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Guru
Dutt Padukone was born in Mysore in South India on July 9,
1925. He had his early education in Calcutta before doing
basic training with dance maestro Uday Shankar after which
he joined Prabhat Studios.
Guru
Dutt Padukone was born in Mysore in South India on July 9,
1925. He had his early education in Calcutta before doing
basic training with dance maestro Uday Shankar after which
he joined Prabhat Studios. It was here that he got a break
as a choreographer with the film Hum ek Hain (1946 ), the
launching pad of friend and actor Dev Anand. Rumour has it
they met at Prabhat when their shirts got mixed up by the
dhobi! A friendship blossomed wherein Dev Anand promised
him that if ever he produced a film, Guru Dutt would
direct and should Guru direct, Dev would play the leading
man! From Prabhat Guru Dutt moved on to Famous Studios and
then on to Bombay Talkies. His close friend from Prabhat,
Dev Anand (now a star), who had launched his own banner 'Navketan',
invited him to direct a film for him thus keeping his
share of the promise. 1951 saw the release of Baazi Guru
Dutt's directorial debut. The film starring Dev Anand,
Geeta Bali and Kalpana Kartik was a trend setter regarded
as the forerunner of the spate of urban crime films that
followed in Bollywood in the 1950s. Its songs, sung mainly
by well known playback singer of the times Geeta Roy, were
runaway hits. In fact Guru Dutt and Geeta Roy met during
the song recording of Baazi and fell in love marrying on
the 26th of May,1953. Baaz in1953 saw Guru Dutt make his
debut as leading man and he went on to act as well as
direct.
Aar
Paar released in 1954 established Guru Dutt as a director
to reckon with. Followed some of his best work Mr. and Mrs
55, Pyaasa and Kaagaz ke Phool but the last mentioned was
adismal failure at the box office and a dejected Guru Dutt
never directed a film again. He continued to produce films
and act in both home and outside productions. But never
did he ever give his name in the credits as director
again. Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam though credited to writer
Abrar Alvi bears his unmistakable stamp. The film won the
President's silver medal as well as the film of the year
award from the Bengal Film Journalists Association.
However Guru Dutt's personal life was a shambles. He had
separated from his wife allegedly due to his involvement
with his discovery and leading actress Waheeda Rehman and
on Oct. 10, 1964 he took an overdose of sleeping pills and
committed suicide though doubts linger as to whether his
death was accidental. Indian cinema had lost one of its
greats. At the time of his death Guru Dutt was starring in
Love and God and in Baharein Phir Bhi Aayengi, a home
production. Both the films were ultimately completed by
different actors, Sanjeev Kumar and Dharmendra
respectively.
Sensitive,
Poetic, Magical. These and more words have described the
genius of Guru Dutt. But while enough has been written
about the thematic content of his films and his
sensitivity, what interests this author, himself a
film-maker, are the technical achievements of Guru Dutt in
his films. Guru Dutt had a unique knack of being able to
integrate the film song into the story and make the story
move forward even through the song. This is apparent right
in his first film Baazi. The number 'Suno gajar kya gaaye'
has the vamp warning the hero to be careful. He is going
to be killed. Or even the song 'Aaj ki raat piya'where as
the heroine croons to the hero, he reciprocates her
feelings over the course of the song and we come to
realize he loves her as well.This is because Guru Dutt
stuck to the vocabulary of his characters even in the
songs and picturised them in the locations the characters
would normally inhabit. Also he began a lot of songs
without the introductory music thus using it as an
extension of the dialogue. Hence the songs never appear
out of place. His strength lay in his sense of music as
well as in the picturisation of songs, particularly his
shot takings. Guru Dutt used the effect of light and shade
to poetic in fact magical effect to create romance. There
is no better use of light and shade in Indian cinema than
the songs 'Saakiya aaj mujhe neend nahin aayegi' from
Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam, 'Dekhizamaane ki yaari' and 'Waqtne
kiya kya haseen situm' both from Kaagaz ke Phool, India's
first ever film in cinemascope. To achieve the shaft of
light in the studio for the picturisation of the latter
song, the roof of the studio was opened and the shaft was
created by reflecting the light from two giant mirrors.
One mirror was kept on the terrace and from it the light
was reflected to the second mirror kept on the catwalk.
