Tikka Sankarayya

(Redirected from Tikka Shankaraiah)

Tikka Sankarayya (transl. Crack Sankarayya) is a 1968 Indian Telugu-language comedy film directed by D. Yoganand and produced by D. V. S. Raju. It stars N. T. Rama Rao, Krishna Kumari and Jayalalithaa, with music composed by T. V. Raju.[1][2]

Tikka Sankarayya
Theatrical release poster
Directed byD. Yoganand
Written byD. V. Narasa Raju (dialogues)
Produced byD. V. S. Raju
StarringN. T. Rama Rao
Krishna Kumari
Jayalalithaa
CinematographyG. K. Ramu
Edited byG. D. Joshi
Music byT. V. Raju
Production
company
D.V.S. Productions
Release date
  • 29 March 1968 (1968-03-29)
Running time
157 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Plot

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Raghavayya, a middle-class villager, lives with his overbearing wife, Kantamma, and his two daughters, Suseela and Rani. Kantamma mistreats Suseela for being her stepdaughter. Meanwhile, a young and charismatic man named Mohan visits to set up a marriage with Rani but instead falls in love with Suseela. However, Lingaraju, a loan shark, also wants to marry Suseela. He asks Raghavayya to get him and Suseela married to absolve him of his debt. Overhearing the conversation, Mohan decides to pay back the debt, so he immediately seeks out his father, Kodandaramayya, who refuses to give his son money. Mohan decides to leave the house, but his mother aids him by selling her jewelry. Kanthamma forces Suseela to marry Lingaraju, but Suseela escapes before the marriage can take place. Kanthamma falsifies the marriage, marrying Lingaraju to their maid instead. Mohan witnesses the wedding, believing that Suseela and Lingjaru got married. Suseela and Mohan encounter each other on the same train to the city. Mohan rejects Suseela's advances, still thinking she is married. Soon after, Mohan gets into an accident and is hospitalized. Suseela meets him in the hospital, where Mohan finally rejects her. Mohan accidentally leaves his briefcase full of money behind, and Suseela returns it to his father. He appreciates Suseela's honesty, accepting her as his daughter-in-law as they await Mohan's arrival.

During an argument with Kantamma, Lingjaru discovers he married a maid instead of Suseela. Kantamma promises to find Suseela and perform the marriage once and for all. Kantamma sends her brother Devayya to search for Suseela, and he runs into Mohan. Devayya explains the situation to Mohan, and both go searching for Suseela. Sankaram, a madman who resembles Mohan, flees from a mental hospital. The staff of the mental hospital confuses Mohan with Sankaram and brings Mohan to the mental hospital. Devayya, believing Sankaram to be Mohan, brings him back to their village. Eventually, Sankaram and Rani fall in love. Sankaram's father visits Mohan in the hospital but realizes Mohan is not his son, and he is released. Before Mohan returns, Suseela gets a letter from Kantamma saying that Mohan is ready to marry Rani. Distressed, Suseela leaves the house. Upon his return, Mohan reads the letter and searches for Suseela to resolve the misunderstanding. Once reaching the village, Suseela tries to convince Sankaram to marry her, believing him to be Mohan. An angered Lingjaru backstabs Sankaram and kidnaps Suseela. After regaining consciousness, Sankaram regains his memory and reveals he is not Mohan. Just as he is about to leave, Rani stops him and proclaims her love for him. Mohan then rescues Suseela from Lingjaru, and Lingaraju accepts the maid as his wife. The movie ends with Mohan marrying Suseela and Sankaram marrying Rani.

Cast

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Music

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Music was composed by T. V. Raju. Lyrics were written by C. Narayana Reddy.[3]

Song Title Singers Length
"Tholi Kodi Kusindi" P. Suseela 3:22
"Mucchata Golipe" P. Suseela 3:53
"Kovela Erugani" Ghantasala, P. Suseela 3:59
"Vagakaada" P. Suseela 3:47
"Aisarabajjaa" Ghantasala, P. Suseela 4:38
"Yaskodi Tassadiyya" Ghantasala, P. Suseela 2:40

References

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  1. ^ Srikanth (7 April 1968). "సినిమా: తిక్క శంకరయ్య". Visalaandhra (in Telugu). Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  2. ^ Krishna, Radha (7 April 1968). "తిక్క శంకరయ్య". Andhra Jyothi (in Telugu). Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Thikka Shankarayya (1968)-Song_Booklet". Indiancine.ma. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
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