Manase Manase Thank You Song Lyrics

Manase Manase Thank You Song Lyrics

Manase Manase Thank You Song Lyrics Song Info

ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು ಭೂಮಿಗೆ ಮಳೆ ಹನಿ ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ನೂರಿದೆ ಮನಸಿಗೆ ಪ್ರಣಯವು ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ಎನಿದೆ ಇದೆ ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you

Manase Manase Thank You Song Lyrics Credits

Movie : Ranga SSLC
Song: Manase Manase
Actor: Sudeep, Ramya
Music: Sandeep Chowta
Singer: Rajesh Krishnan, K.S.Chithra
Lyrics: V Nagendra Prasad
Year :2004

Manase Manase Thank You Song Kannada Lyrics:

ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you
ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು
ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you
ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು
ಭೂಮಿಗೆ ಮಳೆ ಹನಿ ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ನೂರಿದೆ
ಮನಸಿಗೆ ಪ್ರಣಯವು ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ಎನಿದೆ
ಇದೆ
ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you
ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು
ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you
ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು
ಅಣು ಅಣುವಿನ ಚಳಿ ಬಿಡಿಸುವ ಕೊಲುಮೆ ಇದೆ
ಕಣ ಕಣದಲಿ ಕಚಗುಳಿ ಇಡೋ ಚಿಲುಮೆ ಇದೆ
ಉಸಿರುಸಿರಲಿ ಪಿಸು ನುಡಿಗಳ ಕವನ ಇದೆ
ಚಡಪಡಿಸುವ ತಡವರಿಸುವ ಚಲನ ಇದೆ
ಆಣೆ ಭಾಷೆ ಹಾಡಾಗಿದೆ
ಬಯಕೆ ಹರಕೆ ಜೊತೆ ಸೆರಿದೆ
ಈ ನನ್ನ ಧಮನಿಯ ಒಳಗೂ ನಿನ್ನದೆ ರೂಪವು
ಈ ನಮ್ಮ ಧರಣಿಯ ಹೊರಗೂ ನಮ್ಮದೆ ಲೋಕವು

ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you
ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು
ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you (Thank you)
ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು
ಎದೆ ಮನೆಯಲಿ ಚಿಲಿಪಿಲಿಗಳ ಆಹ್ಲಾದವು
ಹದಿ ಹರೆಯಕೆ ಹೊಸ ಹುರುಪಿನ ಆನಂದವು
ಗುಸು ಗುಸು ಗುಸು ಮನ ಮನಗಳ ಸಮ್ಮೇಳವು
ಸರಿಗಮಗಳ ಸರಿಸಮಶೃತಿ ಸ೦ಗೀತವು
ಶ್ವಾಸಾ ಶ್ವಾಸಾ ಬೆರೆತಾಗಿದೆ
ಮೊದಲೋ ಕೊನೆಯೋ ಮರೆತಾಗಿದೆ
ಎಂದೆಂದೂ ತಿರುಗುವ ಜಗವ ನಿಂತುಕೋ ಎನ್ನುವ
ಕಾಲಾನೇ ಸರಿಯದೆ ಇರಲಿ ಎನ್ನುತಾ ಹಾಡುವ
ಮನಸೇ ಮನಸೇ, thank you
ನಿನಗೂ ಮನಸಾಯಿತು

ಕನಸೇ ಕನಸೇ, thank you (Thank you)
ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು
ಭೂಮಿಗೆ ಮಳೆ ಹನಿ ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ನೂರಿದೆ
ಮನಸಿಗೆ ಪ್ರಣಯವು ಬರಲು ಸೂಚನೆ ಎನಿದೆ
ಇದೆ
ಇದೆ
ಮನಸೇ
ಮನಸೇ
Thank you
Thank you
ನಿನಗೂ
ಮನಸಾಯಿತು
ಕನಸೇ
ಕನಸೇ
Thank you
ಒಲವೇ ವರವಾಯಿತು

 

Manase Manase Thank You Song English Lyrics:

 

