiruvilaiyadal under the banner of Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures,[10] and wrote the screenplay.[11] M. N. Rajan and T. R. Natarajan edited Thiruvilaiyadal; K. S. Prasad and Ganga were the film's cinematographer and art director, respectively.[12]

Sivaji Ganesan was cast as Shiva,[13] and Savitri as the goddess Parvati.[14] R. Rangasamy did the make-up for Ganesan,[15] and Savitri was given green make-up to portray her character.[16] K. B. Sundarambal was chosen to play Avvaiyar, reprising her role in the 1953 film of the same name.[17][18] Nagesh was cast as Dharumi, and had a call sheet of one-and-a-half days to finish his portion.[19][20] Besides directing, producing and writing, Nagarajan appeared as Nakkeerar.[13] M. Balamuralikrishna initially wanted to portray Hemanatha Bhagavathar but Nagarajan refused, believing T. S. Balaiah would be able to emote the character better. Balamuralikrishna agreed, and remained on the film as a singer.[21]

Filming edit

We had to talk as we walked. We could not break up the dialogues for our convenience as that would slow down the tempo of the shot. We had such a degree of understanding that we enacted the scene with immaculate timing and with the required expressions in one continuous shot.

— Sivaji Ganesan on his experience filming with Nagesh, Autobiography of an Actor: Sivaji Ganesan, October 1928 – July 2001.[22]

Thiruvilaiyadal was shot on a custom-built set at Vasu Studios in Madras (now Chennai).[19] It was filmed in Eastmancolor, thereby making it Nagarajan's first picture to be shot in colour.[23][24] Before he began filming, Nagesh learned that Ganesan's arrival was delayed because his make-up had not been completed; he asked Nagarajan whether they could film any solo sequences, which included a scene where Dharumi laments his misfortune in the Meenakshi Amman Temple.[19][20] While filming, Nagesh spontaneously came up with the line "Varamaattan. Varamaattan. Avan nichchaiyam varamaattan. Enakku nalla theriyum. Varamaattan" (He won't come. He won't come. He will definitely not come. I know he won't come).[19][25][26] According to the actor, two incidents inspired him. One involved two assistant directors discussing whether Ganesan would be ready before or after lunch; one said he would be ready, the other said not. The other was when Nagesh overheard a passerby talking to himself about how the world had fallen on bad times.[19][25] He also took inspiration from Mylapore Krishnasamy Iyer.[20]

Dubbing of the scenes with Nagesh and Ganesan was completed soon after the footage was shot. After watching the scenes twice, Ganesan asked Nagarajan not to remove even a single frame of Nagesh's portions from the final cut, because he believed that those scenes along with the ones involving Balaiah would be the highlights of the film.[25][27][26] The conversations between Shiva and Dharumi were improvised by Ganesan and Nagesh, not scripted by Nagarajan.[28]Thiruvilaiyadal was the first Tamil film since Jagathalapratapan (1944) in which the lead actor plays five roles in one scene. Ganesan does so during the song "Paattum Naane", where he sings and plays four instruments: the veena, mridangam, flute and jathi.[29][30] Asked by his biographer, T. S. Narayanawami, about the Tandava he performed in the film, Ganesan replied that he simply learned the movements necessary for the dance and followed the choreographer's instructions.[31][32] Thiruvilaiyadal was the last film produced by Hameed, who died on 20 May 1965, a few days after the filming ended.[6] Neither he nor Nagarajan was credited in the film as producers.[33]

Themes edit

The film's title is explained in an introductory voiceover. Greeting the audience, it quotes Shiva's literary epic of the same name. According to the narrator (Nagarajan), Shiva does what he does to test the patience of his disciples; the god plays games, which evoke more devotion in the hearts of his worshippers. Therefore, the film's title refers to the games played by Shiva.[34] According to Hari Narayan of The Hindu, Thiruvilaiyadal celebrates the deeds of a god (in this case, Shiva) by depicting miracles performed by him.[35] R. Bharathwaj wrote for The Times of India that the story of the competition between Hemanatha Bhagavathar and Banabathirar is comparable to a contest between Carnatic music composer Shyama Shastri and Kesavvaya, a singer from Bobbili.[36][37] Sastri had sought divine intervention from the goddess Kamakshi to defeat Kesavayya, mirroring Banabathirar's plea for Shiva's help.[37] Mana Baskaran of Hindu Tamil Thisai notes that the film, despite being a mythological, also depicts contemporary social issues.[1]

Music edit

K. V. Mahadevan composed the film's soundtrack and score,[38][39] Kannadasan wrote the song lyrics except for the first portions of "Pazham Neeyappa", which were written by Sankaradas Swamigal.[40] Nagarajan initially wanted Sirkazhi Govindarajan to sing "Oru Naal Podhuma", but he refused and M. Balamuralikrishna sang the song.[41] Each line in the song is from a different raga,[42][43] including Darbar,[44] Todi,[45] Maand,[46] and Mohanam.[43] "Pazham Neeyappa" is based on three ragas: Darbari Kanada,[47] Shanmukhapriya and Kambhoji.[48][49][50] "Isai Thamizh", "Paattum Naane" and "Illadhathondrillai" are based on the Abheri,[51][52] Gourimanohari and Simhendramadhyamam ragas, respectively.[53][54][55] Vikku Vinayakram and Cheena Kutty were the ghatam and mridangam players, respectively, for "Paattum Naane".[56][57] Subbiah Asari made the Macha Veena seen in "Paattum Naane", and the crew of Thiruvilaiyadal purchased it from him for 10,000 (equivalent to 670,000 or US$8,400 in 2023).[58]

