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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

National Award gives motivation to work harder and walk the talk: Suriya on Soorarai Pottru’s success

The 2020 Tamil-language drama won National Awards in five categories, including Best Feature Film, Best Actor for Suriya and Best Actress for Aparrna Balamurali

PTI Mumbai Published 23.07.22, 02:04 PM
Suriya turned 47 on Saturday.

Suriya turned 47 on Saturday. @actorsuriya/Instagram

South superstar Suriya Sivakumar on Saturday vowed to “work harder” and continue making good films after his Tamil movie Soorarai Pottru emerged as a big winner at the 68th National Film Awards.

The 2020 Tamil-language drama on Friday won five awards, including Best Feature Film, Best Actor for Suriya, Best Actress for Aparrna Balamurali, Best Screenplay for Sudha Kongara and Shalini Usha Nair, and Best Music Direction (Background Music) for GV Prakash Kumar.

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Suriya, who shared the Best Actor award with Tanhaji The Unsung Warrior star Ajay Devgn, posted a statement on Twitter and said he is feeling ecstatic about his film winning five National Awards.

“The National Award gives me the motivation to work harder and walk my talk... and give you all good films, now & always,” the actor, who turned 47 on Saturday, said.

Suriya thanked his fans and followers for showering love on Soorarai Pottru, a film inspired by the life of Air Deccan founder Capt G R Gopinath.

“My heartfelt thanks for all the love and good wishes that reached us and enriched our lives so far. We are ecstatic with the five National Awards for Soorarai Pottru. The overwhelming reception for our films, which was released directly on OTT during a pandemic, has made our eyes well up in joy,” the actor said.

The National Award recognition is a testimony of director Kongara's “many years of hard work and creative vision of Captain Gopinath's story”, he added.

Suriya also thanked director Vasanth Sai and filmmaker Mani Ratnam for believing in him and giving him his first film Nerukku Ner (1997).

“I extend my gratitude to director Vasanth Sai and filmmaker-producer Mani Ratnam, who placed their faith in my acting abilities and gave me my first film, Nerukku Ner," he said.

The Jai Bhim star gave a shout out to his actor-wife Jyotika for encouraging him to do Soorarai Pottru .

“My special thanks to my Jyotika, who insisted I should produce & act in Soorarai Pottru. My love and thank you to all those who have encouraged my efforts so far and to my Amma and Appa, Karthi and Brinda, who have supported me always. I dedicate this award to my kids, Diya and Dev, and to my loving family,” he added.

Suriya also congratulated fellow winner Ajay Devgn and all the other National Award recipients.

Besides Suriya, Tamil star Lakshmi Priya Chandramouli bagged the Best Supporting Actress award for her performance in Sivaranjaniyum Innum Sila Pengallum.

Taking to Instagram, the actor said her heart “is filled with joy and gratitude”.

“To everyone who ever believed in me, to everyone who gave me an opportunity, to everyone who stood at a distance and wished me well, to everyone who trusted my talent, to everyone who looked down upon me & pushed me and to everyone who is just happy for me... thank you so so so much,” she wrote.

“A huge thanks to my director @directorvasanth.official for this! Big congratulations to all the other winners and especially to the winners from our own Tamil industry!," her post further read.

In the Non-Feature Film category, filmmaker-composer Vishal Bhardwaj won the Best Music Direction award for the song ‘Marenge Toh Wahin Jaakar’ from director Vinod Kapri's 1232 kms, a documentary about the migrant workers' exodus during the lockdown.

Bhardwaj said he is happy to have won an award for a film that represented the sentiments of migrant workers during COVID-19.

“I'm so happy to get an award for the film which represents and acknowledges the pain that the whole country and especially the migrant workers went through in the Covid-19 pandemic,” the filmmaker said in a statement.

“The song was actually a poem that Gulzar Saab wrote to express the suffocated feelings of not being able to do anything to help the migrants. It was a catharsis for both of us which we expressed through Sukhwinder's voice,” he added.

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