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.

"He was not a madman, Saheb. He was an emperor who had lost his kingdom." natsamrat written by

But in his madness, Ganpatrao is reenacting King Lear . He is living the role he only pretended to play. He shouts Lear’s lines to the wind: "Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!" But then, he switches to Marathi adaptations, mixing his own agony with the poetry of Shakespeare and Kalidasa. He no longer acts the tragedy; he is the tragedy. One day, his son Nana, feeling a twinge of societal shame (not genuine love), comes to the temple to take his father back. He brings a lawyer and a witness to prove he is a good son. Ganpatrao delivers his greatest and final monologue

Ganpatrao looks at the cup. He looks at his royal cloak. He looks at the faces of the few villagers gathered. He then takes his final bow. He asks for a glass of water