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Written By - Natsamrat

Natsamrat is not merely a play; it is a mirror held up to society. It asks us: Do we value our cultural treasures while they are alive, or only after they are gone? Kusumagraj wrote the words, but the silence that follows Appa’s death belongs to all of us.

The second half of the play is a devastating psychological breakdown. Appa, stripped of his home and dignity, clings to the only thing left: his art. Drunk and hallucinating, he performs a one-man show for the ghosts in the graveyard. The climax, where he dies upon an imaginary stage speaking lines from King Lear , is considered one of the most heart-wrenching scenes in world theater. The play was written in 1970 . This period was crucial for Marathi theater. The "Sangeet Natak" (musical drama) era was dying, and the "Experimental Theater" movement was rising. In this transitional phase, Natsamrat acted as a bridge. It retained the dramatic gravitas of classic tragedy but adopted a realistic, prose-driven style. natsamrat written by

When the play was first published as a vachan natak (a play meant for reading, not performance), many critics doubted it would succeed on stage. They argued it was too sad, too long, and too intellectual. They were wrong. No article on Natsamrat can be complete without mentioning the actor who immortalized the role of Appa: Dr. Shriram Lagoo . Natsamrat is not merely a play; it is

Natsamrat was written by Kusumagraj (Vishnu Vaman Shirwadkar) in 1970. If you enjoyed this deep dive, explore the original Marathi script of Natsamrat or watch the 2016 film adaptation to witness the genius of Kusumagraj firsthand. The second half of the play is a