Songs from the album, including "Pazham Neeyappa", "Oru Naal Podhuma", "Isai Thamizh", "Paarthal Pasumaram" and "Paattum Naane", became popular with the Tamil diaspora.[2] Film historian Randor Guy, in his 1997 book Starlight, Starbright: The Early Tamil Cinema, said "Pazham Neeyappa" (performed by Sundarambal) was the "favourite of millions".[59] Singer Charulatha Mani wrote for The Hindu that Sundarambal produced a "pure and pristine depiction" of the Neelambari raga in "Vaasi Vaasi", and praised Balamuralikrishna's rendition of "Oru Naal Podhuma".[60][44]

Track list
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Pazham Neeyappa"K. B. Sundarambal06:29
2."Oru Naal Podhuma"M. Balamuralikrishna05:28
3."Isai Thamizh"T. R. Mahalingam03:50
4."Paarthal Pasumaram"T. M. Soundararajan03:44
5."Paattum Naane"T. M. Soundararajan05:54
6."Podhigai Malai Uchiyiley"P. B. Sreenivas, S. Janaki02:52
7."Ondraanavan Uruvil"K. B. Sundarambal03:04
8."Illadhathondrillai"T. R. Mahalingam03:08
9."Vaasi Vaasi"K. B. Sundarambal05:57
10."Om Namasivaya"Sirkazhi Govindarajan, P. Susheela03:32
11."Neela Chelai Katti Konda"P. Susheela04:40
Total length:45:30

Release edit

Thiruvilaiyadal was released on 31 July 1965,[61] and distributed by Sivaji Films.[62] During a screening at a Madras cinema, several women went into a religious frenzy during a scene with Avvaiyar and Murugan. The film was temporarily suspended so the women could be attended to.[59] According to artist Jeeva, the management of the Raja Theatre built a replica of Mount Kailash to promote Thiruvilaiyadal.[63] A commercial success, the film ran for twenty-five weeks at the Ganesan-owned Shanti Theatre.[64] It also ran for twenty-five weeks at the Crown and Bhuvaneshwari Theatres in Madras and other theatres across South India,[65] becoming a silver jubilee film.[b] It added to Ganesan's string of successful films.[67] At the 13th National Film Awards, Thiruvilaiyadal received the Certificate of Merit for the Second-Best Feature Film in Tamil.[68] It also received the Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil.[69]

Reception edit

Thiruvilayadal was praised by critics.[6] The Tamil magazine Kalki, in a review dated 22 August 1965, considered the film a victory for Tamil cinema.[4] Shanmugam Pillai and Meenakshi Ammal of Ananda Vikatan jointly reviewed the film on the same day. Shanmugam Pillai praised the tandava and said Nagarajan deserved to be appreciated for taking such a long epic and making it into a film. Although Meenakshi Ammal felt it was unnecessary to have a Tamil poet (Dharumi) do comedy, Shanmugam Pillai applauded Nagesh for showing his comic skills even in a mythological. Meenakshi Ammal noted that at a time where social films[a] were dominating Tamil cinema, a mythological like Thiruvilaiyadal was a welcome change and deserved another viewing.[70]

On 7 August 1965, The Indian Express appreciated Nagarajan for treating the four episodes adapted from the Thiruvilayadal Puranam with "due reverence and respect" and chaste Tamil dialogue (a "delight to the ears"). However, the reviewer derided Nagarajan's "unimaginative" handling of the fisherman episode and Ganesan's "awkward" gestures, which turned what would have been a "sublime, divine love story" into a typical "boy-meets-girl affair". They also criticised technical aspects such as "jumpy" shots, the colour scheme, Shiva's fight with the shark and the facial make-up. The reviewer criticised Ganesan for overacting while opining that Savitri had nothing to do, but commended the performances of Sundarambal, Mahalingam, Balaiah, Nagesh, Sarangapani, Muthuraman and Nagarajan.[71]

On 4 September 1965, T. M. Ramachandran wrote for Sport and Pastime, "Both for the devout Hindu and the average movie fan, the picture provides such elements that sustain their interest from beginning to end." He noted that although there were anachronisms such as telephone and telegraph wires visible, "these defects pale into insignificance before the gloss and satisfying impact of the film as a whole on the minds of cinegoers." Ramachandran lauded Ganesan's performance, his tandava, the performances of Savitri, Nagarajan and the other supporting actors, Sundarambal's singing, K. S. Prasad's cinematography and Ganga's art direction.[72]