Manasē manasē, thank you
ninagū manasāyitu
kanasē kanasē, thank you
olavē varavāyitu bhūmige
maḷe hani baralu sūcane nūride
manasige praṇayavu
baralu sūcane enide ide
manasē manasē, thank you
ninagū manasāyitu
kanasē kanasē, thank you
olavē varavāyitu aṇu aṇuvina
caḷi biḍisuva kolume
ide kaṇa kaṇadali kacaguḷi
iḍō cilume ide usirusirali
pisu nuḍigaḷa kavana
ide caḍapaḍisuva taḍavarisuva
calana ide āṇe bhāṣe
hāḍāgide bayake harake jote

seride ī nanna dhamaniya
oḷagū ninnade rūpavu ī nam\’ma
dharaṇiya horagū nam\’made
lōkavu
manasē manasē, thank you
ninagū
manasāyitu kanasē kanasē, thank you
(Thank you)
olavē varavāyitu ede maneyali
cilipiligaḷa āhlādavu hadi hareyake
hosa hurupina ānandavu
gusu gusu gusu mana
managaḷa sam\’mēḷavu
sarigamagaḷa sarisamaśr̥ti
sa0gītavu śvāsā śvāsā
beretāgide modalō koneyō
maretāgide endendū tiruguva
jagava nintukō ennuva kālānē
sariyade irali ennutā hāḍuva

manasē manasē, thank you
ninagū
manasāyitu kanasē kanasē, thank you
(Thank you)
olavē varavāyitu bhūmige
maḷe hani baralu sūcane
nūride manasige praṇayavu
baralu sūcane enide
ide ide
manasē manasē Thank you
Thank you
ninagū manasāyitu kanasē kanasē
Thank you
olavē varavāyitu

Extra Inforamation:

About Sandeep Chowta:

Indian music director Sandeep Chowta was born in 1967 or 1968 and mainly works in Telugu and Hindi films. In India, he also serves as the head of Columbia Records. He has performed some of his tunes as well.

He produced the anti-substance abuse documentary Dead End in 2003, which was shown at multiple film festivals. Tanya Khubchandani, a seventeen-year-old drug campaigner and college student, made this.[Reference required]

Chowta became a key member of the world/new age musical group AO Music (commonly known as AO) after inviting Jay Oliver and Richard Gannaway to his Mumbai studio in 2004. Children’s choirs from all over the world and Miriam Stockley, the voice of Karl Jenkins’ Adiemus project, are also featured on AO Music.

Since 2009, Chowta-credited albums from AO Music have appeared in the top five worldwide. He wrote the music for twelve Tollywood productions.[Reference required]

Childhood
Born in Ghana, Chowta spent his childhood in Nigeria before relocating to Bangalore, India. D. K. Chowta, a Tulu writer and merchant from the Bunt community, is his father. Prajna Chowta is an ethnographer and his younger sister.

About V Nagendra Prasad:

Director, composer, and lyricist V. Nagendra Prasad primarily contributes to Kannada films. Mostly for Kannada films, he has penned around 3000 songs.

Childhood
Prasad’s birthday is December 3, 1975. He is from Ijjala Ghatta village in Nagamangala Taluk, Mandya District, and is the eldest son of M.V. Venkata Ramanappa and Chandramma.[Reference required]

He finished his education in Doddaballapura, Bangalore, then went on to Manasa Gangothri, Mysore University, to earn his master’s degree in Kannada literature.[reference required]. In 2021, Prasad graduated with a Doctor of Literature (D.Litt) from Hampi University.

Career In 2000, V. Nagendra Prasad made his Kannada lyricist debut in the film Gajina Mane, which was directed by K. V. Jayaram [citation needed]. He received praise for writing dialogue for a supernatural film for the first time.

Sri Manjunatha and K. Raghavendra Rao wrote and directed the movie. Many people have commented on his first directing effort, Nalla, which starred Sudeep. In addition, he has experience directing, creating dialogue for television, acting, and composing music. His involvement in theater, both on stage and in street performances, is equally well-known. He debuted as the main character in his own film, directed by Googal, in 2018. He also starred as the main character in the film Guruji.

As a lyricist, V. Nagendra Prasad has written over 3000 songs for over 1000 films, as well as hundreds of classical, patriotic, promotional, and devotional albums and more than 50 television series. He has collaborated with many composers, such as  Rajan-Nagendra, Ilayaraja, Hamsalekha, and Upendra Kumar. Among them are Sadhu Kokila, Gurukiran, Arjun Janya, Vidhya Sagar, V. Manohar, Rajesh Ramanath, Raghu Dixit, Anoop Seelin, Mano Murthy, Deva,

M. M. Keeravani, Gandharva, L. N. Shastri, Jessie Gift, Chandan Shetty, Ravi Basrur, Sridhar V. Sambhram, Bharath B. J., B. Ajaneesh Loknath, Manikanth Kadri, Poornachandra Tejaswi, Manisharma, Thaman, R. P. Patnaik, Sandeep Chowta, Venkat Narayan, Gowtham Srivatsav, Vineeth Menon, D Imman, Yuvan Shankar Raja, and Charan Raj.

