AVM Saravanan Age, Wiki, Biography, Native Place, Wife, Children, Family

 

avm-saravanan-age-wiki-biography

AVM Saravanan, the veteran Tamil film producer, passed away on December 4, 2025. This news came on Thursday morning. He was 86 years old. Fans and stars mourn his loss today. 

Early Life 

AVM Saravanan was born in 1939. He came from a big film family. His father was A.V. Meiyappan. Meiyappan started AVM Productions. This was one of India's oldest film studios. Saravanan grew up in Chennai. He saw films being made from childhood. At age 18, he learned all about movies. He handled production work early. His father taught him story picking. He also learned distribution. Saravanan joined AVM as an executive in 1958. Life was simple then. But films excited him a lot. 

He had brothers too. One was M. Balasubramanian. They worked together later. Saravanan watched his father make hits. AVM made films in Tamil, Telugu, and more. Young Saravanan loved the studio lights. He ran around sets as a boy. This made him ready for big roles. Family duty was key. He never left the film world. 

AVM Saravanan Age, Wiki, Biography, Wife, Family 

Category

Details

Full Name

Saravanan Surya Mani, known as AVM Saravanan [2]

Birth Year

1939 or 1940 [1][2]

Death Date

December 4, 2025, at age 85 or 86 [2][1]

Father

A.V. Meiyappan, founder of AVM Productions in 1945 [2][5]

Brothers

M. Balasubramanian, M. Kumaran; worked together in family business [5][1]

Son

M.S. Guhan, film producer [1][2]

Granddaughters

Aruna Guhan (creative director at AVM), Aparna Guhan [1][3]

Early Career

Joined AVM in late 1950s; learned production, distribution, story selection from age 18 [5][1]

Took Over AVM

After father's death in 1977 or 1979; managed with brothers [1][5]

Key Role

Owner of AVM Studios, Chennai; produced over 300 films in Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam [5][2]

Sheriff of Madras

Served in 1986 [2][1]

Last Feature Film

2010; studio now in OTT and ads [1][3]

Career 

Saravanan took charge after his father died in 1977. AVM was already famous. He made it stronger. With his brother, he ran the studio for decades. They produced over 300 films. These came in many languages. Tamil was main. Saravanan kept strict rules. He liked on-time shoots. No waste of money. Workers called him fair boss. He picked stories for families. Songs and drama mixed well. 

Under him, AVM won awards. Like best studio prize in 2007. They made quality films. Saravanan hated delays. He built trust in the industry. Stars liked working there. Studio grew big. It helped Tamil cinema shine. He turned AVM into a home for good tales. 

Family Life 

Saravanan had a close family. He married and had son M.S. Guhan. Guhan is a producer too. He carries the AVM name now. Saravanan had granddaughters. Aruna Guhan and Aparna Guhan. Aruna works at AVM. She handles creative side. Family stayed in Chennai. They lived near the studio. Saravanan shared meals with workers. Home was full of film talk.

His wife supported him always. They faced ups and downs. But AVM kept going. Children learned from him. Guhan made films like Ayan. Family tree links four generations. Father Meiyappan started it. Saravanan grew it. Now son and grandkids run it. Love for cinema bonds them. 

Popularity 

Saravanan produced many blockbusters. One early hit was Kalathur Kannamma in 1960. It starred Savitri. Then came Pava Mannippu. These made money fast. Naanum Oru Penn came in 1963. It won hearts. Server Sundaram was fun drama. Murattu Kaalai boosted Rajinikanth. Superstar did eight films with AVM. 

In 1986, Samsaram Adhu Minsaram won National Award. First Tamil film for popular entertainment. Mella Thirandhathu Kathavu touched souls. Gemini was stylish. Sivaji: The Boss in 2007 was huge. Rajini again. Big budget action. Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu had Vikram. Minsara Kanavu in 1997 was music magic. Ayan in 2009 starred Suriya. Fast action thrilled youth. 

He shaped stars. Kamal Haasan got Sakalakala Vallavan. MGR did Anbe Vaa. Sivaji Ganesan had Uyarndha Manidhan. Saravanan picked right scripts. He mixed emotion, songs, fights. Families watched together. No risky bets. Safe but super hits. 

Awards 

AVM won many under him. Silver Lotus for Sivaji effects. Filmfare best studio 2007. Jaya TV best film awards. Fans groups praised Vaira Nenjam. Chief Minister MK Stalin condoled his death. Called him pillar. Tamil Nadu mourned. 

National Awards for films like Samsaram. His work got respect. No loud claims. Results spoke. Legacy lives in awards shelf. 

Legacy 

Saravanan made AVM last 75 years. From talkies to digital. He taught value of hard work. Family films touched millions. Stars he built rule now. Studio does new projects. His story inspires. Young producers learn from him. Tamil pride swells. 

He never chased fame. Work was worship. Birthday joy turned sorrow quick. But memories stay. AVM flag flies high. Thanks to him.