Natsamrat Written By Apr 2026

Playwright: Vasant Kanetkar (Original Marathi, 1970s) Protagonist: Ganpatrao Ramchandra Belwalkar (also known as "Natsamrat" or "Appa") Part 1: The Curtain Rises on Glory The story begins at the pinnacle of a man’s life. Ganpatrao Belwalkar is a legendary stage actor, revered across Maharashtra as the Natsamrat —the Emperor of Actors. Having dedicated his entire life to the theater, he specialized in Shakespearean tragedies adapted into Marathi, particularly King Lear .

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. 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. His condition is simple: he and his wife