From the second mirror the light could then be diverted to
the required angle. To make the beam visible, some dust
and smoke was used. Or in the first mentioned song a mujra,
where the lead dancer is always in the light and the
dancers in the background lit up in a manner that no light
falls on their faces. This when often there is both
character movement and camera movements being co-ordinated
in the course of the shot!
Guru
Dutt revolutionalised the close up shot. He went into
closer magnifications of characters than those seen till
then almost as if probing for their internal feelings. He
went beyond the standard 50mm lens used then, using lenses
with higher focal length to get tighter close ups. He
strongly felt that 80% of acting was done in the eyesand
20% the rest of the body. For the eyes are the most
expressive part. And being an actor - director made it
easy for Guru Dutt to get good performances from his
artistes. But being a limited actor himself, his
directorial ability knew how to utilize his strengths
while covering his weaknesses. His thematic contents
coupled with his technical innovations make his films the
masterpieces they are. And if he wasn't completely
satisfied with the results, he scrapped the film he was
making irrespective of the amount of money and time gone
into the project. This explains the large number of
incomplete films that he left. According to his one time
assistant and successful director in his own right, Raj
Khosla.
Raj
Khosla further felt that Guru Dutt had achieved too much
too soon as far as his professional life was concerned.
After Pyaasa and Kaagaz ke Phool, there was is the high
society. People who have no need for poetry, love,
brotherhood and humanity. People who are motivated by the
pursuit of money alone.
It
is the very same class that is indicted in Kagaz Ke Phool
(1959) too. Here, instead of the poet, it is the
film-maker, Suresh Sinha, who falls prey to the unbridled
commercialisation of a society which once had place to
creativity and art; which was driven by something more
refined than the principle of accumulation. Like the poet
of Pyaasa, the film-maker of Kagaz ke Phool, too, drifted
into the shadows, unwanted, uncared, a social reject.
Nevertheless,
his rebellion is limited to himself alone and is a purely
individualised one. In Guru Dutt's screen personae,
indictment soon gives way to self-negation. The poet in
Pyaasa who merely threatened to spurn the world ('Tang aa
chuke hain kash-ma-kashe-zindagi se hum', thukra na den
jahan ko kahin be-dili se hum') now literally turns his
back on it despite the fact that fame awaits him round the
comer. After years of ignominy, when his verse was treated
as waste, the world finally recognises his worth and is
willing to give him his due. But the poet doesn't want it
any more. "No, I do not want the world even if I can
get this one full of palaces, platforms and crowns; this
social set that is inimical to man; this crumbling nation
where every soul is wounded; every heart depressed, ('har
ek jism ghayal, bar ek rooh pyaasi, nigahon mein uljhan,
dilon mein udasi, yeh duniya hai ya alam-e-badhawasi, yeh
duniya agar mil bhi jaaye to kya hai...'), he intones and
simply turns his back on such a world. He walks away
announcing, "Burn it, annihilate it, take it away
from my sight...."
Rebellion
yes, but self-defeating. For in the face of this nihilism,
there is only one person who is the actual loser. The poet
himself. Guru Dutt then was essentially the prototypal
character of a Greek tragedy. One who moved headlong
towards doom due to his heightened sensitivity. He was the
outsider who, unable to identify himself and keep pace
with rapidly changing times, opted for self-abnegation and
suicide. In Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam, he was the outsider
again, albeit one who watched a similar fate befall the
female protagonist (Meena Kumari), victimised as she was
by hard-core feudal orthodoxy. Even when it came to love.
Guru Dutt chose sacrifice rather than satiation. In
Chaudhvin Ka Chand, he was even willing to forsake his
lawfully wedded wife (Waheeda Rehman), when he learnt that
his best friend (Rehman) was besotted by her. The fact
that his wife was an unwilling partner in this masochistic
deal did not deter him at all, for pain was always more
eagerly sought than pleasure in the credo of the fifties'
hero.
Guru
Dutt is remembered in the history of Indian cinema as the
brooding intense romantic who attempted to reflect the
changing social situation in India in the fifties. Within
his short life, he created some of India's most
socially-conscious movies like Pyaasa (Thirsty, 1957),
Kaagaz ke Phool (Paper Flowers, 1960) and Baazi (1951). He
also introduced Waheeda Rehman in CID (1956) and propelled
her to stardom through his films.
