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Gapa Hele Bi Sata (1976) is the first colour film in the Odia Language. It was directed by Nagen Roy starring Harish Mohapatra and Banaja Mohanty . The story was penned by Basant Mohapatra and screenplayed by P.D. Cinematographer: Surendra kumar Sahoo, Art Director : Nikhil Baran Sengupta, Shenoy .
Rebati is the story of a young girl whose desire for education in the backdrop of a conservative Odia society in a backward village, which is hit by a Cholera epidemic. The story itself also opens a third dimension when it deals with a very well bonded relation between Rebati and a school teacher.
His "Rebati" (1898) is widely recognized as the first Odia short story. It is the story of a young innocent girl whose desire for education is placed in the context of a conservative society in a backward Odisha village, which is hit by the killer epidemic cholera. His other stories are "Patent Medicine", "Daka Munshi", "Adharma Bitta" etc.
Gapa Hele Bi Sata (2015 film), an Indian Odia-language drama film Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gapa Hele Bi Sata .
[2] 2014: Dash Benhur: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [3] [4] 2015: Snehalata Mohanty: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [5] [6] 2016: Batakrushna Ojha: Total Contribution to Children's Literature: 2017: Subhendra Mohan Srichandan Singh: Total Contribution to Children's Literature: 2018: Birendra Mohanty: Rumku Jhuma ...
Odisha Sahitya Akademi Award is a literary award awarded to an Odia language litterateur for outstanding contribution to Odia literature in various categories by the Odisha Sahitya Akademi, [1] [2] an institution established in 1957 in Odisha [3] for active promotion of Odia language and literature. [4] [5] [6]
During the '80s he edited children's magazine in Odia by names Shishu Nayan, Ame Shishu and Shishu Raija. Shishu Raija was published between 1976 and 1990 from Jeypore in Odisha. Nayak joined All India Radio in Jeypore , Odisha on 13 December 2012 as Asst. Director and promoted to Station Director on 28 February 2014 and retired on 31 March 2015.
Kishori Charan Das (born 1924; died 17 August 2004), also known by his short name K.C. Das, was an eminent Indian writer and translator of the Odia and English language. [1] Known for his master interpretation of choices, disillusionment, and insecurities of the Odia middle class.