Arunagirinathar (film)

Arunagirinathar
Poster
Directed by T. R. Ramanna
Produced by B. S. Moorthy
Written by Sakthi T. K. Krishnasamy
Starring T. M. Soundararajan
M. R. Radha
B. S. Saroja
C. Lakshmi Rajyam
Sharadha
Music by G. Ramanathan
T. R. Papa
Cinematography G. K. Ramu
Edited by D. K. Shankar
Production
company
Baba Arts Productions
Distributed by Baba Arts Productions
Release date
7 August 1964[1]
Running time
120 mins
Country India
Language Tamil

Arunagirinaathar (தமிழ்: அருணகிரிநாதர், Aruna-giri-naadhar) is a 1964 Tamil biographical film directed by T. R. Ramanna and produced by B. S. Moorthy. The film's script was written by Sakthi T. K. Krishnasamy.[2] Soundtrack was composed by G. Ramanathan and T. R. Papa. The film stars T. M. Soundararajan in the titular role with M. R. Radha, B. S. Saroja , Sharadha, C. Lakshmi Rajyam and Master Raghunath portraying supporting roles.[3]

Plot

Arunagiri (T. M. Soundararajan) was born in the town of Thiruvannamalai in Tami Nadu. Arunagiri was attracted to the pleasures of the flesh and spent his youth in pursuing a life of debauchery. He frequently visited the devadasi Maragatham (C. Lakshmi Rajyam). His sister Aadhi Lakshmi (B. S. Saroja) tries to reform her brother, Arunagiri, so she arranged his marriage with Gnana Valli (Sharadha). And Arunagiri was feeling unhappy in his married life. He neglects his wife and continues in his bad ways. He persuades his sister to sell all their property and their house to get money for his dissipation. He reduces himself, his wife and sister to dire poverty. His sister gave him what ever money she earned herself, to make her brother happy. It was said that since he was used to enjoying his life in debauchery, he started to suffer from leprosy and people were avoiding him.

There came a time when his sister had no money to meet his demands for his dissipated life. Arunagiri said he was going to end his life because of this. To prevent Arunagiri from killing himself, his sister says that he should sell her in order to have money for prostitutes. Since he had leprosy, prostitutes could avoid him and if that were the case, Arunagiri's sister says she will offer herself to him, to stop Arunagiri from committing suicide. Hearing this shocks him to the core and changes his outlook. Till that time, he was uncaring about the consequences to his family because of his depraved lifestyle. Arunagiri feels guilty and attempts suicide by jumping off a temple tower when Lord Murugan himself, disguised as a pious young man saves him, cures his leprosy, shows him a path of religious devotion and initiates him to compose the Thiruppugazh, an anthology of songs dedicated to Lord Murugan.[3]

Cast

Crew

  • Director = T. R. Ramanna
  • Producer = B. S. Moorthy
  • Script = Sakthi T. K. Krishnamoorthy
  • Art = Selvaraj
  • Stills = Nagai Peter Johns
  • Processing = S. Ranganathan by Vijya Lab
  • Audiography(song) = Jeeva, T. S. Rangasamy and J. J. Manikkam
  • Audiography(dialog) = C. V. Ramanan
  • Choreography = Muthusamy, B. S. Moorthy, Ramasamy and Thangaraj
  • Studio = Vijaya - Vahini and Venus - Shyamala.[3]

Reception

The familiar tale of Arunagirinathar had been made into a film twice in 1937 and was produced for the third time in 1964, after a few decades by the noted director T. R. Ramanna for Baba Art Productions. Sharadha, the multilingual actress played his wife and M. R. Radha and R. S. Manohar played two egoistic persons who face defeat at the hands of the saint. C. Lakshmi Rajyam, a dancer played the role of the vamp. The brilliant music, particularly for the hymn Mutthai Tharu[3] was much acclaimed.

Soundtrack

Arunagirinathar
Soundtrack album by G. Ramanathan and T. R. Papa
Released 1964
Recorded 1964
Genre Devotional
Length 33:18
Language Tamil
Producer G. Ramanathan and T. R. Papa

Music was composed by G. Ramanathan and T. R. Papa. Lyrics were written by T. K. Krishnasamy.[4] Randor Guy stated in The Hindu, "The first offering begins with Mutthai Tharu.This hymn with tongue-twisting lyrics in Tamil is difficult to even read at leisure and T. M. Soundararajan created history by recording it in a single take!". It is composed in raaga Shanmugapriya.

T. M. Soundararajan recalls that the tune was composed by T. R. Papa and before the recording he called on the religious preacher Kirupanandha Variyar who explained every word of the song and T. M. Soundararajan had rehearsals for an entire day before he recorded it. An amazing performance indeed, not surprisingly the song is one of the immortal melodies of Tamil cinema.[3]

NoSongSingerLyricsLength(m:ss)
1Aadavendum MayileT. M. Soundararajan S. JanakiT. K. Krishnasamy4:03
2Nilavo AvalT. M. Soundararajan P. SuseelaT. K. Krishnasamy3:23
3Penn Pirantha PavathaiP. SuseelaT. K. Krishnasamy3:28
4Muthai TharuT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar4:10
5Senkol Ezh AdthuT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar6:11
6Ven Kudai ViruthuT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar1:13
7Thandayani VendayamT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar2:56
8Pakkarai VichitharamaniT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar2:40
9Yethanai Piravi PetruT. M. SoundararajanT. K. Krishnasamy3:32
10Santhaana PushpaT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar3:10
11Aadum ParivelT. M. SoundararajanArunagirinathar1:24
12Amma Deivam AgivittalL. R. EswariT. K. Krishnasamy

See also

References

  1. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=P9oYG7HA76QC&dat=19640807&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  2. http://thamizhisai.com/tamil-cinema/tamil-cinema-001/arunagirinathar.php/
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Randor Guy (13 October 2012). "Blast from the past - Arunagirinathar 1964". "The Hindu". Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  4. "arunagirinathar songs". gaana. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
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