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" Mā Telugu Talliki " [a] is the official state song of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The main subject of the song, Mother Telugu , is portrayed as a sacred symbol of the Telugu people . Many schools and government events start with this song.
Sankarambadi Sundarachari (Telugu: Shankarambāḍi Sundarācāri; born 10 August 1914 – died 8 April 1977) [1] was an Indian writer and poet in the Telugu language, although of Tamil origin. He was the writer of the official state song of Andhra Pradesh, Ma Telugu Talliki (lit. ' To Our Mother Telugu '). [2]
The patriotic song "Mā Telugu Talliki" ("To Our Mother Telugu") is the official state song of Andhra Pradesh, whose lyrics were written by Sankarambāḍi Sundarācāri for the 1942 Telugu film Deena Bandhu, which starred V. Nagayya. [3] [4] [5]
Tanguturi Suryakumari (13 November 1925 – 25 April 2005), also known by her married name Suryakumari Elvin, [1] was an Indian singer, actress and dancer in Telugu cinema. She sang "Maa Telugu Thalliki", the official song of the State of Andhra Pradesh. [2] She was the winner of Miss Madras 1952 pageant [3] and runner-up of the Miss India 1952 ...
Song name Translated name Language Lyricist(s) Composer(s) Adopted Andhra Pradesh: Maa Telugu Thalliki [1] To Our Mother Telugu: Telugu: Sankarambadi Sundaraachari: Tanguturi Suryakumari: 1975 [2] Assam: O Mur Apunar Desh [3] [4] O My Endearing Country! Assamese: Lakshminath Bezbaroa: Kamala Prasad Agarwala: 2013 [5] Bihar: Mere Bharat Ke ...
Maa Telugu Thalliki (To Our Mother Telugu) Maa Telugu Talliki (pronounced [maː teluɡu talliki], IAST: Mā Telugu Talliki; lit. ' "To Our Mother Telugu" ') is the official song of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The Telugu Thalli is portrayed as a symbol of Telugu people. Many schools and government events start with this song.
NBC’s 50th anniversary special for “Saturday Night Live” hit a very strong 14.8 million viewers on average across NBC and Peacock on Sunday night. That number is 202% above the average ...
The Andhra Pradesh University's syllabus committee to include it in the Telugu second year graduation text books for the next academic year starting in 2009. This is the third song to feature in Telugu syllabi after Maa Telugu Thalliki and Telugu Jathi Manadi in the 77 years of Telugu cinema. [2]