Re-release edit

In mid-2012, legal issues arose when attempts were made to digitally re-release the film. G. Vijaya of Vijaya Pictures filed a lawsuit against Gemini Colour Laboratory and Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures for attempting to re-release the film without her company's permission. In December 1975, Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures transferred the film rights to Movie Film Circuit; MFC transferred them to Vijaya Pictures on 18 May 1976.[73] Vijaya Pictures approached Gemini to digitise the film for re-release, but Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures asked laboratory officials not to release the film without their consent. Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures disputed Vijaya's claim by running an advertisement in a Tamil newspaper on 18 May 2012 saying that it owned the film's rights, and anyone who wanted to exhibit it in a digital format should only do so with their permission. The judge who presided over the case ordered that the status quo be maintained by both parties.[73][74]

Encouraged by the success of the re-release of Karnan (1964), C. N. Paramasivam (Nagarajan's son and the head of Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures) found film negatives of Thiruvilayadal in a Gemini Films storage facility. Paramasivam restored the film and re-released it in CinemaScope in September 2012.[75][2] The digitised version premiered at the Woodlands Theater in Royapettah, Chennai.[76][77] It received public acclaim and became a commercial success.[78][79] Producer Ramkumar (Ganesan's son) said about the digitised version, "It was like watching a new film".[80]

Legacy and influence edit

Only two actors can pull the scene away from under my feet when we face the camera together – one is M. R. Radha, the other, Nagesh.

— Ganesan, while listening to an audio version of Thiruvilaiyadal[81]

Thiruvilaiyadal has attained cult status in Tamil cinema.[82] Along with Karnan, it was responsible for a resurgence in devotional and mythological cinema, since it was released at a time when Tamil cinema primarily made social films.[83][84] Film critic Baradwaj Rangan called Thiruvilaiyadal "the best" Tamil film epic released during the 1960s.[85] Nagarajan and Ganesan collaborated on many more films in the genre, including Saraswathi Sabatham (1966), Thiruvarutchelvar (1967), Kandhan Karunai (1967) and Thirumal Perumai (1968).[27][86][87] The film was a milestone of Nagesh's career, and the character of Dharumi is cited as one of his finest roles.[81][88][89]

In July 2007, when S. R. Ashok Kumar of The Hindu asked eight notable directors to list ten films they liked the most, C. V. Sridhar and Ameer chose Thiruvilaiyadal. Ameer found the film "imaginative", depicting mythology in "an interesting way", and called it "one of the best films in the annals of Tamil cinema."[90] After Nagesh's death in 2009, Thiruvilaiyadal ranked fifth on the Sify list of "10 Best Films of late Nagesh"; according to its entry, the actor "was at his comic best in this film".[91] Thiruvilaiyadal is included with other Sivaji Ganesan films in 8th Ulaga Adhisayam Sivaji, a compilation DVD with Ganesan's "iconic performances in the form of scenes, songs and stunts", which was released in May 2012.[92]

The film has been parodied and referenced in cinema, television and theatre. Notable films alluding to Thiruvilaiyadal include Poove Unakkaga (1996),[93] Mahaprabhu (1996),[94] Kaathala Kaathala (1998),[95] Vanna Thamizh Pattu (2000),[96] Middle Class Madhavan (2001),[97] Kamarasu (2002),[98] Kanthaswamy (2009)[99] and Oru Kal Oru Kannadi (2012).[100] In his review of Oru Kanniyum Moonu Kalavaanikalum (2014), Baradwaj Rangan noted that the use of touchscreen human facial icons on mobile apps was a "Thiruvilaiyadal-like framing device".[101] The Star Vijay comedy series Lollu Sabha parodied the film twice: in an episode of the same name,[102] and in a contemporary version titled Naveena Thiruvilayaadal.[103]

After T. M. Soundararajan's death in May 2013, M. Ramesh of Business Line wrote: "The unforgettable sequences from ... [Thiruvilaiyadal] ... have forever divided the world of Tamil music lovers in two: those who believe that the [Oru Naal Podhuma] of the swollen-headed Hemanatha Bhagavathar could not be bested, and those who believe that Lord Shiva's Paattum Naane Bhavamum Naane won the debate hands down".[104] The character of Dharumi was parodied in Iruttula Thedatheenga, a play staged in November 2013.[105] In a January 2015 interview with The Times of India, playwright Y. G. Mahendran said: "Most character artists today lack variety [...] Show me one actor in India currently who can do a [Veerapandiya] Kattabomman, a VOC, a Vietnam Veedu, a Galatta Kalyanam and a Thiruvilayadal [sic]."[106] After Manorama's death in October 2015, Thiruvilaiyadal was ranked eighth on The New Indian Express' list of top movies featuring the actress.[107]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b In Indian cinema terminology, social films (or simply socials) are films with a contemporary setting, as opposed to those which have mythological and period settings.[108][109]
  2. ^ A silver jubilee film is one that runs for at least twenty-five weeks in a single theatre.[66]