About K.S.Chithra:

Born on July 27, 1963, Krishnan Nair Shantakumari Chithra is a Carnatic musician and playback vocalist from India. She has recorded more than 25,000 songs in a variety of Indian languages over the course of her almost fifty-year career, including Tamil, Kannada, Hindi, Telugu, Malayalam, Odia, Bengali, Punjabi, Rajasthani, Marathi, Tulu, Badaga, Banjara, Urdu, Assamese, Gujarati, and Sanskrit. in addition to other languages including English, French, Malay, Latin, Arabic, Sinhalese, and Urdu (Pakistan).

Chithra, who is well-known for her exceptional singing ability, was named the Golden Voice of India by the esteemed Royal Albert Hall in London in 2001. As a testament to her enormous contribution to the Indian film industry, the Times Group named her the Melody Queen of Indian Cinema in 2016. Additionally, she is Known by a variety of loving titles in different parts of the country, including Piya Basanti in North India, Vanambadi in Kerala, Chinna Kuyil in Tamil Nadu.

Kannada Kogile in Karnataka, and Sangeeta Saraswathi in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana states, she is hailed as the Little Nightingale of Indian Cinema, Nightingale of South India, She is also well-known for her long history of working with playback singers K. J. Yesudas and S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, as well as music composers A. R. Rahman, Ilaiyaraja, M. M. Keeravani, and Hamsalekha.

Chithra has won 43 State Government honors from eight Indian states, including 18 from Kerala, 12 from United Andhra Pradesh, 5 from Tamil Nadu, and 4 from Karnataka, in addition to six National Film honors and ten Filmfare Awards South and one each from the governments of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, West Bengal, and Odisha.  For her significant services to the Indian music community, she received the Padma Bhushan in 2021, India’s third-highest civilian honor, and the Padma Shri in 2005.

As the first Indian woman to get recognition from the British Parliament in 2003 at the House of Commons in the United Kingdom, she was bestowed the title of First Lady by the President of India in 2018. She performed live at the Qinghai International River Festival in 2009, becoming the first Indian musician to receive recognition from the Chinese government. She is also the second Indian female playback singer, aside from Lata Mangeshkar, to have performed at London’s esteemed Royal Albert Hall in 2001.

A packed international audience enthusiastically welcomed the performance.[30][29] In the United Kingdom, her song “Kannalane/Kehna Hi Kya” from the 1995 movie Bombay was featured. The “1000 Songs Everyone Must Hear Before You Die” list from The Guardian.

Childhood
Chithra was born on July 27, 1963 in the Keralan city of Trivandrum, which is today known as Thiruvananthapuram. All three of her children received instruction in the fundamentals of music from their father, Krishnan Nair, who was a school teacher and a music lover. On July 18, 1986, he passed away following a protracted fight with cancer. Shanthakumari, her mother, taught music as well. She has a younger brother named K. S. Mahesh who is also a musician and an older sister named K. S. Beena who used to be a singer.

Chithra finished She attended Thiruvananthapuram’s Cotton Hill Government Girls High School. She admits that her musical ability was discovered by the school’s teachers.

For seven years, Chithra was trained in Carnatic music by K. Omanakutty. She received a first-class and third-ranked B.A. in music from the University of Kerala.[36] She was chosen to receive the Government of India’s 1978–1984 National Talent Search Scholarship.

Playback music in Malayalam movies
In 1979, M. G. Radhakrishnan recorded K. S. Chithra’s voice for movies and personal albums, introducing her to Malayalam playback. She originally recorded her voice for the movie Attahasam, Snehapoorvam Meera, and Njan Ekananu. She gave a live performance as well. performances in India and beyond with K. J. Yesudas.[36] Bombay Ravi’s composition of “Manjal Prasadavum” from the 1986 movie Nakhakshathangal won her the second National Film Award for Best Female Playback Singer.

