Contribution of Girish Karnad

 Girish Karnad is an Indian playwright, author, actor, and film director whose films and plays, written largely in Kannada, explore the present by way of the past.
He wrote his first play, the critically acclaimed Yayati, the story is centred on the mythological king, the play established Karnad's use of the themes of history and mythology that would inform his work over the following decades. Karnad's next play, Tughlaq, tells the story of the 14th century Sultan Muhammad Ibn Tughlaq and remains among the best known of his works.
Samskara marked Karnad's entry into film making. He wrote the screenplay and played the lead role in the film, an adoption of an anti-caste novel of the same name by U.R. Anathamurthy. He continued to produce work as a playwright, including Hayavadana widely recognised as among the most important playa of Post Independence India. For his contribution to theater, he was awarded the Padmashree, in 1974.
He worked in Hindi, directing the critically acclaimed Utsav, an adoption of Shudraka's 4th century Sanskrit play Mirchchakatika. With the play Nagamandala, Karnad framed and unhappy contemporary marriage in imagery drawn from Kannada folk tales.
He was also awarded with Padma Bhushan, in recognition of his contributions to the arts. He was the recipient of the Jnanpith Award, India's highest literary price for his contribution to literature and theatre. He continued to work in film Heggadithi and acting in Iqbal and Life Goes On, among others.

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