'' (1938)
Singing career Subbalakshmi gave her first performance at the prestigious
Madras Music Academy in 1929, when she was 13 years old. The performance consisted of singing
bhajans (Hindu hymns). The academy was known for its discriminating selection process, and they broke tradition by inviting a young girl as a key performer. Her performance was described as spellbinding and earned her many admirers and the
moniker of musical genius from critics. Soon after her debut performances, Subbulakshmi became one of the leading Carnatic vocalists. By the age of seventeen, Subbulakshmi was giving concerts on her own, including major performances at the
Madras Music Academy. She travelled to
London,
New York,
Canada, the
Far East, and other places as India's cultural ambassador. Her concerts at
Edinburgh International Festival of Music and Drama in 1963;
Carnegie Hall, New York; the
UN General Assembly on UN day in 1966;
Royal Albert Hall, London in 1982; and Festival of India in Moscow in 1987 were significant landmarks in her career. In 1969 she was accompanied by
Indian Railways Advisor SN Venkata Rao to Rameswaram, where she sang several songs in front of each idol in the
Ramanathaswamy Temple. She shared a very cordial relation with Sree Ramaseva Mandali at Bengaluru for whom she performed 36 concerts. After the death of her husband
Kalki Sadasivam in 1997, she stopped all her public performances. Her last performance was in 1997, before her retirement from public concerts. M. S. Subbulakshmi died on 11 December 2004, at her home in Kotturpuram, Chennai.
Films M.S. also acted in four
Tamil films during her youth. Her first movie,
Sevasadanam, was released on 2 May 1938.
F.G. Natesa Iyer was the lead actor, opposite Subbulakshmi, in this film, directed by
K. Subramanyam. It was a critical and commercial success.
Ananda Vikatan favourably reviewed the film on 8 May 1938: Sevasadanam is one of the early Tamil films to be set in a contemporary social setting and to advocate reformist social policies. The film is an adapted version of
Premchand's novel
Bazaar-e-Husn. Veteran Marxist leader
N. Sankaraiah, has described Sevasadanam as an "unusual film" for choosing the subject of marriages between young girls and old men (which had social sanction). According to him, the film successfully broughtout the "sufferings of the girl" (Subbalakshmi) and the "mental agony of the aged husband" (F.G. Natesa Iyer). Tamil film critic and historian Aranthai Narayanan observes in his book,
Thamizh Cinemavin Kathai (The Story of Tamil Cinema) that "Seva Sadhanam proved a turning point in the history of Tamil cinema. In the climax, the aged husband, now a totally changed man, was shown as casting aside with utter contempt his 'sacred thread', which symbolises his Brahmin superiority. It came as a stunning blow to the then Brahmin orthodoxy." MS Subbulakshmi also played the male role of
Narada in
Savitri (1941) to raise money for launching
Kalki, her husband's nationalist Tamil weekly. Her title role of the
Rajasthani saint-poetess
Meera in the eponymous 1945
film gave her national prominence. This movie was re-made in Hindi in 1947. == Filmography ==