She got her third National Film Award for singing the song “Indupushpam Choodi Nilkum” for the 1989 movie Vaishali, which was composed by the same composer. The song “Poomaname” from the 1985 film Nirakkoottu, which was composed by Shyam, earned her her first Kerala State Film Award for Best Singer. She has gained widespread recognition since then by performing well-known songs written by Mohan Sithara, Shyam, S. P. Venkitesh, Kannur Rajan, Salil Chowdhury, Johnson, Ouseppachan, M. K. Arjunan, A. T. Ummer, Berny Ignatius,

M. B. Sreenivasan, Mohan Sithara, Vidyasagar, Ramesh Narayan, Sharreth, Jayachandran M. and Dev Deepak. She recorded a number of popular Malayalam songs and is known as the “Nightingale of Kerala (Vanambadi)”. Her greatest duets in Malayalam are with K. J. Yesudas and M. G. Sreekumar, and she recorded several songs for composer S. P. Venkitesh. She has won the Kerala State Awards a record 16 times as of 2017. From the film Malik (2021), her most recent song “Theerame” became yet another fantastic smash in the Malayalam music industry.

Telugu film

Chithra and S. P. Balasubrahmanyam performing
“Paadalenu Pallavaina” from the dubbed Tamil film Sindhu Bhairavi (1985) was Chithra’s debut Telugu song. It was written by Ilaiyaraaja. Later, she hummed in a song sung by K. J. Yesudas and composed by K. V. Mahadevan.  for the image Pralayam (1985). “Gelupu Maade” from Vijrumbhana (1986), which was written by K. Chakravarthy, is her first song in a Telugu movie. She later sang songs for many Telugu composers, including Sathyam, Raj-Koti, Ilaiyaraja, K. V. Mahadevan, and K. Chakravarthy, between 1986 and 1988.

However, she first became well-known and made her breakthrough with Ilaiyaraja’s compositions, such as “Jallanta Kavvinta” from Geethanjali (1989) and “Ninnukori Varnam” from Gharshana (1988). She became a well-known Telugu singer after that, recording every other song on each album and appearing as the lead female vocalist in practically every movie released in the 1990s. That was when she made a name for herself as a well-known vocalist who nearly replaced S. Janaki in 1990, solidifying her spot in Telugu cinema.

The Government of Andhra Pradesh presented Chithra with her first Nandi Award for “Kalika Chilakala Koliki” from Seetharamayya Gari Manavaralu (1991). Her numerous Telugu songs earned her a total of 11 Nandi Awards for Best Female Playback Singer. As the years went by, Chithra was acknowledged as a Telugu singing great whose time or legacy was regarded as the golden era, alongside P. Susheela and S. Janaki. Chithra’s charm is extraordinary, and she is currently regarded as one of the best singers in the Telugu film business. She worked and performed as many Telugu songs as she could for M. M. Keeravani. with nearly all of the great composers from that era to the present.

Hindi film
List of Hindi songs recorded by K. S. Chithra is the main article.
Chithra first heard Hindi film music in 1985. S. P. Venkitesh wrote her first Hindi song, which she recorded but which was never commercially released. Chithra has recorded almost 200 Bollywood songs when the composers Anand and Milind asked her to perform duets with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam for the 1991 Hindi movie Love.

Chithra recorded a number of private albums in addition to movie songs, including Piya Basanti and Sunset Point, which went on to become quite successful and won multiple awards, including the MTV Music Video Awards. She became well-known in the Northern region due to the success of her previous record She is known to many Indians as “Piya Basanti” Chitra.

About Sudeep:

Known by various names, including Sudeepa or Kichcha Sudeep, Sudeep Sanjeev was born on September 2, 1971. He is an Indian actor, director, producer, screenwriter, television host, and singer who mainly works in Kannada movies. Additionally, he has contributed to Tamil, Telugu, and Hindi films. He is among the top paid actors in Kannada film and one of the most acclaimed celebrities. Additionally, he is among the first Kannada actors to appear in Forbes’ list of India’s top 100 celebrities since 2013. He has won multiple honors, including the Nandi Award, the Karnataka State Film Award, and four Filmfare Awards South.

Sudeepa made his acting debut in Prathyartha (1999) and Thayavva (1997) in a supporting role before landing a big part in Sparsha (2000) is a romance directed by Sunil Kumar Desai. He made a name for himself in the highly regarded part in Huchcha (2001). Nandhi (2002), Kiccha (2003), Swathi Muthu (2003), My Autograph (2006), No 73, Shanthi Nivasa (2007), Mussanjemaatu (2008), Ee Shathamaanada Veera Madakari (2009), Just Maath Maathalli (2010), Vishnuvardhana (2011),

Kempe Gowda (2011), the Telugu-Tamil bilingual Eega (2012), Maanikya (2014), Ranna (2015), Kotigobba 2 (2016), Hebbuli (2017), The Villain (2018), Pailwaan (2019), Telugu-Hindi bilingual Rakta Charitra, and the Hindi film Dabangg 3 (2019) were among the other commercially successful films in which he starred.