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c [Thiruvilayadal released again in digital technology]. Maalai Malar (in Tamil). 6 September 2015. Archived from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  3. ^ Nagarajan 1965, Opening credits, from 0:55 to 1:20.
  4. ^ a b "திருவிளையாடல்" [Thiruvilaiyadal]. Kalki (in Tamil). 22 August 1965. p. 69. Archived from the original on 9 September 2023. Retrieved 9 September 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ Rajya V. R. 2014, p. 69.
  6. ^ a b c d Nainar, Nahla (31 August 2018). "Tinsel-edged memories". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 4 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  7. ^ Thiagarajan 1965, p. xviii.
  8. ^ David 1983, p. 40.
  9. ^ Guy 1997, pp. 280–281.
  10. ^ "1965 – திருவிளையாடல் ஸ்ரீ விஜயலஷ்மி பிக் (கலர்)". Lakshman Sruthi (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
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  12. ^ Nagarajan 1965, Opening credits, from 1:40 to 2:07.
  13. ^ a b Guy 1997, p. 281.
  14. ^ Tilak, Sudha G. (22 May 2004). . Tehelka. Archived from the original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  15. ^ Kannan, Uma (27 June 2011). . The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  16. ^ தீனதயாளன், பா. (3 July 2015). "சாவித்ரி-9. தங்கச் சரிகை சேல!". Dinamani (in Tamil). p. 2. Archived from the original on 20 August 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
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  18. ^ "தென்னகத்தின் இசைக்குயில் மறைந்தது; தமிழ் சினிமா முன்னோடிகள் தொடர்-19". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil). 28 December 2015. from the original on 1 June 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
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  20. ^ a b c நாகேஷ் (25 April 2004). "காமெடிக்கு லாஜிக் கிடையாது!" [Comedy has no logic!] (PDF). Kalki (in Tamil). pp. 76–78. Retrieved 1 April 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  21. ^ "பிளாஷ்பேக் : ஹேமநாத பாகவதரை விட்டுக்கொடுக்காத ஏ.பி.நாகராஜன் – டி.எஸ்.பாலையா பிறந்தநாள் ஸ்பெஷல்!". Dinamalar (in Tamil). 23 August 2018. Archived from the original on 6 September 2018. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  22. ^ Ganesan & Narayana Swamy 2007, p. 150.
  23. ^ Nagarajan 1965, From 0:43 to 0:47.
  24. ^ [A. P. Nagarajan, the man who created Thiruvilaiyadal and Thillana Mohanambal]. Maalai Malar (in Tamil). 9 December 2011. Archived from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  25. ^ a b c [Nagesh, the man who lived the role of Dharumi in Thiruvilaiyadal]. Maalai Malar (in Tamil). 10 May 2012. Archived from the original on 8 October 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  26. ^ a b நாகேஷ் (2 May 2004). "தருமி பட்ட அவமானம்!" [The humiliation Dharumi faced!]. Kalki (in Tamil). pp. 49–51. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  27. ^ a b Raman, Mohan V. (14 April 2012). "Master of mythological cinema". The Hindu. from the original on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
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  29. ^ "10 வேடத்தில் நடித்த முதல் நடிகர் பி.யு சின்னப்பா ! ( தமிழ்சினிமா முன்னோடிகள்-தொடர் 24)". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil). 14 March 2016. from the original on 1 June 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  30. ^ "எம்ஜிஆரின் நாயகர்... சிவாஜியின் முன்மாதிரி..." Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). 22 September 2019. from the original on 5 January 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  31. ^ Ganesan & Narayana Swamy 2007, p. 158.
  32. ^ Nagarajan 1965, From 1:13:35 to 1:16:18.
  33. ^ Nagarajan 1965, Opening credits, from 0:00 to 3:25.
  34. ^ Rajya V. R. 2014, pp. 46–47.
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Thiruvilaiyadal at IMDb  

