Theatre Review: Maamannan Nandhan
Cast: Suresh Kumar, Barnaba, Pandiaraj, Niraimathi, Mogalingam, Sridevi
Director: Sivapanchavan
Duration: 90min
Language: Tamil
Troupe: Yaakkai Joyful Theatre
Rating: 3 stars
Review: Yaakkai Joyful Theatre’s Maamannan Nandhan is a retelling of the story of Nandanar through a more political lens. The staging is effective and allows the writing and performances to take centre stage. While the sharp dialogues confront uncomfortable social hierarchies. The play positions itself as both a retelling and a critique. The play’s intent remains clear — to question who gets to be remembered and how. Nandhan’s all-consuming devotion to Lord Shiva isn’t celebrated. Rather, the play gives a critical spin to it. The narrative questions whether his faith actually empowers him. Therefore, those who revere Nandanar’s tale may not take kindly to this reinterpretation.
However, it will appeal to those who are interested in alternative readings of age-old tales through a more critical and contemporary lens. Maamannan Nandhan repositions Nandhan as a maamannan, with dialogues questioning why no one bats an eye when he is called an adimai, yet resists when he is referred to as maamannan. At the same time, it doesn’t shy away from contradictions, portraying a man caught between devotion, desire and social conditioning. There are multiple striking moments. Like Nandhan’s reaction when he smells sandalwood for the first time or him thinking he just received a divine calling only to realise that it’s his own conscience speaking to him. All the actors are solid. Though prolonged, the play is engaging and is anchored by committed acting performances.
Should you watch it?
Watch it for its ideas as much as the performances.
Get the latest entertainment updates from the Times of India, along with the latest Hindi movies, upcoming Hindi movies in 2026 , and Telugu movies.”
Language: Tamil
Troupe: Yaakkai Joyful Theatre
Review: Yaakkai Joyful Theatre’s Maamannan Nandhan is a retelling of the story of Nandanar through a more political lens. The staging is effective and allows the writing and performances to take centre stage. While the sharp dialogues confront uncomfortable social hierarchies. The play positions itself as both a retelling and a critique. The play’s intent remains clear — to question who gets to be remembered and how. Nandhan’s all-consuming devotion to Lord Shiva isn’t celebrated. Rather, the play gives a critical spin to it. The narrative questions whether his faith actually empowers him. Therefore, those who revere Nandanar’s tale may not take kindly to this reinterpretation.
However, it will appeal to those who are interested in alternative readings of age-old tales through a more critical and contemporary lens. Maamannan Nandhan repositions Nandhan as a maamannan, with dialogues questioning why no one bats an eye when he is called an adimai, yet resists when he is referred to as maamannan. At the same time, it doesn’t shy away from contradictions, portraying a man caught between devotion, desire and social conditioning. There are multiple striking moments. Like Nandhan’s reaction when he smells sandalwood for the first time or him thinking he just received a divine calling only to realise that it’s his own conscience speaking to him. All the actors are solid. Though prolonged, the play is engaging and is anchored by committed acting performances.
Should you watch it?
Get the latest entertainment updates from the Times of India, along with the latest Hindi movies, upcoming Hindi movies in 2026 , and Telugu movies.”
end of article
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