His films Huchcha, Nandhi, and Swathi Muthu earned him the Filmfare Award for Best Actor in Kannada for three years in a row. He has been presenting the Bigg Boss Kannada television reality show since 2013. His performance in the His followers dubbed him Kichcha Sudeepa after the 2001 movie Huchcha.

Childhood
Sanjeev Manjappa and Saroja welcomed Sudeep into the world on September 2, 1971, in Shimoga, in the Shimoga district of modern-day Karnataka. The family had moved from Narasimharajapura in the Chikmagalur district to Shimoga. He graduated from Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering in Bangalore with a bachelor’s degree in industrial and production engineering. He played cricket for the college’s under-17 team.[Reference required] He conquered his’shyness’ at the Roshan Taneja School of Acting in Mumbai.

Career As an actor, Sudeep made his cinematic debut with Thayavva (1997). After that, he starred in Sunil Kumar Desai’s Prathyartha as a supporting actor and Sparsha as the lead actor. A part in Huchcha in 2001 provided He has his first large fan base. He debuted in Bollywood with Phoonk in 2008. Additionally, he starred in the films Rann, Phoonk 2, and Rakta Charitra, all directed by Ram Gopal Varma.

Following S. Narayan’s guidance, he changed his stage name from Sudeep to Sudeepa for Veera Parampare (2010), and he chose to stick with the moniker after the movie’s success. Both of his later movies, Kempe Gowda and Vishnuvardhana (2011), were box office hits.

In 2012, Sudeepa made his Telugu film debut in the fantasy film Eega, directed by S. S. Rajamouli. In the film, he played an industrialist who kills her supposed boyfriend after falling in love with an NGO worker (played by Samantha Ruth Prabhu), who then starts to haunt him in the guise of a housefly. Sudeepa’s performance and the movie were highly praised.

Varadanayaka and Bachchan were released in 2013. His next project was the drama Maanikya, which he also directed. It was an adaptation of the highly successful Telugu movie Mirchi (2013). He starred in Ranna, a 2015 version of the Telugu film Attarintiki Daredi, which was also a box office success, and he made a brief appearance as a Persian arms dealer in S. S. Rajamouli’s Baahubali: The Beginning, which was the highest-grossing movie of the year.

Vaalee (2001), Chandu (2002), Ranga SSLC (2004), Nalla (2004), #73, Shaanthi Nivaasa (2007), Ee Shathamaanada Veera Madakari (2009), Kempe Gowda (2011), Bachchan (2013), and other films like Mandya to Mumbai (2014), Ring Road Shubha (2014), and Raate (2015) are among the many films in which he sings.

In 2019, Sudeepa portrayed Salman Khan’s archenemy Chulbul Pandey in the Hindi movie Dabangg 3. In Sye Raa Narasimha Reddy, he also portrays Avuku Raju.

Sudeepa finished his 26 years in the motion picture business.

Nirup Bhandari and Neetha Ashok starred in Sudeepa’s subsequent Vikrant Rona, which was directed by Anup Bhandari. In Kabzaa, which starred Upendra, he had a supporting part.

About Ramya:

Divya Spandana, better known by her stage name Ramya, was born on November 29, 1982, and is an Indian politician, producer, and actor. She represented Mandya, Karnataka, as a Member of Parliament in the Lok Sabha. Although she has made appearances in Tamil and Telugu films, her primary activity is in Kannada cinema. Ramya has won a Karnataka State Film Award, an Udaya Award, and two Filmfare Awards South.

In the Kannada-language movie Abhi from 2003, Ramya made her acting debut. Despite her occasional involvement in Tamil and Telugu films, her contributions to the Kannada cinema industry brought her more recognition. For Amrithadhare (2005) and Tananam Tananam (2006), she received the Udaya Award and the Filmfare Award for Best Actress, respectively.

Her portrayal of the title character in the 2011 She received additional praise from critics and a Karnataka State Film Award for Best Actress for her role in the romance film Sanju Weds Geetha. Ramya has also starred in other commercially successful movies, including as the 2016 epic-fantasy Nagarahavu, and the 2011 fantasy blockbuster Katari Veera Surasundarangi. She returned to filmmaking in 2023, producing the movie Swathi Mutthina Male Haniye under the “AppleBox Studios” name, following a brief break from acting.

In 2012, Ramya became a member of the Indian National Congress’ youth wing. She later won a by-election in 2013 to represent Karnataka’s Mandya constituency in parliament, but she lost the general elections the following year.