thiruvilaiyadal, this, article, about, 1965, film, 2006, film, thiruvilaiyaadal, aarambam, transl, divine, game, 1965, indian, tamil, language, hindu, mythological, film, written, directed, produced, nagarajan, film, stars, sivaji, ganesan, savitri, sundaramba. This article is about the 1965 film For the 2006 film see Thiruvilaiyaadal Aarambam Thiruvilaiyadal transl The Divine Game is a 1965 Indian Tamil language Hindu mythological film written directed and co produced by A P Nagarajan The film stars Sivaji Ganesan Savitri and K B Sundarambal with T S Balaiah R Muthuraman Nagesh T R Mahalingam K Sarangapani Devika Manorama and Nagarajan in supporting roles K V Mahadevan composed the film s soundtrack and score and Kannadasan and Sankaradas Swamigal wrote the song lyrics ThiruvilaiyadalTheatrical release posterDirected byA P NagarajanScreenplay byA P NagarajanBased onThiruvilaiyadal Puranamby Paranjothi MunivarProduced byA P Nagarajan A M Shahul HameedStarringSivaji Ganesan Savitri K B SundarambalNarrated byA P NagarajanCinematographyK S PrasadEdited byM N Rajan T R NatarajanMusic byK V MahadevanProductioncompanySri Vijayalakshmi PicturesDistributed bySivaji FilmsRelease date31 July 1965 1965 07 31 Running time155 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageTamilThiruvilaiyadal was inspired by the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam a collection of sixty four Shaivite devotional epic stories written in the 16th century by Paranjothi Munivar which record the actions and antics of Shiva on Earth in a number of disguises to test his devotees Thiruvilaiyadal depicts four of the stories The first is about the poets Dharumi and Nakkeerar the second concerns Dhakshayani The third recounts how Shiva s future wife Parvati is born as a fisherwoman Shiva in the guise of a fisherman finds her and marries her The fourth story is about the singers Banabhathirar and Hemanatha Bhagavathar Thiruvilaiyadal was released on 31 July 1965 to critical praise for its screenplay dialogue direction music and the performances of Ganesan Nagesh and Balaiah The film was a commercial success running for over twenty five weeks in many theatres and becoming a silver jubilee film It was also responsible for a resurgence in devotional and mythological cinema since it was released when Tamil cinema was primarily producing social films a Thiruvilaiyadal received the Certificate of Merit for the Second Best Feature Film in Tamil at the 13th National Film Awards and the Filmfare Award for Best Film Tamil A digitally restored version was released in September 2012 which was also a commercial success Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Filming 4 Themes 5 Music 6 Release 7 Reception 8 Re release 9 Legacy and influence 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksPlot editThe Hindu god Shiva gives a sacred mango fruit brought by the sage Narada to his elder son Vinayaka as a prize for outsmarting his younger brother Muruga in a competition Angry with his father Muruga dressed as a hermit goes to Palani He meets Avvaiyar one of his devotees along the way Despite her attempts to convince Muruga to return to Mount Kailash he remains adamant about his decision to leave his family His mother the goddess Parvati arrives there and tells the stories of four of Shiva s divine games to calm Muruga The first story is set in Madurai the capital city of the Pandya Kingdom Shenbagapandian the king wants to find the answer to a question posed by his wife whether the fragrance of a woman s hair is natural or artificial and announces a reward of 1 000 gold coins to anyone who can come up with the answer Dharumi a poor poet desperately wants the reward and starts to break down in the Meenakshi Amman Temple Shiva hearing him weeping takes the form of a poet and gives Dharumi a poem containing the answer Overjoyed Dharumi takes the poem to Shenbagapandian s court and recites it however the court s head poet Nakkeerar claims that the poem s meaning is incorrect On hearing this Shiva argues with Nakkeerar about the poem s accuracy and burns him to ashes when he refuses to relent Later Shiva revives Nakkeerar and says that he only wanted to test his knowledge Realising it was Shiva s will that Dharumi should get the reward Nakkeerar requests Shenbagapandian to give it to Dharumi The second story focuses on Shiva marrying Sati against the will of her father Daksha Daksha performs a Mahayajna without inviting his son in law Sati asks Shiva s permission to go to the ceremony but Shiva refuses to let her go because he feels that no good will come from it Sati disobeys him and goes only to be insulted by Daksha She curses her father and returns to Shiva who is angry with her Sati says that they are one without her there is no Shiva He disagrees and burns her to ashes He then performs his Tandava which is noticed by the Devas who pacify him Shiva restores Sati to life who is reborn as Parvati and accepts their oneness In the third story Parvati is banished by Shiva when she is momentarily distracted while listening to his explanation of the Vedas Parvati now born as Kayarkanni is the daughter of a fisherman When she is playing with her friends Shiva approaches in the guise of a fisherman and tries to flirt with her The fishermen are troubled by a giant shark who disrupts their way of life and Shiva says that he alone can defeat the shark After a long battle Shiva subdues the shark who is the bull deity Nandi in disguise and marries Parvati The last story is about Banabathirar a devotional singer Hemanatha Bhagavathar a talented singer tries to conquer the Pandya Kingdom when he challenges its musicians The king s minister advises the king to seek Banabathirar s help against Bhagavathar When the other musicians spurn the competition the king orders Banabathirar to compete against Bhagavathar Knowing that he cannot win the