
Ram, a successful theatre artist, saves Mandar from committing suicide. He then ends up developing a special bond with Mandar and even helps solve his problems.
Does Nautanki Saala! have end credit scenes?
No!
Nautanki Saala! does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
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Which actor plays the lead character Ram Parmar (RP) in the film?
Ayushmann Khurrana
Kunaal Roy Kapur
Rufy Khan
Vikrant Massey
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Read the complete plot summary of Nautanki Saala!, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Ram Parmar [RP] is in a therapy session, opening up about a life tangled in personal turmoil. He describes three breakups in as many months, a three-month stretch of sleepless nights, and a pattern of heavy drinking that began after a suicide attempt. The film unfolds in a narrative voice that follows RP as he tries to understand how these events are connected and what they reveal about himself. He is not just any performer; he is a successful theatre artist who portrays Raavan in the production of Ram Leela, a show that has already logged an astonishing 1500 performances. This stage world sets the backdrop for the drama that will soon collide with real life in unpredictable ways.
One day, RP’s life intersects with that of Mandar Lele, who is on the brink of self-harm on a public road. RP intervenes, saves him, and brings him back to his home. This act, meant to be a rescue, pulls RP into Mandar’s orbit and pulls his own life off its rails in the process. Mandar’s presence forces RP to confront his own emotional fragility, just as RP’s girlfriend Chitra Singh grows anxious about RP’s increasing entanglement with Mandar. Chitra fears that RP’s involvement could land him in trouble with the police or the hospital system, and she urges RP to step back. Yet RP cannot simply walk away from someone in need.
Mandar’s troubles run deeper than a failed relationship. He reveals that he has just lost Nandini Patel Nandini Patel and is haunted by the end of that bond, to the point of writing a suicide note to her grandmother. RP’s decision to retrieve the letter leads him to a troubling discovery at the grandmother’s home. The elder woman, Sulabha Arya’s character in the story, implies that her involvement pushed Nandini away, painting a harsh picture of Mandar as a 12th-fail with no apparent marketable skills beyond acting. She even suggests that those who cannot become actors often end up directing. This revelation complicated RP’s view of Mandar and his own romantic life, casting a shadow over RP’s relationship with Chitra Singh and forcing RP to balance loyalty with honesty.
The consequences of Mandar’s arrival ripple through both RP’s career and his relationships. While Mandar struggles with stage confidence, the pair attend to Mandar’s pain. An accident in the backstage area results in Mandar suffering injuries when propped props topple around him. At the hospital, Mandar asks for morphine, and RP—driven by his desire to help—steals the drug from another patient to ease Mandar’s suffering. The hospital charges RP hefty fines, reinforcing the high cost of trying to fix someone else’s life. In the wake of these events, RP misses the milestone of his and Chitra’s third anniversary, a lapse that deepens Chitra’s anger and frustration.
RP’s instinct to help Mandar grows into a broader mission: he becomes determined to repair Mandar’s life, which includes bringing Nandini back into its orbit. In a turn of events, RP tracks down Nandini and tries to reunite her with Mandar. Nandini is a florist who has a timeline yet to be fulfilled, including a forthcoming wedding to Lokesh. Lokesh, a supplier who is introduced as a confident figure, has become a rival in love. Nandini’s recent troubles—an order canceled by a worried customer at a critical moment—draw RP into her world. To demonstrate his feelings and to win Nandini back, RP buys the entire order for eight bouquets, turning them into a grand gesture designed to win her favor and to remind Chitra that he hasn’t forgotten their anniversary.
The bouquets become a turning point, as Chitra discovers a “Shubh Vivah” card nestled among the blooms and misreads the message as RP’s proposal. She accepts, and RP’s web of deception deepens as he continues to juggle two intimate relationships—tethering his actions to the needs of Mandar and the fragile status of Nandini. RP finds himself lying to both Sita Sita Suryavanshi and Chitra about the true state of his feelings and his investments in Mandar’s future.
Mandar’s return to health marks a shift in the story. He is discharged from the hospital and brought back to RP’s home, where RP resolves to shield him from the shock of Nandini’s impending wedding to Lokesh. RP’s decision to cast Mandar in the role of Ram in RP’s play—despite the producer’s doubts about Mandar’s on-stage abilities—becomes a test of RP’s loyalty and ingenuity. Rather than let the production fail, RP arranges a crowd of paying audience members to applaud Mandar, boosting his confidence and convincing the producer that Mandar can draw a crowd. This gambit works, and Mandar’s self-assurance begins to grow, drawing the attention of Sita, who previously flirted with RP but now finds a new spark with Mandar.
Meanwhile, RP uncovers Lokesh’s infidelity with Nandini, and he uses this knowledge to create an opening for Nandini to reassess her relationship with Lokesh. He believes Nandini’s longing for companionship might pull her back toward Lokesh, so he himself becomes a source of companionship, dating Nandini to block Lokesh’s advances. To complicate matters further, RP’s deception becomes increasingly layered: he flirts with Nandini, then reveals that he is involved because he fears loneliness, and in the process, he slips into a dangerous triangle. On one date, Nandini kisses RP in a bid to make Lokesh jealous, and the two ultimately fall for each other, while Chitra’s patience wears thin and she ends their relationship.
As the romance between RP and Nandini develops, the friendship between RP and Mandar strains under the weight of betrayal. RP recognizes that he is betraying his friend, and in a difficult moment, he ends things with Nandini and arranges for Nandini and Mandar to meet again, hoping to mend what has been broken. Yet the truth inevitably surfaces, and RP’s entanglements unravel: he loses his girlfriend, the trust of a close friend, and his own moral footing in the process.
In the present-day therapy sessions, the psychiatrist advises RP to apologize to all three of them—Nandini, Mandar, and Chitra—to begin healing. In a final act of reconciliation, Mandar returns to RP’s production, stepping into the role of Hanuman, and his emergence helps to bring Nandini and RP back together. With Mandar’s growth and the romantic triangle resolved through forgiveness, he ultimately chooses a life with Sita, completing a arc of personal transformation that completes the film’s narrative journey.
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