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Mayangukiral Oru Maadhu was produced by S. Baskar under Vijayabaskar Films. The screenplay was written by Panchu Arunachalam. Jaishankar insisted the crew to shoot in Modern Theatres' studio as they were willing to provide rent for certain amount for entire film, this led the crew to begin the film there as most of the facilities were available in studios.
A. Dakshinamurthy; A. Muttulingam; Aravindan Neelakandan; Brammarajan; Ambai; Charu Nivedita; Cho Dharman; Dhamayanthi; Devan; Era Natarasan; Imayam; Indira Parthasarathy
The five Tamil epics Seevaka-chintamani, Silappatikaram, Manimekalai, Kundalakesi and Valayapathi are collectively known as The Five Great Epics of Tamil Literature. There were a number of books written on Tamil grammar. Yapperungalam and Yapperungalakkarigai were two works on prosody by the Jain ascetic Amirtasagara.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Films based on Tamil novels" The following 111 pages are in this category, out of 111 ...
S. Ramakrishnan is a writer from Tamil Nadu, India.He is a full-time writer who has been active over the last 27 years in diverse areas of Tamil literature like short stories, novels, plays, children's literature and translations.
Namma Kuzhandaigal is based on writer Poovannan's novel Aalam Vizhudhu. [4] It was directed by Srikanth and produced by D. Ramanaidu under Vijaya & Suresh Combines, while the dialogues were written by Thuraiyur K. Murthi. [5] The final cut of the film was 4,308.03 metres (14,134.0 ft). [6]
Agnaadi is a fictional historical novel written by Tamil writer Poomani.Set in the 19th century, it deals with the lives of people from the Kalingal, Kazhugumalai, Chatrapatti, Veppankadu, Chinnaiahpuram, and Sivakasi region over a span of 170 years.
Some people at some moments) is a Tamil-language novel by Indian writer Jayakanthan. It is an expanded version of his 1968 short story Agnipravesam (transl. Entering the fire) with a different ending. The novel, serialised in 1970 in Dinamani Kathir, [1] won the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1972. A sequel titled Gangai Enge Pogiral (transl.