troubled Banabathirar prays to Shiva who appears outside Bhagavathar s house in the form of a firewood vendor the night before the competition and shatters his arrogance by singing Paattum Naane Shiva introduces himself to Bhagavathar as Banabathirar s student Sheepish at hearing this Bhagavathar leaves the kingdom immediately and leaves a letter for Shiva to give to Banabathirar Shiva gives the letter to Banabathirar and reveals his true identity Banabathirar thanks him for his help After listening to the stories Muruga realises that this too was one of Shiva s divine games to test his patience he then reconciles with his family The film ends with Avvaiyar singing Vaasi Vaasi and Ondraanavan Uruvil in praise of Shiva and Parvati Cast editSivaji Ganesan as Shiva Savitri as Parvati Sati Kayarkanni Kamakshi and Kali amman K B Sundarambal as Avvaiyar T S Balaiah as Hemanatha Bhagavathar R Muthuraman as Shenbagapandian 1 Nagesh as Dharumi 2 O A K Thevar as Daksha 3 A Karunanidhi as Sovai T R Mahalingam as Banabathirar 1 A P Nagarajan as Nakkeerar K Sarangapani as Kayarkanni s father E R Sahadevan as Pandya King Varagunapandiyan 1 Devika as Shenbagapandian s wife 4 Manorama as Ponni 5 G Sakunthala as Banabathirar s wife Baby Susarita as MuruganProduction editDevelopment edit In 1965 after the critical and commercial success of Navarathri 1964 its director A P Nagarajan and producer A M Shahul Hameed came together to make a film entitled Siva Leela later retitled Thiruvilaiyadal It was inspired by the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam a collection of sixty four 16th century Shaivite devotional epic stories by Paranjothi Munivar which describe the actions and antics of Shiva on Earth in a number of disguises to test his devotees 6 7 Four of the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam s stories are depicted in the film 6 8 including the story where the Tamil poet Nakkeerar confronts Shiva over an error in his poem exaggerating his sensitivity to the right and the wrong Nagarajan had previously used this story as a play within a film in K Somu s Naan Petra Selvam 1956 9 In addition to directing Nagarajan co produced Thiruvilaiyadal under the banner of Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures 10 and wrote the screenplay 11 M N Rajan and T R Natarajan edited Thiruvilaiyadal K S Prasad and Ganga were the film s cinematographer and art director respectively 12 Sivaji Ganesan was cast as Shiva 13 and Savitri as the goddess Parvati 14 R Rangasamy did the make up for Ganesan 15 and Savitri was given green make up to portray her character 16 K B Sundarambal was chosen to play Avvaiyar reprising her role in the 1953 film of the same name 17 18 Nagesh was cast as Dharumi and had a call sheet of one and a half days to finish his portion 19 20 Besides directing producing and writing Nagarajan appeared as Nakkeerar 13 M Balamuralikrishna initially wanted to portray Hemanatha Bhagavathar but Nagarajan refused believing T S Balaiah would be able to emote the character better Balamuralikrishna agreed and remained on the film as a singer 21 Filming edit We had to talk as we walked We could not break up the dialogues for our convenience as that would slow down the tempo of the shot We had such a degree of understanding that we enacted the scene with immaculate timing and with the required expressions in one continuous shot Sivaji Ganesan on his experience filming with Nagesh Autobiography of an Actor Sivaji Ganesan October 1928 July 2001 22 Thiruvilaiyadal was shot on a custom built set at Vasu Studios in Madras now Chennai 19 It was filmed in Eastmancolor thereby making it Nagarajan s first picture to be shot in colour 23 24 Before he began filming Nagesh learned that Ganesan s arrival was delayed because his make up had not been completed he asked Nagarajan whether they could film any solo sequences which included a scene where Dharumi laments his misfortune in the Meenakshi Amman Temple 19 20 While filming Nagesh spontaneously came up with the line Varamaattan Varamaattan Avan nichchaiyam varamaattan Enakku nalla theriyum Varamaattan He won t come He won t come He will definitely not come I know he won t come 19 25 26 According to the actor two incidents inspired him One involved two assistant directors discussing whether Ganesan would be ready before or after lunch one said he would be ready the other said not The other was when Nagesh overheard a passerby talking to himself about how the world had fallen on bad times 19 25 He also took inspiration from Mylapore Krishnasamy Iyer 20 Dubbing of the scenes with Nagesh and Ganesan was completed soon after the footage was shot After watching the scenes twice Ganesan asked Nagarajan not to remove even a single frame of Nagesh s portions from the final cut because he believed that those scenes along with the ones involving Balaiah would be the highlights of the film 25 27 26 The conversations between Shiva and Dharumi were improvised by Ganesan and Nagesh not scripted by Nagarajan 28 Thiruvilaiyadal was the first Tamil film since Jagathalapratapan 1944 in which the lead actor plays five roles in one scene Ganesan does so during the song Paattum Naane where he sings and plays four instruments the veena mridangam flute and jathi 29 30 Asked by his biographer T S Narayanawami about the Tandava he performed in the film Ganesan replied that he simply learned the movements necessary for the dance and followed the choreographer s instructions 31 32 Thiruvilaiyadal was the last film produced by Hameed who died on 20 May 1965 a few days after the filming ended 6 Neither he nor Nagarajan was credited in the film as producers 33 Themes editThe film s title is explained in an introductory voiceover Greeting the audience it quotes Shiva s literary epic of the same name According to the narrator Nagarajan Shiva does what he does to test the patience