Penning the ‘Struggle’ of a Salaried Man

Udumalai Narayanakavi had huge debts in his life and took a vow that he would never enter his village before repaying them. Standing by his word, he repaid all his debts through the money he earned by working in the plays earlier.



Coimbatore: In an age, when the monthly salary of a sole breadwinner is hardly enough to make both ends meet, the lyrics penned by the popular Tamil poet Udumalai Narayanakavi echo the consumer culture of the present day, though he wrote them for various Tamil films in the early 1950s.



Born to the couple Krishnasamy and Muthammal at the village Poolavadi of Udumalpet in the then Coimbatore district, Udumalai Narayanakavi, whose real name was Narayanasamy, lost his parents when he was a boy and could not pursue education beyond class IV. After the demise of his parents, poverty forced him to sell matchboxes in the villages around Poolavadi to eke out a living with his earnings of 25 paise per day. However, he developed a taste for art and literature, as he observed the performances of the Kongu folk art forms including Puraviyattam, Udukkayadi Paattu, and Oyil Kummi in his village.

The poet, who later carved out a niche for himself as a popular lyricist in the Tamil filmdom, learned the nuances of composing lyrics and staging plays from eminent playwright and Tamil scholar Udumalai Sarabam Muthusamy Kavirayar. Working with him from the age of 12, Narayanasamy accompanied his teacher to places, wherever he staged plays and wrote scripts, and lyrics, and even acted in his dramas for about 13 years.

And returning to his native village at the age of 25, he started a business of his own by founding a shop to sell Khadhar cloth in his village. However, experiencing a great loss in the venture, he set out for Madurai with just Rs 100 in his pocket. After meeting ‘The Father of Tamil Theatre’ Sankaradas Swamigal in Madurai, Narayanasamy worked on his dramas and learned the depths of Tamil prosody from him.



Later, he got the friendship of Dravidian movement stalwarts including Periyar E.V. Ramasamy, C.N. Annadurai, and Kalaingar M. Karunanidhi through Kalaivanar N.S.Krishnan, which opened the gates of Tamil filmdom to him.

At a time, when the world of Tamil cinema was dominated by themes from religious pieces of literature, Udumalai Narayanakavi’s entry into Tamil cinema as a lyricist brought new changes to the silver screen. His innovative lyrics with strong themes of rationalism and atheism infused new blood in the cinema industry, as he wrote the unforgettable numbers Kaa.. Kaa... Kaa.. and Thesam Gnanam Kalvi Kaasu Eeesan Poosai Ellaam Kaasu Mun Sellathadi in the Karunanidhi scripted box office hit Parasakthi.

His popular lyric Onnulayirunthu Irupathuvaraikkum Kondaattam Kondaattam in the 1955 film Mudhal Thethi is still to be enjoyed for its lines, which humorously portrays the financial struggle of a family once its sole breadwinner’s monthly salary is run out. A line in the lyric reads that the salaried man usually repays his debts on the first day of every month soon after drawing his salary.

Newsletter

Rediscovering Muttam from the ruins

An inscription records a gift made to the temple by a Thevaradiyal (A woman dedicated to the temple) by name…

Rediscovering Unique Terms in Kongu Tamil

In Coimbatore of a bygone era, people referred to their relations as ‘Orambarai’ - the word reflected its na...

A River, once

A stone inscription records that a group of Brahmins had asked permission from one of the Kongu Chola kings to build a d...

Remembering a Selfless Kongu Chieftain

An oral tradition in the Kongu region maintains that Kalingarayan constructed the canal, as directed by a snake!

Kovai Chose ‘Do’ from ‘Do or die’

Hiding behind the branches of the trees near the Singanallur Lake, the freedom fighters awaited the arrival of the train...

Remembering the vision-impaired Bard of Kongunadu

“We are all blind, but in the eyes of Mambazha Kavichinga Navalar, lives the bright Sun” - King Sethupathi.