Natsamrat
by V.V. Shirwadkar (Kusumagraj)
Natsamrat
Bhakti Yoga is a profound exploration of the path of devotion, presenting love, surrender, and spiritual discipline through the teachings of Swami Vivekananda.
About This Book
Natsamrat is a seminal Marathi play that chronicles the tragic downfall of Ganpatrao Belwalkar, a celebrated Shakespearean actor. After retiring and distributing his wealth among his children in anticipation of a peaceful old age, Ganpatrao faces betrayal, familial ingratitude, and poverty. The narrative follows his descent into loneliness, destitution, and madness, as he grapples with the loss of his dignity and the harsh realities of a changing society.
Key Insights
By the end of this story, everything you thought you knew about the sanctity of family and the weight of legacy will be different. You will look at the people you love and realize that the stage of life is often a trap, not a sanctuary.
In *Natsamrat*, V.V. Shirwadkar (Kusumagraj) invites us into the house of Ganpatrao Belwalkar, a man who has lived his life through the verses of Shakespeare. [short pause] The air in the room is thick with the scent of old velvet curtains and the lingering dust of forgotten applause. Ganpatrao sits by a window, the golden afternoon light catching the silver stubble on his chin, believing he has secured a peaceful sunset for his golden years by gifting his estate to his children.
There is a scene I have not forgotten since I first read it, where the illusion of safety shatters. His son, Nana, stands stiffly by the door, his face a mask of cold impatience. Ganpatrao asks, “Is it so difficult to show kindness to the man who gave you everything?” Nana replies, his voice like grinding stones, “You gave us your theater, Father. We are living in the real world now. Please, keep your dramas for the stage.”
*Natsamrat* is a profound, aching meditation on the cruelty of abandonment. It argues that society demands we perform roles—father, provider, hero—until we are hollowed out, leaving us with nothing when the applause fades. Kusumagraj’s prose is surgical; he captures the transition from grace to madness with lines like, “The world is a stage, but the exit is a narrow, lonely alley.” [medium pause]
[sigh] As Ganpatrao wanders the streets, stripped of his dignity and his home, you are forced to ask: What happens when the actor forgets who he is, and the audience he sacrificed everything for turns their backs? You must read this to understand the heartbreak of the final curtain.