of his disciples the god plays games which evoke more devotion in the hearts of his worshippers Therefore the film s title refers to the games played by Shiva 34 According to Hari Narayan of The Hindu Thiruvilaiyadal celebrates the deeds of a god in this case Shiva by depicting miracles performed by him 35 R Bharathwaj wrote for The Times of India that the story of the competition between Hemanatha Bhagavathar and Banabathirar is comparable to a contest between Carnatic music composer Shyama Shastri and Kesavvaya a singer from Bobbili 36 37 Sastri had sought divine intervention from the goddess Kamakshi to defeat Kesavayya mirroring Banabathirar s plea for Shiva s help 37 Mana Baskaran of Hindu Tamil Thisai notes that the film despite being a mythological also depicts contemporary social issues 1 Music editK V Mahadevan composed the film s soundtrack and score 38 39 Kannadasan wrote the song lyrics except for the first portions of Pazham Neeyappa which were written by Sankaradas Swamigal 40 Nagarajan initially wanted Sirkazhi Govindarajan to sing Oru Naal Podhuma but he refused and M Balamuralikrishna sang the song 41 Each line in the song is from a different raga 42 43 including Darbar 44 Todi 45 Maand 46 and Mohanam 43 Pazham Neeyappa is based on three ragas Darbari Kanada 47 Shanmukhapriya and Kambhoji 48 49 50 Isai Thamizh Paattum Naane and Illadhathondrillai are based on the Abheri 51 52 Gourimanohari and Simhendramadhyamam ragas respectively 53 54 55 Vikku Vinayakram and Cheena Kutty were the ghatam and mridangam players respectively for Paattum Naane 56 57 Subbiah Asari made the Macha Veena seen in Paattum Naane and the crew of Thiruvilaiyadal purchased it from him for 10 000 equivalent to 670 000 or US 8 400 in 2023 58 Songs from the album including Pazham Neeyappa Oru Naal Podhuma Isai Thamizh Paarthal Pasumaram and Paattum Naane became popular with the Tamil diaspora 2 Film historian Randor Guy in his 1997 book Starlight Starbright The Early Tamil Cinema said Pazham Neeyappa performed by Sundarambal was the favourite of millions 59 Singer Charulatha Mani wrote for The Hindu that Sundarambal produced a pure and pristine depiction of the Neelambari raga in Vaasi Vaasi and praised Balamuralikrishna s rendition of Oru Naal Podhuma 60 44 Track listNo TitleSinger s Length1 Pazham Neeyappa K B Sundarambal06 292 Oru Naal Podhuma M Balamuralikrishna05 283 Isai Thamizh T R Mahalingam03 504 Paarthal Pasumaram T M Soundararajan03 445 Paattum Naane T M Soundararajan05 546 Podhigai Malai Uchiyiley P B Sreenivas S Janaki02 527 Ondraanavan Uruvil K B Sundarambal03 048 Illadhathondrillai T R Mahalingam03 089 Vaasi Vaasi K B Sundarambal05 5710 Om Namasivaya Sirkazhi Govindarajan P Susheela03 3211 Neela Chelai Katti Konda P Susheela04 40Total length 45 30Release editThiruvilaiyadal was released on 31 July 1965 61 and distributed by Sivaji Films 62 During a screening at a Madras cinema several women went into a religious frenzy during a scene with Avvaiyar and Murugan The film was temporarily suspended so the women could be attended to 59 According to artist Jeeva the management of the Raja Theatre built a replica of Mount Kailash to promote Thiruvilaiyadal 63 A commercial success the film ran for twenty five weeks at the Ganesan owned Shanti Theatre 64 It also ran for twenty five weeks at the Crown and Bhuvaneshwari Theatres in Madras and other theatres across South India 65 becoming a silver jubilee film b It added to Ganesan s string of successful films 67 At the 13th National Film Awards Thiruvilaiyadal received the Certificate of Merit for the Second Best Feature Film in Tamil 68 It also received the Filmfare Award for Best Film Tamil 69 Reception editThiruvilayadal was praised by critics 6 The Tamil magazine Kalki in a review dated 22 August 1965 considered the film a victory for Tamil cinema 4 Shanmugam Pillai and Meenakshi Ammal of Ananda Vikatan jointly reviewed the film on the same day Shanmugam Pillai praised the tandava and said Nagarajan deserved to be appreciated for taking such a long epic and making it into a film Although Meenakshi Ammal felt it was unnecessary to have a Tamil poet Dharumi do comedy Shanmugam Pillai applauded Nagesh for showing his comic skills even in a mythological Meenakshi Ammal noted that at a time where social films a were dominating Tamil cinema a mythological like Thiruvilaiyadal was a welcome change and deserved another viewing 70 On 7 August 1965 The Indian Express appreciated Nagarajan for treating the four episodes adapted from the Thiruvilayadal Puranam with due reverence and respect and chaste Tamil dialogue a delight to the ears However the reviewer derided Nagarajan s unimaginative handling of the fisherman episode and Ganesan s awkward gestures which turned what would have been a sublime divine love story into a typical boy meets girl affair They also criticised technical aspects such as jumpy shots the colour scheme Shiva s fight with the shark and the facial make up The reviewer criticised Ganesan for overacting while opining that Savitri had nothing to do but commended the performances of Sundarambal Mahalingam Balaiah Nagesh Sarangapani Muthuraman and Nagarajan 71 On 4 September 1965 T M Ramachandran wrote for Sport and Pastime Both for the devout Hindu and the average movie fan the picture provides such elements that sustain their interest from beginning to end He noted that although there were anachronisms such as telephone and telegraph wires visible these defects pale into insignificance before the gloss and satisfying impact of the film as a whole on the minds of cinegoers Ramachandran lauded Ganesan s performance his tandava the performances of Savitri Nagarajan and the other supporting actors Sundarambal s singing K S Prasad s cinematography and Ganga s art direction 72 Re release editIn mid 2012 legal issues arose when attempts were made to digitally re