Jayatheertha


Jayathirtha B. V. is an Indian theatre activist, production designer, and filmmaker. He is known for his movies Olave Mandara, Tony, Beautiful Manasugalu, and Bell Bottom.
He is also known for his work as a director and play writer.

Early life and education

Jayathirtha B. V. was born and brought up in Bangalore, Karnataka. A high school dropout due to financial constraints, he started working as a salesman at 17 and took up theatre as a pastime. He trained at Abhinayataranga under the renowned theatre personality A. S. Murthy and later became a teacher in the same institution.
Jayathirtha won several awards for his works in theatre, including the B. V. Karanth Best Stage Reviewer Award for his critical review of the play, Maranayak.

Film career

Beginnings

In 2007, he directed a short film called Hasivu. The movie won the Best Indian Short Film award at Cinerail Film Festival, Paris.

2011–2013: Directorial debut and breakthrough

In 2011, he directed a full-fledged Kannada feature film, Olave Mandara which brought several awards including the 59th Filmfare Awards. The sub-plot of Olave Mandara is inspired by the real-life events of Dashrath Manjhi who cut a rocky hill for 22 years to build a road in memory of his wife. Later he directed Tony which won him the Karnataka State Film Award for Best Screenplay.

2015–2018: Career fluctuations

He wrote the screenplay for the 2015 film Endendigu. His next was Bullet Basya starring Sharan and Haripriya, which opened to mixed reviews owing to its sexist jokes.
He made a comeback with the movie Beautiful Manasugalu, which was based on shocking events that occurred in 2012. The movie won Best Dialogues Award at KAFTA Times of India 2017, the only awards given to technicians in Kannada film industry. His next movie was Vanilla, a murder mystery with a message of social concerns.

2019–present: commercial success and fluctuations

is a comedy crime thriller, a story of a die-hard fan of detective stories. It became the first Kannada film in 2019 to complete 100 days. It also won the second best commercial film recognition at Bangalore International Film Festival 2020. The movie has won Best Director Award in Critics Choice Film Awards 2020.
In November 2020, It was reported that Jayathirtha along with four other Kannada film directors KM Chaitanya, Shashank, Yogaraj Bhat, and Pawan Kumar would team up to make a two-hour film. However it did not materialise. His next directorial was Banaras, starring newcomer Zaid Khan alongside Sonal Monteiro, which opened to mixed reviews and was a box office failure. He then directed the action drama Kaiva with Dhanveerah and Megha Shetty in the lead roles and released in 2023, which also opened to mixed reviews and ended as box office disappointment.
In January 2021, Bell Bottom 2, the sequel to the blockbuster Bell Bottom was announced to be directed by Jayathirtha. However the shooting of the film was paused as of 2022 owing to Rishab Shetty's other commitments.

Theatre activities

Jayathirtha has conducted more than 150 theatre training programs, focusing on issues including life skills. He penned and directed 65 street plays and ten stage plays from 1996 to 2007. He organized those plays to spread social awareness among illiterates and the backward classes. Jayathirtha directed Hathim Thi, an experiment with 500 actors, at the Al-Ameen school building.
Jayathirtha has used street plays as an effective medium to convey philosophical messages, concerning social issues, imbued with the entertaining flow. His approach is to involve the audience in the flow of the plays. He scripted six stage plays and 69 street plays/shows.

Radio

Jayathirtha directed a 450-episode of educational radio drama for children, Chukki Chinna – Chinnara Chukki, for an NGO Education Development Center under Sarva Shikshana Abhiyana program of Government of India. This interactive syllabus-based radio program was recorded between 2005 and 2007, but it continues to play on the radio for first-standard to sixth-standard students in Karnataka government schools.

Recognition

  • Best Back Stage designer 1994
  • Best script writer 1996
  • Best stage reviewer 1997
  • Second Best Small Story Award – from Gulbarga University
  • First place in small story award – from Belagali Sahithya Pratistana.
  • First place in small story award – from Kannada Sahithya Parishath.
  • First place in script writing – Street play – Pravardhini from Sahithya Sankramana
  • Best Indian short film Hasivu from Cinerail film festival in Paris

    Filmography

Awards