Susi Ganeshan

Susi Ganeshan
Born Ganeshan Subbaiya
Vannivelampatti, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India
Residence India
Years active 2002–present
Parent(s) Subbaiya
Sittammaal
Website www.directorsusiganesh.com

Susi Ganeshan (Tamil: சுசி கணேசன்; born Ganeshan Subbiah) is an Indian film Director, Producer and screenwriter.

Early life

Ganeshan was born in Vannivelampatti, Madurai District in Tamil Nadu to Tamil parents Subbiah and Sittamma. He changed his screenname to Susi Ganeshan, his first name being derived from the first two letters from his parents' first names. Ganeshan graduated from Madras Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in automobile engineering.[1] During his college days, he was a journalist and had published many articles for the Tamil magazine Ananda Vikatan.[1] He was also chairman of ATHENAEUM, the student body of the Madras Institute of Technology, during 1991–92. After working as an assistant to director Mani Ratnam during the filming of Bombay (1995), Iruvar (1997) and Dil Se.. (1998), Ganeshan debuted as a director with the 2002 film Virumbugiren.[2]

Career

Ganeshan began his first project Virumbugiren in 2000. Its story was based on love in a village backdrop with a social message to it. The film, starring Prashanth and then newcomer Sneha, was selected and screened at the Kuala Lumpur World Film Festival 2003.[3] The film received four awards at the 2001 Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, winning the Best Director, Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress prizes, while also being adjugded as the Best Film of the year. Virumbugiren became long delayed and released in late 2002.

Ganeshan next directed Five Star (2002), which happened to be his first release, due to the delay of his first project Virumbugiren.[2] Five Star, produced by his mentor Mani Ratnam under the banner Madras Talkies, featured five newcomers in the title roles. The story focused on friendship, love with social awareness and a touch of human emotions. The film won him the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Storywriter. In early 2004, he announced plans on directing Madhavan in a film titled Karuppan which would feature ten female lead actresses, but the venture did not materialize.[4] He then launched a film titled Sakkarai with Prashanth in the lead role in October 2004, but the film was subsequently postponed then shelved.[5]

In 2006, Ganeshan made his third film Thiruttu Payale. The film, which featured Jeevan, Sonia Agarwal and Malavika in principal roles, emerged a sleeper hit and ranked among the highest-grossing Tamil films of the year. It was named the third Best Film of the year by the Tamil Nadu State Government and gave major breaks to the leading actors, with the performances of Jeevan and Malavika in particular being considerably appreciated. Three years later, Ganeshan directed Kanthaswamy. The film dealt with disparity of rich and poor in the Indian society, and it was reportedly the first South Indian film in that the protagonist, portrayed by Vikram, conceived a superhero character. The film had the biggest opening in the year 2009.

Ganeshan's next directed and produced the Hindi film, Shortcut Romeo (2013), a remake of his 2006 film Thiruttu Payale starring Neil Nitin Mukesh and Puja Gupta.

Filmography

Year Film Credited as Language Notes
Director Writer
2002 Five Star Green tick Green tick Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Storywriter
2002 Virumbugiren Green tick Green tick Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Director
2006 Thiruttu Payale Green tick Green tick Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Third Best Film
2009 Kanthaswamy Green tick Green tick Tamil Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director
2013 Shortcut Romeo Green tick Green tick Hindi
2017 Thiruttu Payale 2 Green tick Green tick Tamil Filming

References

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