release the film G Vijaya of Vijaya Pictures filed a lawsuit against Gemini Colour Laboratory and Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures for attempting to re release the film without her company s permission In December 1975 Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures transferred the film rights to Movie Film Circuit MFC transferred them to Vijaya Pictures on 18 May 1976 73 Vijaya Pictures approached Gemini to digitise the film for re release but Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures asked laboratory officials not to release the film without their consent Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures disputed Vijaya s claim by running an advertisement in a Tamil newspaper on 18 May 2012 saying that it owned the film s rights and anyone who wanted to exhibit it in a digital format should only do so with their permission The judge who presided over the case ordered that the status quo be maintained by both parties 73 74 Encouraged by the success of the re release of Karnan 1964 C N Paramasivam Nagarajan s son and the head of Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures found film negatives of Thiruvilayadal in a Gemini Films storage facility Paramasivam restored the film and re released it in CinemaScope in September 2012 75 2 The digitised version premiered at the Woodlands Theater in Royapettah Chennai 76 77 It received public acclaim and became a commercial success 78 79 Producer Ramkumar Ganesan s son said about the digitised version It was like watching a new film 80 Legacy and influence editMain article Influence of Thiruvilaiyadal Only two actors can pull the scene away from under my feet when we face the camera together one is M R Radha the other Nagesh Ganesan while listening to an audio version of Thiruvilaiyadal 81 Thiruvilaiyadal has attained cult status in Tamil cinema 82 Along with Karnan it was responsible for a resurgence in devotional and mythological cinema since it was released at a time when Tamil cinema primarily made social films 83 84 Film critic Baradwaj Rangan called Thiruvilaiyadal the best Tamil film epic released during the 1960s 85 Nagarajan and Ganesan collaborated on many more films in the genre including Saraswathi Sabatham 1966 Thiruvarutchelvar 1967 Kandhan Karunai 1967 and Thirumal Perumai 1968 27 86 87 The film was a milestone of Nagesh s career and the character of Dharumi is cited as one of his finest roles 81 88 89 In July 2007 when S R Ashok Kumar of The Hindu asked eight notable directors to list ten films they liked the most C V Sridhar and Ameer chose Thiruvilaiyadal Ameer found the film imaginative depicting mythology in an interesting way and called it one of the best films in the annals of Tamil cinema 90 After Nagesh s death in 2009 Thiruvilaiyadal ranked fifth on the Sify list of 10 Best Films of late Nagesh according to its entry the actor was at his comic best in this film 91 Thiruvilaiyadal is included with other Sivaji Ganesan films in 8th Ulaga Adhisayam Sivaji a compilation DVD with Ganesan s iconic performances in the form of scenes songs and stunts which was released in May 2012 92 The film has been parodied and referenced in cinema television and theatre Notable films alluding to Thiruvilaiyadal include Poove Unakkaga 1996 93 Mahaprabhu 1996 94 Kaathala Kaathala 1998 95 Vanna Thamizh Pattu 2000 96 Middle Class Madhavan 2001 97 Kamarasu 2002 98 Kanthaswamy 2009 99 and Oru Kal Oru Kannadi 2012 100 In his review of Oru Kanniyum Moonu Kalavaanikalum 2014 Baradwaj Rangan noted that the use of touchscreen human facial icons on mobile apps was a Thiruvilaiyadal like framing device 101 The Star Vijay comedy series Lollu Sabha parodied the film twice in an episode of the same name 102 and in a contemporary version titled Naveena Thiruvilayaadal 103 After T M Soundararajan s death in May 2013 M Ramesh of Business Line wrote The unforgettable sequences from Thiruvilaiyadal have forever divided the world of Tamil music lovers in two those who believe that the Oru Naal Podhuma of the swollen headed Hemanatha Bhagavathar could not be bested and those who believe that Lord Shiva s Paattum Naane Bhavamum Naane won the debate hands down 104 The character of Dharumi was parodied in Iruttula Thedatheenga a play staged in November 2013 105 In a January 2015 interview with The Times of India playwright Y G Mahendran said Most character artists today lack variety Show me one actor in India currently who can do a Veerapandiya Kattabomman a VOC a Vietnam Veedu a Galatta Kalyanam and a Thiruvilayadal sic 106 After Manorama s death in October 2015 Thiruvilaiyadal was ranked eighth on The New Indian Express list of top movies featuring the actress 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Randor 1997 Starlight Starbright The Early Tamil Cinema Amra Publishers OCLC 1129588233 Nagarajan A P 1965 Thiruvilayadal motion picture India Sri Vijayalakshmi Pictures Panikkar K N 2002 Culture Ideology Hegemony Intellectuals and Social Consciousness in Colonial India Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 039 6 Rajadhyaksha Ashish Willemen Paul 1998 1994 Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema British Film Institute and Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 563579 5 Rajya V R Rashmi 2014 Narrative Strategies and Communication of Values in Tamil Epic Tradition Films of A P Nagarajan PDF University of Madras Sundararaman 2007 2005 Raga Chintamani A Guide to Carnatic Ragas Through Tamil Film Music 2nd ed Chennai Pichhamal Chintamani OCLC 295034757 Thiagarajan K 1965 Meenakshi Temple Madurai Meenakshi Sundareswarar Temple Renovation Committee External links editThiruvilaiyadal at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thiruvilaiyadal amp oldid 1217271331, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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