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               They 
                claim that they are the least respected of the entire production 
                team. Irony is what it is. Akkineni (the elder one) claims that 
                the nuts and bolts aside, it is the story/screenplay that is the 
                driving force for the movie. The candyfloss, the window dressing, 
                the designer sets, the exotic locales, the glamour dolls and the 
                other innumerable trivia that pervade the silver screen, seem 
                totally out of place, without that one essential ingredient - 
                the screenplay. And yet, the writer is the most un(der)-appreciated 
                technician of the lot. "Director is the captain of the ship" 
                extol the actors, "I take blame/credit for the movie" 
                claims the director (as if, it was his, to start with). Week after 
                week, movie after movie, the charade of (screen)play-less movies 
                continue to capture the minds and the pockets of the audience 
                and yet "We get no respect" say the writers. This is 
                their story. 
              Fast-forwarding 
                the silent era, when the directors were the true captains of the 
                ships, let's enter the 50's era, which celebrated the golden era 
                for those talented technicians - the one who wielded the pens. 
              Each 
                production house had its own team churning out quality screenplays 
                out of stories that were both created and borrowed. Vijaya (Prod. 
                Nagi Reddi and Chakrapani) had Pingali Nagendra Rao, Vauhini (Prod. 
                B.N.Reddi) had D.V.Narasa Raju, Annapoorna (Prod. D. Madhusudhana 
                Rao) had Aatreya, and N.A.T (Prod. N. Trivikrama Rao) had Samudraala. 
                Pingali had the knack of weaving folklore and mythology, Narasaraju 
                was a scathing satirist, Aatreya was adept at practicality and 
                Samudrala was the master of mythology. You hear a dialogue and 
                you immediately could guess (and rightly at that), the pen that 
                created it.  
              Take 
                the example of Paatala Bhairavi - Mayala Phakir, who is 
                regaling the crowd with his magic tricks, at one point during 
                his act, asks Dingari, if he should entertain the crowd with what 
                he knows or entertain them with what they like ("janam 
                meccaedi manam saayaDama, manam caesaedi janam cooDaDamaa"). 
                This dialogue has been the hallmark and the driving force behind 
                Pingali Nagendra Rao's works. He was a true entertainer. Add to 
                the mix, the directors' (K.V. Reddi, L.V. Prasad etc) sensibilities, 
                he churned out one block-buster after another - Paatala Bhairavi, 
                Mayabazaar, Jagadeka Veeruni Katha, Appu caesi Pappu kooDu (with 
                Sadasiva Brahmam) etc. Coining new words, that almost sounded 
                like real words, asmadeeyulu - tasmadeeyulu, alamalam, talpam-gilpam, 
                kambaLi-gimbaLi (Mayabazar) and justfying the process with 
                "evaroo puTTincakunDaa maaTalelaa puDataayi, vesukO veeDiki 
                oka veera taaDu", was something that was typical of Pingali 
                - winking at the audience and being aware of it. He was an ambidexter, 
                in that, his ease of the dialogue flow was equally evident in 
                the grace of his lyrical flow. Who can ever forget a "laahiri 
                laahiri", "vivaaha Bhojanam", "kalavaramaayae 
                madilO", "enta ghaaTu praemayO" and 
                those other lilting numbers from Missamma, Gundamma Katha, 
                Krishnaarjuna Yuddham. 
              Chakrapani, 
                a good writer in his own right, reverentially gave way for Pingali 
                and made him the final authority on any script matters. He was 
                one writer, who enjoyed the true benefits of a great writer contracting 
                for a good production house. 
              D.V.Narasaraju 
                - It is a tad sad affair that not many people know about this 
                "Father of telugu cinema satire", without mentioning 
                his social dramas that hit the nail right on the head hard - Pedda 
                Manashulu, Gundamma Katha, Yamagola, Bhakta Prahlaada, Raamudu-Bheemudu 
                remain the highpoints in his career. 
                 
               
                It is an amazing feat that he worked through almost the entire 
                period the Telugu Film history. He inherited the wit of Chakrapani 
                and passed on his satire to Aatreya. Pedda Manashulu, a 
                satire on village politics, remains his best work till date. The 
                dialogues penned for Relangi in that movie, evoke a healthy laugh 
                to a sad situation. His movies had every character that was author-backed, 
                in that, the characters remain true to their characters and speak 
                the language that befits the character. Consider the role of Ramana 
                Reddy in Gundamma Katha - an opportunist at best, he neither 
                fully apologizes for his actions nor does he seem indifferent 
                to his actions. The role walks on a fine line between villany 
                and comedy and Narasaraju's words assist him ably to balance the 
                fine-walk. It is a true situation of loving to hate a character. 
                Same goes with Rao Gopala Rao in Yamagola. It is not a mean feat 
                to dominate the hero and more specially when NTR dons the hero 
                role, but Rao Gopal Rao not only holds his ground, but almost 
                surpasses the hero's character. Consider the wit/satire in the 
                little speech about hero rescuing the heroin from engulfing fires 
                - "aa ee Madhya sineemaallO cooDDamlaa! heroin vonTari 
                gaa venltoo unTundi, hero gaaDu daani meedaki rowdeelni pampistaadu, 
                vaaLLu daanni paTTukunTaaru, adi labO dibO manTadi, aa pakkanae 
                unTaadu kadaa mana hero, veeDu vacci vaaLLani utukutaaDu, vaaLLu 
                paaripOtaaru, heroin bikka moham vaesukuni nela vanka coostoounTadi, 
                mana hero kaalar egaraesi nuncunTaaDu, love, duet, EVADIKI TELEEDU 
                EE SINIMAA KABURLU". It cannot get any irreverent, funny, 
                self-abrasive and self-aware dialogue than that. The satirist 
                - D.V.Narasaraju 
              (click 
                here for part - 2) 
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