Born
in Calcutta in 1925, Guru Dutt worked as a telephone
operator before he embarked on his career as an actor and
director in 1944. The fifties was the time when India,
under Nehru's brand of state socialism, was embarking on
massive industrialization. The conventional wisdom has it
that rapid changes introduced by industralization were
undermining 'traditional values'. What is certain is that
industrialization, and the accompanying migration from
rural to urban areas, was creating -- as it still does in
India -- anomie, dislocation, and new social norms. In the
urban enviornment, new social relations developed. It is,
therefore, not surprising that a recurring theme in his
films is the attraction, bound to be fatal, that develops
between a middle class girl and a tough but likeable
character from the lower class. His most memorable movie
in this genre is probably Pyaasa. Inspired by Sarat
Chandra's novel, Srikanta, it depicts the romance between
a poet and a prostitute. The genuine poet cannot survive
amidst philistines and publishers interested only in
profiteering: the spectre of the big city is everywhere in
Guru Dutt's films.
Guru
Dutt's films are also said to be marked by a certain
nostalgia, most evident in Sahib, Bibi aur Gulam (Master,
Mistress, and Servant), a film that explores the decline
of feudal landed family. An aristocratic demeanor, a flair
for style, characterize this film. Yet in all of his
films, Guru Dutt was to show mastery over cinematic
elements, from lighting and camera-work to film
composition; and every films bears the unmistakable
imprint of his work. Though not known widely outside
India, Guru Dutt's work compares with that of any director
working at that time around the world. His brilliant
career came to a premature end with his suicide, following
a protracted struggle with alcoholism, in 1964.
Guru
Dutt (1925 - 1964) was an Indian film director, producer,
and actor. He is most famous for making lyrical and
artistic films, including Pyaasa.
Early
life
Guru
Dutt was born to Shivsankar Rao Padukone and Vasanthi
Padukone on July 9, 1925, in Bangalore. His parents were
Saraswat Brahmins, originally settled at Panambur, a
village in South Kanara [1]. His father was initially a
headmaster, and then became a bank employee. His mother
Vasanthi while initially a housewife later taught in a
school, gave private tuition and also wrote short stories
and translated Bengali novels into Kannada. Vasanthi was
only 16 when Guru Dutt was born.
Guru
Dutt had a tough childhood with financial difficulties,
and a strained relationship between his parents. As a
child he had some bad experiences; the hostility from his
mother's brother's family, a frightening encounter with an
insane uncle, and the infant death of his seven-month old
brother.
He
was initially named Vasanth Kumar at birth at the
suggestion of his mother's elder brother, but after a
childhood accident, he was renamed Gurudutt, which was
felt to be a more auspicious name. He was joined by two
younger brothers, Atmaram and Devidas, and a younger
sister, Lalitha. The famed Indian film director, Kalpana
Lajmi, is his sister's daughter.
Bengali
connection
The
father, who was initially a headmaster at Panambur and
later a bank employee at Bangalore, was then transferred
to Bhawanipore near Calcutta, where Guru Dutt finished his
schooling. Hence, Guru Dutt spoke fluent Bengali, and
carried a distinct stamp of Bengali culture in his work.
The
Bengali name
Later,
when he moved to Mumbai and Bollywood in the 1940s, he
dropped the Shivsankar Padukone part of his name, and was
known simply as Guru Dutt. Because Dutt is a common
Bengali last name, many people assumed that he was a
Bengali.
He
spent a great deal of time with his mother's cousin,
Balakrishna B. Benegal (known to the family as Bakutmama)
who was a painter of cinema posters. The famed Indian film
director, Shyam Benegal, is the son of Sridhar B. Benegal,
Balakrishna's younger brother.
Early
Inspirations
His
sister recalls that at age 14 Guru Dutt would use his
fingers to shape images on a wall lit up by the flickering
light of their grandmother's diya as she performed the
evening arti. Though untrained, he could produce inspired
movements as he did when he persuaded his uncle, Benegal,
to photograph him performing a snake dance, based on a
painting by the latter. The snake dance was later
performed at a gathering of Saraswat Brahmins at Calcutta
for which Guru Dutt was even given a cash prize of 5
Rupees.
He
was a good student, but never went to college, partly also
due to financial troubles at home. Instead, he joined the
performing arts troupe of Uday Shankar, the older brother
of the better-known Ravi Shankar.
