Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dr. Xeno Houston Wingfield (Dr. (ドクター) ゼノ・ヒューストン・ウィングフィールド, Dokutā Zeno Hyūsuton Wingufīrudo) Voiced by: Kenji Nojima [22] A former NASA scientist, Dr. Xeno is the leader of the colony formed in the United States and is a scientific genius on par with Senku.
Thaman was born as Ghantasala Sai Srinivas in a Telugu family of musicians in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh and grew up in Chennai. [9] [10] He is the grandson of veteran director and producer, Ghantasala Balaramayya. [11] His father, Ghantasala Siva Kumar, was a drummer, who worked for seven hundred films, under music director K. Chakravarthy.
Ghantasala participated in the Quit India Movement of 1942, for which he was arrested and imprisoned for 18 months at the Alipore (Allipura) Jail, Ballari. [16] After leaving jail, he met Samudrala Sr., who advised him to try his luck in the film industry as a singer. [17] Ghantasala married Savitri, who lived in a village called Pedapulivarru.
Sati Savitri is a 1978 Telugu-language Hindu mythological film directed by B. A. Subba Rao. [2] It stars N. T. Rama Rao, Krishnam Raju, Vanisri and music composed by Ghantasala & Pendyala Nageswara Rao. [3]
Ghantasala Sai Srinivas, widely known as S. Thaman, composer, multi-instrumentalist, conductor singer-songwriter, actor, and music producer. [4] [5] Ghantasala Balaramayya Grandfather to S. Thaman; Ghantasala Siva Kumar, Composer and drummer, son of Ghantasala Balaramayya
Ghantasala (musician) (Ghantasala Venkateswara Rao, 1922-1974), Telugu singer and composer Ghantasala Balaramayya (1906 - after 1952), Telugu film producer and director Ghantasala Sai Srinivas, professionally known as S. Thaman , an Indian music composer
Pandava Vanavasam (transl. The exile of the Pandavas) is a 1965 Indian Telugu-language Hindu mythological film directed by Kamalakara Kameswara Rao and written by Samudrala Sr. [1]
Chintamani is a 1956 Indian Telugu-language drama film produced and directed by P. S. Ramakrishna Rao. [1] It stars P. Bhanumathi, N. T. Rama Rao, and Jamuna, with music composed by Addepalli Rama Rao and T. V. Raju.