Vintage theatres make way for commercial complexes

Vijayawada was the first city in the State where a movie theatre was built

April 26, 2012 10:49 am | Updated July 13, 2016 05:01 am IST - VIJAYAWADA:

VIJAYAWADA (AP) WEDNESDAY, 25-04-2012. 
**** FOR CITY PULSE ******
The open space once housed Jawahar Theatre that was renamed as Vijaya Talkies on Eluru Road in Vijayawada.. _ PHOTO: RAJU_V. (DIGITAL MAGE)

VIJAYAWADA (AP) WEDNESDAY, 25-04-2012. **** FOR CITY PULSE ****** The open space once housed Jawahar Theatre that was renamed as Vijaya Talkies on Eluru Road in Vijayawada.. _ PHOTO: RAJU_V. (DIGITAL MAGE)

Did you know Vijayawada was the first city to build a movie theatre in the State? Way back in 1921, Pothina brothers - Sreenivasa Rao and Ganapati Rao Patrudu constructed ‘Maruthi Talkies' in the One Town area, which screened movies right from the silent era.

Maruthi Talkies was the only theatre that catered to the needs of the move buffs in the early 1920s until movie halls like Durga Kala Mandiram and Jai Hind came up in Two Town area in the late 1920s and 1930s.

“I still remember watching a silent movie - Draupadi Vasthrabharanam in Maruthi Talkies. I remember the ticket was kani (one sixteenth of a rupee),” recollected septuagenarian Padmasree Turlapati Kutumbha Rao, Chairman AP Grandhayala Samstha.

Sharing an interesting incident, Mr. Rao said that the film, when released had Bheema (of Pandavas) without a moustache in one scene. “The makers failed to realise the faux pas and completed the film without the twirling moustache on Bheema's face. People refused to visit the theatre as the character was without a moustache. Somehow the operator meddled with the negatives and came out with a moustache (though not a menacing one) to draw the crowd. In fact the theatre folks went around neighbourhood beating of the drums to announce “Bheemuduki Meesalu Ochindiaho,” said Mr. Rao.

Senior columnist Adavalli Satyanarayana said that popular mythological films used to be screened at Maruthi. “The best of NTR and ANR films used hit the screen and the balcony ticket rate, if my memory is correct, was Rs.1.50 in the 1940s,” he said.

He also recollected the role of Prasad Brothers (of Challapalli) in establishing theatres like Saraswathi and Leela Mahal in the 1940s. “Saraswathi used to screen Hindi films and Leela Mahal beamed English films. Kavi Samrat Viswanatha Satyanarayana used to watch the English films at Leela Mahal regularly,” reminisced Mr. Satyanarayana.

The shifting of film distribution from Vijayawada to Hyderabad and the constant technological changes in the tinsel world made several theatre owners give up film business. “Maintaining a movie hall is not that lucrative nowadays.

Many theatres are making huge losses as the patronage from the moviegoers is on the wane. That is the reason why many landmarks are getting gradually erased, paving the way for commercial and residential complexes,” said V. Subba Rao, an exhibitor.

First colour film

Maruthi Theatre, which screened the first colour film-ever produced by Telugu film industry “Lavakusa,” along with Jawahar (Vijaya Talkies), Lakshmi (Swarna Complex), Saraswathi, Seesh Mahal, Eswar Mahal (Radha Theatre) and Venkateswara Theatre was consigned to history and many (old theatres) are in the pipeline to meet the same fate.

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