The
Uday Shankar India Culture Center at Almora near Calcutta
taught dance, drama, and music. It aimed at combining the
best of the Gurukula system with a modern Arts University,
and tried to turn out well-rounded students, at home in
many disciplines. A young Guru Dutt joined the center at
age 16 in 1941 on a five-year scholarship of Rs. 75
annually (a lot of money then), and studied at Almora
until 1944, when the advancing World War II forced the
closing of the center.
First
job
Guru
Dutt wired home to say he had got the job of a telephone
operator at a Lever Brothers factory in Kolkata. But soon
he disengaged himself from the job, and joined his parents
in Mumbai in 1944.
However,
his uncle found him a job under a three-year contract with
the Prabhat Film Company in Poona in 1944. This once
premier film producing centre had already seen the
departure of its best talent, V Shantaram, who had by then
launched his own Kala Mandir. It is here that Guru Dutt
met two people who would remain his good friends - actors
Rehman, and Dev Anand.
Guru
Dutt acted in a small role as Sri Krishna in Chand in
1944. In 1945, he acted as well as assisted director
Vishram Bedekar in Lakhrani, and in 1946 he worked as an
assistant director and choreographed dances for P L
Santoshi's film, Hum Ek Hain.
This
contract ended in 1947, but his mother got him a job as a
free lance assistant with Babu Rao Pai. However, after
that for a period of ten months Guru Dutt was unemployed
and staying with his family at Matunga, Mumbai. During
this time, Guru Dutt developed a flair for writing in
English, and used to write short stories for The
Illustrated Weekly, a local magazine. It is during this
time that he is supposed to have written the script for
Pyaasa (Hindi: the thirsty one), which was almost
autobiographical. Its original name was Kashmakash (
Hindi: struggle), which was changed later to Pyaasa.
It
is in this phase of his life that Guru Dutt was almost
married, twice! The first time he had eloped with a girl
called Vijaya from Pune, and later his parents had him
almost married to his maternal niece, Suvarna, from
Hyderabad.
Guru
Dutt as choreographer, actor, assistant director
While
Guru Dutt was hired by Prabhat as a choreographer, he was
soon pressed into service as an actor, and even as an
assistant director. At Prabhat, he met Dev Anand and
Rehman, who both became stars. These early friendships
helped ease his way into the film world.
After
Prabhat failed in 1947, Dutt moved to Bombay, now Mumbai,
where he worked with directors Amiya Chakravarty, a
leading director at the time in his film, Girl's School,
and Gyan Mukherjee in Bombay Talkies film Sangram. Then,
Dev Anand offered him a job as a director with his new
company, Navketan's second movie after the first movie was
a commercial flop. Thus, Guru Dutt's first film, Baazi,
was released in 1951.
Dev
& Guru's promise
There
exists a very interesting anecdote behind this new job.
Guru Dutt and Dev Anand used the services of the same
laundry man when they were at Prabhat in Pune in 1945. One
day Dev found one of his shirts missing, but replaced with
a different one. On appearing at work as the hero of Hum
Ek Hain, he found the film's young choreographer (Guru
Dutt) wearing his shirt. On being questions, Guru Dutt
admitted that it was not his shirt, but since he had no
other he was wearing the replacement. This developed into
a great friendship, since they were of the same age. They
promised each other that, if Guru Dutt were to turn
filmmaker, he would hire Dev as his hero, and if Dev were
to produce a film then he would use Guru Dutt as its
Director.
Dev
Anand fulfilled his end of the bargain with Baazi, but
still regrets that his friend Guru Dutt did not. Guru Dutt
indirectly did fulfill his promise. His studio, Guru Dutt
Films Pvt. Ltd, produced "C.I.D " which starred
Dev, but was directed by Raj Khosla (previously an
assistant director to Guru Dutt). So technically Guru Dutt
never directed Dev Anand in his own movie.
They
would make two super-hit films together, Baazi, and Jaal.
Creative differences between Guru Dutt, and Chetan Anand (Dev's
elder brother) who was also a director, made future
collaborations difficult.
Baazi's
Other Contributions
Baazi
also highlights two early key technical developments in
Indian movie-making that are attributed to Guru Dutt. The
use of close-up shots with a 100mm lens - there are over
14 in the movie - which became known in Indian movie
making as the "Guru Dutt shot", and the use of
songs to further the narrative in the movie. Guru Dutt
also introduced Zohra Sehgal (whom he met at Almora) as
the choreographer in the movie, and he also met his future
wife, Geeta Dutt during the making of the movie.
