Natsamrat Written By ❲DELUXE ✪❳
When Nana approaches, Ganpatrao is in the middle of a "performance." He doesn't recognize Nana as his son. Instead, he sees him as a villain in a play.
Ganpatrao, once cheered by thousands, is now homeless with his aging wife. They have nowhere to go. His daughter Kusum is married into a middle-class family that struggles to accommodate them, but his pride refuses to become a burden there. natsamrat written by
Ganpatrao delivers his greatest and final monologue. He roars at Nana, not as a father, but as King Lear cursing his ungrateful daughters: "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child!" But then, shifting to his own reality, he collapses. He realizes that the "mad king" and "Natsamrat" are the same person. He asks for a glass of water. A poor temple priest gives him water in a broken clay cup. When Nana approaches, Ganpatrao is in the middle
He starts speaking to imaginary audiences. He wears a torn, discarded royal cloak he found in a garbage heap. He uses a broom as a royal scepter. The local villagers and street children think he is a mad, harmless old man. They call him "Pagla Raja" (The Mad King). They have nowhere to go
He drinks the water, sits down in the lotus position (the pose of a king on his throne), and dies. In his death, he finally achieves what he could not in life: dignity, peace, and the silent applause of those who finally understood his tragedy. Natsamrat is not just about an old actor. It is a universal tragedy about the clash between art and commerce, between devotion and greed, between the parent who gives everything and the child who takes everything.
His condition is simple: he and his wife will live in the attached outhouse ( osari ), and his children will take care of them for life. Nana agrees enthusiastically, and Ganpatrao, blinded by love and old-world values, trusts him completely. Within months, the mask slips. Nana and his wife, who never appreciated art or sacrifice, begin treating the old couple as a burden. They mock Ganpatrao’s past glory, calling him a "washed-up clown." The final betrayal comes when Nana legally evicts them from the outhouse, claiming he needs the space for a home office.