Childhood and work
On November 29, 1982, Ramya was born in Bangalore, Karnataka Her foster father, R. T. Narayan, was an industrialist, and her mother, Ranjitha, is a prominent Karnataka Congress Party member. Both of her parents are from Mandya. From the age of five, he raised her until her death in 2013. Ramya asserted in 2004 that she was the granddaughter of S. M. Krishna, a politician and former Karnataka chief minister.[Reference required]

Ramya completed her education at St. Hilda’s School, a residential school in Ooty, and Sacred Heart School (Church Park), Chennai. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree in commerce from St. Joseph’s College of Commerce, Bangalore, she planned to work as a model for Mumbai-based Sheetal Designer Studio.

Ramya was crowned Miss Country Club after participating in ramp shows 2001. She received film offers around this time and was considered for Appu, Dumbee, and Ninagagi before being paired with Puneeth Rajkumar in Abhi. Here, Parvathamma Rajkumar, the film’s producer, gave her the screen name Ramya.

Career in film

At the 37th Indian International Film Festival (IFFI-2006), Ramya
Abhi, a 2003 Kannada film directed by Puneeth Rajkumar, marked Ramya’s feature film debut. In the 2004 movie Kuththu, she debuted in the Tamil film business under the stage name Ramya. Both the movie and her subsequent Tamil feature, Giri, earned well at the box office. However, she was given the nickname “Kuthu” Ramya for her first movie, which made her well-known in Tamil Nadu at the time. With three Kannada films—Aakash, Gowramma, and Amrithadhare—she had significant box office success, won praise from critics, and rose to prominence as an actress.

She starred in Julie (2006), a Hindi-language film remake of the 1975 original, however it was a box office flop. Despite negative reviews from reviewers, her next Kannada film, Jothe Jotheyali, was a hit [citation needed] after her next release, Datta. Tananam Tananam, her last album from 2006, was a mediocre performance that received mixed reviews .Ramya won her first Filmfare Award for Best Actress for . Her role in the movie was characterized as “challenging” and “little complex” by her.

Ramya featured in three feature films in 2007; Arasu, the first, was a big smash. Then she showed up as a prostitute in an AIDS awareness film as part of Mira Nair’s AIDS Jaago initiative. Polladhavan, her final 2007 film, was a commercial triumph and her debut in Tamil. It was released during Deepavali.[Reference required] Rajinikanth had nothing but admiration for the whole Polladhavan crew.

She was nominated for a Best Actress Award at the 56th Filmfare Awards South for her debut 2008 release, the popular Kannada film Mussanjemaatu. She then went on to do the Tamil movie Thoondil. Later, Ramya said she was sorry she had accepted the movie. She starred in Bombaat and Anthu Inthu Preethi Banthu later that year; the former did well at the box office. the last book she released in 2008.

Vaaranam Aayiram, directed by Gautham Vasudev Menon, was the winner of the National Award for the best Tamil feature film that year. In Vaaranam Aayiram, she was given credit as Divya.[Reference required] For this picture, which was a critical and financial triumph, she dubbed her own voice. Since her two films, Bhimoos Bang Bang Kids and Jothegaara, were postponed because of financial difficulties, she had no releases in 2009.[Reference required]

Just Math Mathalli, her debut release in 2010, was well-reviewed and praised for her performance.[Reference required] That year, she also released Kiccha Huccha and the long-delayed Jothegaara. The love movie Sanju Weds Geetha and the Tamil film Singam Puli were her following releases. Reviews for this movie were favorable when it first came out, and Ramya received accolades by reviewers for her performance, which was regarded as one of her finest.

She played a school teacher in the comedy-drama Sidlingu, which was her debut release in 2012.[Reference required] A light-comedy film called Lucky came next. She made an appearance in Katari Veera Surasundarangi, a semi-mythological film. Ramya declared in August 2013 that she was thinking of giving up acting to go into politics.

After a brief stint in politics, Ramya returned to acting in 2016 with Nagarahavu, a movie that used special effects to cast deceased star Vishnuvardhan in the lead role. When it was first released, the movie got bad reviews and didn’t draw any viewers.

Following an almost seven-year hiatus, Ramya rejoined the film industry with her own film studio, AppleBox Studios.[32] She produced the Raj B. Shetty-directed movie Swathi Mutthina Male Haniye (2023) as her first task. With this endeavor, she hopes to provide compelling stories about strong women.

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