Guru
Dutt as director
Baazi
was an immediate success. Guru Dutt followed it with Jaal
and Baaz. Neither film did well at the box office, but
they did allow Dutt to start forming the crew that
performed so brilliantly in subsequent films. He
discovered, and mentored, Johnny Walker (comedian), V.K.
Murthy(cinematography), and Abrar Alvi (writing and
directing), among others. Baaz was notable in that Guru
Dutt both directed and starred, not having found an actor
to take the main role.
Fortune
smiled on Dutt's next film, the 1954 Aar Paar. He followed
up with the 1955 hit, Mr. and Mrs. 55, then CID, Sailaab ,
and in 1957, Pyaasa - the story of a poet rejected by an
uncaring world who achieves success only after his
apparent death. Having starred in three of these films,
Dutt was flying high both as actor and director.
His
1959 Kaagaz ke Phool was thus an intense disappointment.
He had invested a great deal of love, money, and energy in
this film, which was a self-absorbed tale of a famous
director (played by Guru Dutt) who falls in love with an
actress (played by Waheeda Rehman, Dutt's real-life love
interest). Kaagaz ke Phool failed at the box office and
Dutt was devastated. All subsequent films from his studio
were officially helmed by other directors. Guru Dutt felt
that his name would be box office poison.
Guru
Dutt's last productions
However,
he was persuaded to star in the 1960 Chaudhvin ka Chand,
which was an enormous hit and saved his studio from ruin.
He also starred in the 1962 Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam, which
was officially directed by his protege Abrar Alvi. Many
critics feel that Guru Dutt was the behind-the-scenes
director, for all that his name did not appear in the
credits as such. Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam is still regarded
as one of Dutt's most tragic and artistic films. He
starred in several less-remembered films after "Sahib
Bibi ....
Death
On
October 10, 1964, Guru Dutt was found dead on his bed. He
is said to have been mixing alcohol and sleeping pills.
His death may have been suicide, or just an accidental
overdose.
Guru
Dutt's son, Arun Dutt views this as an accident in an
interview with India Abroad in October 2004 on the 40th
anniversary of his father's death. Guru Dutt had scheduled
appointments the next day with actress Mala Sinha for the
movie, Baharen Phir Bhi Aayengi, and Raj Kapoor to discuss
making colour films. According to him, "my father had
sleeping disorders and popped sleeping pills like any
other person. That day he was drunk and had taken an
overdose of pills, which culminated in his death. It was a
lethal combination of excessive liquor and sleeping
pills."
Guru
Dutt's family life
In
1953, Dutt married Geeta Roy, a well-known playback
singer. They had been engaged for three years and had to
overcome a great deal of family opposition to marry. They
had three children, Tarun, Arun, and Nina.
Unfortunately,
the marriage was unhappy. According to his brother Atmaram,
Guru Dutt was "a strict disciplinarian as far as work
was concerned, but totally undisciplined in his personal
life" (Kabir, 1997, p. 124). He smoked heavily, he
drank heavily, he kept odd hours, and he was unfaithful to
Geeta. At the time of his death, he had just separated
from Geeta and was living alone in a Bombay flat.
Guru
Dutt's Legacy
Guru
Dutt was at first mourned as a matinee idol but as the
years passed, it became ever clearer that it was as a
director that he would be remembered. Starting in 1973,
his films were shown at film festivals throughout India
and the rest of the world. Despite being a commercial
director, he appealed to the same intelligentsia who made
Satyajit Ray an international favorite. He also has a
place in the hearts of many ordinary Indians for his
brilliant song "picturizations" and the many
vivid characters sketched in his films.
Selected
filmography
Actor
Picnic
(1964)
Sanjh
Aur Savera (1964)
Suhagan
(1964)
Bahurani
(1963)
Bharosa
(1963)
Sahib
Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962)
Sautela
Bhai (1962)
Chaudhvin
Ka Chand (1960)
Kaagaz
Ke Phool (1959)
12
O'Clock (1958)
Pyaasa
(1957)
Mr.
& Mrs. '55 (1955)
Aar
Paar (1954)
Suhagan
(1954)
Baaz
(1953)
Hum
Ek Hain (1946)
Director
Kaagaz
Ke Phool (1959)
Pyaasa
(1957)
Sailaab
(1956)
Mr.
& Mrs. '55 (1955)
Aar
Paar (1954)
Baaz
(1953)
Jaal
(1952)
Baazi
(1951)
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