Mulshankar Mulani


Mulshankar Harinand Mulani was a Gujarati playwright from the Gujarati theatre of India. After working as a village development officer and as an editor with a weekly newspaper, he joined the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali, a theatre company, where he worked as a playwright for decades. He wrote more than fifty plays on social, mythological and historical subjects including commercially or critically successful plays like Rajbeej, Ajabkumari, Saubhagya Sundari, Nandbatrisi and Krishnacharitra.

Early life

He was born on 1 November 1867 in Chavand to the religious Prashnora Nagar Brahmin family of Harinand Dayanad and Mankunwar. He was a descendant of Mula Bhatt who had served as a minister of Nawanagar State before 10 or 12 generations. He studied until the fourth standard in English medium in Junagadh and had read religious works and Sanskrit books at his home, later going on to study with a Sanskrit scholar for some time.
Mulani started a job as a village development officer in Dhari, for a salary of ten rupees, but subsequently left to go to Bombay. After a period of struggles, he joined a weekly Satyavakta as a proofreader for a salary of twenty rupees. He covered true stories in his column, Ghanghata and became popular. Later he served as an editor of the weekly.

Theatre career

Mulani met Prabhurai Popatlal, who offered him a job as a play editor in the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali, a theatre company, for a salary of five rupees. He transcribed copies of the plays also. Eventually, he left the Satyavakta and his salary rose to thirty rupees. His first play Shakuntal and his second play Rajbeej starring Bapulal Nayak were performed in the Geity Theatre and were commercially successful. It was followed by Kundbala and Mansinh Abhaysinh. Kundbala depicted a relationship between a princely state and the British Raj. Following it, the censorship by the British authorities was instituted. His health deteriorated and he returned to his native village where he wrote his successful plays, Mularaj Solanki and Karanghelo. His salary rose to 35 rupees. After studying Shakespeare and Kalidasa, he wrote Barrister, which was a play about a youth who was devastated due to his attraction to the western world. It became successful and his salary rose to 75 rupees. Later he was made a partner in the company.
Mulani introduced tragedy to the Gujarati theatre. His Jayraj and Ajabkumari were not initially successful, due to the occurrence of plague in Bombay. They however, became hits when they were performed again in 1912–13. Ajabkumari was praised by scholars like Govardhanram Tripathi but the audience did not like it. Although the financial condition of the company had deteriorated, his Vikramcharitra, based on Shamal Bhatt's Sinhasan Batrisi, became a commercial hit and helped the company recover. He demanded his pending sum of 28,000 rupees with the company, but received only 10,000 rupees. Feeling hurt, he left the company. His contract terms, however, prohibited him from writing plays for other companies for another ten years. He subsequently founded the Kathiyawadi Natak Mandali in 1906 in the name of his son-in-law, Vishwanath Madhavji Bhatt. Viththaldas Bhojak and Bapulal Punjiram Nayak were its director and musician respectively.
He rejoined Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali when Nathuram Shukla requested him to rewrite Saubhagyasundari, which had failed to impress the owners and the director of the company. He rewrote the play and it premiered on 19 October 1901. Starring Bapulal Nayak and Jaishankar Bhojak in lead roles as well as Mohanlala in the role of Madhav, the play became a major success and Jaishankar became known for his female impersonator role of Sundari. The pairing of Bapulal Nayak and Jaishankar Sundari became popular with the audience and they starred together in many plays later on. Prabhashankar 'Ramani' acted in his several plays and rose to fame. Jugal Jugari was his social play.
Kathiyawadi Natak Mandali produced his Krishnacharitra which brought Krishna, for the first time, on the Gujarati stage. Devotional in nature, it was based on stories from the Bhagavata, depicting the relationship between Krishna and Gopi. His plays influenced Urdu as well as Marathi plays. He had written Veermandal in just a day. In addition, he had written scripts for films. In debt in 1909, he sold Kathiyawadi Natak Mandali, and in 1915, he left the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali. His Ek Ja Bhool, written for Royal Natak Mandali, had a discussion on a drone in its script. In 1920s, he worked with Aryasubodh Gujarati Natak Mandali.
After retirement, he lived in Kanpur and Bhavnagar. He died on 14 December 1957.

Works

Mulani was one of the prominent playwrights of the old Gujarati theatre. He had written more than fifty plays on social, mythological and historical subjects; about twenty eight staged, four not staged and fourteen adapted plays. His popular plays include Rajbeej, Ajabkumari, Saubhagyasundari, Nandbatrisi and Krishnacharitra . Krishnacharitra and Devkanya are published as books. His Porus Sikandar is published but never performed on the stage.
He wrote and composed songs for musical plays with help of his knowledge of folk-tunes and metres before writing plays. His songs for Kulin Kanta became popular.
His plays depict the most noticeable features of old Gujarati theatre, including the technique of setting, music and acting, and the theme of triumph of good over evil was central in his plays. He drew inspiration from historical or mythological episodes and wove it in the contemporary events. His plays also focused on the conflicts arising from the human relations.
PlayDateTheatre companyNotes
Shakuntal10 August 1889Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliAdapted from Annasaheb Kirloskar's Marathi play Shakuntal
Rajbeej21 February 1891Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Kundabala27 February 1892Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Mansinh Abhaysinh8 July 1893Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Mularaj Solanki19 October 1895Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Karanghelo5 September 1896Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliBased on Nandshankar Mehta's novel Karanghelo
Barrister14 August 1897Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Jayraj27 August 1898Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Ajabkumari30 September 1899Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Veermandal16 December 1899Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Vikramcharitra7 July 1900Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliBased on Shamal Bhatt's Sinhasan Batrisi
Saubhagya Sundari19 October 1901Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Jugal Jugari23 August 1902Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Kamlata14 October 1904Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliLoosely based on Shakuntal
Krishnacharitra1906Kathiyawadi Natak MandaliInspired from stories from Bhagavata
Krishnacharitra1912Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliInspired from stories from Bhagavata
Nandbatrisi1906Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliBased on Shamal Bhatt's Nandbatrisi
Chaitanyakumar1908Kathiyawadi Natak MandaliBased on story by Harilal Mulshankar Mulani
Devkanya1908Kathiyawadi Natak Mandali
Devkanya1911Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Navalsha Heerji3 November 1909Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Vasantprabha17 December 1910Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Prataplakshmi31 January 1914Mumbai Gujarati Natak MandaliBased on Manilal Dwivedi's novel Gulabsinh
Sangatna Fal28 February 1915Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Ek Ja Bhool1919Royal Natak Mandali
Bhagyoday1920Royal Natak Mandali
Ratnavali28 February 1925Aryasubodh Gujarati Natak Mandali
Vikram Ane Shani28 May 1925Aryasubodh Gujarati Natak MandaliBased on Shamal Bhatt's Sinhasan Batrisi
Veernari Asha3 October 1925Aryasubodh Gujarati Natak Mandali
Kokila1926Aryasubodh Gujarati Natak Mandali

Recognition

He was felicitated by the Bhavnagar Sahitya Sabha in 1944 and the Gujarat Sahitya Sabha in 1946 in Ahmedabad during the Rang Parishad, a theatre conference session. He was honoured in Bhangwadi Theatre, Bombay on 14 December 1948 and was awarded rupees 1,50,000.
Jaishankar Bhojak 'Sundari' had considered him the Shakespeare of Gujarat. Dinesh H. Bhatt has written a doctoral thesis on his life and works in 1966.