Gumasthavin Penn

Gumasthavin Penn (English: Clerk's Daughter) is a 1941 Indian Tamil-language romance film directed by B. N. Rao. It is an adaptation of the play Gumasthavin Magal, itself based on Nirupama Devi's Bengali novel Annapurnaar Mandir. The film was released on 10 May 1941 and became a success.

Gumasthavin Penn
Theatrical release poster
Directed byB. N. Rao
Based onAnnapurnaar Mandir
by Nirupama Devi
StarringT. K. Shanmugam
T. K. Bhagavathi
M. V. Rajamma
CinematographyRustom M. Irani
Production
company
TKS Brothers
Murthi Films
Distributed byGemini Pictures Circuit
Release date
  • 10 May 1941 (1941-05-10)
Running time
183 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Seetha and Sarasa are sisters. Their father Ramaswami, a clerk working under the wealthy philanderer Mani, is unable to get them married. Ramu, another wealthy man in the same village, opposes marriage as it would interfere with his reformist ideals. Ramu's mother wants him to marry Seetha. He refuses, so a desperate Ramaswami gets Seetha married to a much older man. Seetha becomes a widow soon after. Mani tries to rape her one day, but Ramu saves her. Traumatised and depressed, Seetha commits suicide. Feeling he is responsible for her demise, Ramu decides to arrange Sarasa's marriage. When the bridegroom and his family back out due to an argument regarding dowry, Ramu marries Sarasa.[1]

Cast

Adapted from The Hindu:[1]

Production

Gumasthavin Magal was a Tamil play staged by TKS Brothers, based on Nirupama Devi's Bengali novel Annapurnaar Mandir.[1][2] Following its critical and commercial success, TKS Brothers decided to adapt it as a film with the title Gumasthavin Penn, co-producing it with Murthi Films financed by S. S. Vasan under his banner Gemini Pictures Circuit. B. N. Rao was hired as director, Rustom M. Irani as the cinematographer, and Panju (who later gained fame as one half of the Krishnan–Panju director duo) as assistant director.[1] The name of K. R. Ramasamy's character V. P. Var,[3] was the reverse of the name of director P. V. Rao.[1]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Narayanan and Padmanabhan Party. The song "Paarai Maanida", sung by P. G. Venkatesan, attained popularity.[1]

Release and reception

Gumasthavin Penn was released on 10 May 1941, and was distributed by Vasan through Gemini.[4] The film was commercially successful, leading to youngsters "raising their voices wherever girls were being married to old men as second or third wives".[1]

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gollark: Again, *you can do that without horrible hardcoding*.
gollark: Also, you can just autoconfigure modems.
gollark: Also, you already did that.
gollark: You do *not*.

References

  1. Guy, Randor (15 October 2009). "Gumasthavin Penn (1941)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  2. Vamanan (23 April 2018). "Tamil cinema's Bong connection". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 23 September 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  3. Raman, Mohan V. (20 September 2014). "The man who started the trend". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  4. "Clerk's Daughter". The Indian Express. 10 May 1941. p. 3.
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