Actors who multitask: Siddhu Jonnalagadda, Adivi Sesh, Naveen Polishetty and Vishwak Sen
The Hindu
How actors Siddhu Jonnalagadda, Adivi Sesh, Naveen Polishetty and Vishwak Sen, who also don the hats of screenwriters, have carved their niche in Telugu cinema
Siddhu Jonnalagadda, Adivi Sesh, Naveen Polishetty and Vishwak Sen. The common factor between these actors is their multi-dimensional involvement in cinema. As actors, they are the face of the films they star in, but they do much more. The four are also screenwriters. Some of them have also been credited as editors and creative producers. Vishwak Sen is also a director. Their tenacity to put in the extra work, which initially came from a necessity to get a foothold in the Telugu film industry rather than lament the lack of opportunities, holds them in good stead.
At the time of writing this feature, Tillu Square, the Telugu crime comedy released in theatres on March 29, was inching towards the ₹100 crore mark at the box office. The runaway success affirms how big the Tillu phenomenon has grown since the 2022 madcap comedy DJ Tillu, co-written by Siddhu, drawing from hyperlocal Hyderabad and Secunderabad references. It helped that Siddhu, who had co-written the first film with its director Vimal Krishna, went back to the drawing board, this time with director Mallik Ram, and managed to retain the essence of what made Tillu click while developing the story further in a zone that is familiar to the audience.
The success bolsters Siddhu as one of the multi-talented actors to watch out for. It took Krishna and his Leela, which Siddhu had co-written with director Ravikanth Perepu, to make the audience and the industry take the actor seriously. The film had a direct digital release during the lockdown of 2020. Siddhu has been a part of Telugu cinema since 2009, when he locked horns with Naga Chaitanya in the latter’s debut film, Josh. Director Praveen Sattaru cast him as one of the leads in LBW (Life Before Wedding) and later collaborated with him to write Guntur Talkies (2016).
The recognition that came with Krishna and his Leela paved the way for DJ Tillu. Packed with wacky one-liners, the character of Tillu, with all its vulnerability, street smartness and philosophical musings reflected the banter on the streets of Secunderabad. Siddhu had arrived but couldn’t take his success for granted, lest Tillu fade away as a one-time wonder. DJ Tillu and its sequel Tillu Square went through changes during the making, with several rewrites and edits leading to all that fun.
For Siddhu, an engineer and an MBA diploma holder who chose cinema over a corporate job, realising his dream of being a star of ₹100 crore film has not been an easy journey. As Tillu Cube is on the cards, all eyes will also be on his other films coming up are films with director Nandini Reddy, Neeraja Kona and Bommarillu Bhaskar.
The making of Adivi Sesh starrers Kshanam and Goodachari, which the actor co-wrote with the respective directors Ravikanth Perepu and Sashi Kiran Tikka, holds lessons in how to make every rupee go the extra mile. Within the Telugu film circles and among avid film buffs, it is well known that Kshanam, the tautly written and edited thriller looked richer and sleeker than what its modest budget of around a crore would allow.
Similarly, Goodachari, made within a budget of about five crore, was a film that required much more. Sesh and his collaborators, in both films, understood the need to cut corners but not let it show on screen. The success of Kshanam made way for Goodachari with a better budget but rather than seeking a star status, Sesh would take on other tasks to ensure the smooth making of the film. A string of successes —Evaru, Major and HIT: The Second Case — followed, among which he co-wrote Major and chipped in with the post-production work of Evaru.