Sangham (transl. Society) is a 1954 Indian Telugu-language romantic comedy film, produced by M. Murugan, M. Saravanan and M. Kumaran of AVM Productions and directed by M. V. Raman. It stars Vyjayanthimala, Anjali Devi, N. T. Rama Rao and S. Balachander, with music composed by R. Sudarsanam.

Sangham
Theatrical release poster
Directed byM. V. Raman
Written byTholeti (dialogues)
Screenplay byM. V. Raman
Story byV. S. Venkatachalam
Produced byM. Murugan
M. Saravanan
M. Kumaran
StarringVyjayanthimala
Anjali Devi
N. T. Rama Rao
S. Balachander
CinematographyT. Muthu Swamy
Edited byM. V. Raman
K. Shankar
Music byR. Sudarsanam
Production
company
Release date
  • 10 July 1954 (1954-07-10)
Running time
175 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Plot

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The film begins at Bangalore where two soulmates, Rani, a plucky feminist & Kamini, a modest. Ramanatham Kamini's father has been ostracized from society because he knitted low caste woman Annapurna. Ergo, today, it nullifies matches of Kamini with mortification. Exploiting it, Kannaiah, an old cat, proceeds for the bridal connection, and Rani drives him away, which utterly crashes Ramanatham. He also fails to know the whereabouts of his nephew Sundaram. He is currently at Burma campaign, still loving Kamini and looking forward to returning.

Meanwhile, Seetaramanjaneya Das, an orthodox village headman, and his son Raja walk on as a medico to Bangalore with his bestie, jovial Chandram. Kannaiah is also a resident of the same and Seetaramanjaneya's mate. Once, the Raja & Chandram are acquainted with Rani & Kamini in a clash when Raja endears Kamini. Chandram always frays with Kamini but silently falls for her. Later, Rani heads to Ceylon for athletics and fractures her leg. With a progressive mind, Raja splices Kamimi in Rani's absence and without his parents' knowledge.

Besides, Sundaram backs and becomes downhearted, conscious of Kamini's martial. Ramanatham, beware of it, hastens for him and, tragically, dies in an accident. Now, Kannaiah subterfuges by posting Seetaramanjaneya that his son has wedlock and is casteless. Ergo, Seetaramanjaneya immediately calls Raja and roars with a final notice to quit Kamini. However, he backtalks and exits. In parallel, on Kamini's plea, Sundaram guests are there for a few days. Upon his arrival, Raja takes off by detesting suspicions about their relationship. Then, he declares that he will become betrothed to anyone of his father's choice.

Fortuitously, Seetaramanjaneya engages with Rani's father, Colonel Mallikarjuna Rao, which Rani accepts. Listening to it, Kamini is blissful, unaware of the fact. Just before the wedding, Kamini gets dismayed & devasted, looking at Raja as the groom, but chooses to give up and attempts suicide. Hereupon, Chandram secures her and divulges the actuality to Rani. At last, Rani emerges chastity & virtue of Kamini, Kannaiah's heinousness, and Sundaram makes Raja eat crow. Plus, Seetaramanjaneya also accepts Kamini as his daughter-in-law by expelling Kannaiah. Finally, the movie ends happily with the marriage of Chandram & Rani.

Cast

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Production

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Sangham was produced by A. V. Meiyappan, the founder of AVM Productions. It was simultaneously shot in Hindi as Ladki and in Tamil as Penn.[1] Vyjayanthimala appeared as the female lead in all three versions.[2] N. T. Rama Rao was cast in the role done by Bharat Bhushan in the Hindi version and Gemini Ganesan in the Tamil version.[3]

Soundtrack

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Music composed by R. Sudarsanam. Lyrics were written by Tholeti.[4]

Song Title Singers length
"Bharata Veera" P. Susheela 2:38
"Aadadante Aluseladela" Raghunath Panigrahi 2:02
"Jaathi Bedam Samasipoda" V. Nagayya 2:16
"Sundaranga" P. Susheela & T. S. Bagavathi 4:14
"Nidurinchedi" Madhavapeddi Satyam 3:53
"Karavalamani" P. Susheela, T. S. Bagavathi & M. S. Rajeswari 8:22
"Ilalo Sati Leni" P. Susheela 7:12
"Pelli Pelli" Pithapuram 3:03
"Nalugurilo" T. S. Bagavathi 4:22
"Dimikita Dimikita" Madhavapeddi Satyam 4:30
"Kohi Kohi Mani Kakula" P. Susheela 3:53
"Aasale Adiasalai" P. Susheela 3:25

Box office

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The film became hit at the box office due to the Vyjayanthimala fan craze.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b Narasimham, M. L. (2 February 2014). "Sangham (1954)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  2. ^ Guy, Randor (2016). Memories of Madras: Its Movies, Musicians & Men of Letters. Creative Workshop. pp. 334–335. ISBN 978-81-928961-7-5.
  3. ^ S. R. Ashok Kumar (26 February 2006). "Finger on people's pulse". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 1 July 2004. Retrieved 15 March 2011.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ "సంఘం" (PDF). Indiancine.ma (in Telugu). Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 December 2022. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
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