Ali Peter John
It was the year 1896. Lord Elgin, the representative of Queen Victoria, ruled India. The country was in the grip of political turbulence and throes of a freedom movement. There were widespread fire, floods and famine and amidst all the frenzy and fury, ‘Cinema’ was born.
After their successful inaugural public show in Paris in December 1895, the Lumiere brothers, Loius and Auguste, made their way to the Indian continent in July 1896 and cast their magic with six ‘moving pictures’ or rather ‘living photographic pictures’ as it was extensively publicised. The cinematographe shows were presented in Bombay’s Watson Hotel, an exclusive inn for the elite Europeans. Thereafter, the shows were moved to the Novelty Theatre for regular public viewing which continued till mid August 1896.
An unprecedented euphoria was created and several enterprising and talented young men got entranced by this popular form of entertainment; prominent names include the never much remembered men with artistic and creative bent: Hiralal Sen, Harishchandra Sakharam Bhatavdekar, F B Thanawala, Nanabhai Govind Chitre, Ramchandra Gopal Torney. A mention is also made of Jamsetji Framji Madan and Abdulally Essoofally who were more of showmen and theatre owners engaged in exhibition of films to make the audience cinema conscious. Most of the creative masterminds made efforts to capture or cover general events, celebrations, festivals, processions, road side happenings or make short films of episodes or scenes from plays staged in the theatres.
Though their painstaking efforts were commendable yet they did not provide the needed impetus to regular feature film making based on a full length story.
The year 1913 marked a turning point in the realm of film making and entertainment. Yet another enterprising man, in his early 40s, with vision and versatility, confidence and conviction, embarked on the trodden path of his less successful predecessors or contemporaries. And soon he came to be hailed as the pioneer who laid the foundation of Indian Cinema and virtually shaped its future. That man was Dhundiraj Govind Phalke, the Father of Indian Cinema.
Dhundiraj or Dadasaheb Phalke, as he was fondly called, was born on 30 April, 1870 at Trymbakeshwar, near Nashik in Maharashtra in a traditional and conservative Brahmin family. Dhundiraj was store house of multi-talent: printer, painter, playwright, photographer, magician, make-up artiste, costume designer which helped him in his passion and pursuit of filmmaking. He was a restless man with all the sparks of a genius in the making. To the left is a rare picture taken by Dadasaheb Phalke when he was a student.
A momentous change in his thinking and life took place after he saw the Hollywood film ‘The Life of Christ’ on the Christmas day in 1910. His wife, Saraswatibai, was with him. On way back home, he said, “Like the life of Christ, we shall make pictures about Rama and Krishna’. Initially, she was not happy to hear that and expressed her displeasure in silence all through their way back home. But once he embarked on a new career and began his tryst with film making, which was soon to become his profession and passion, his sole source of strength was none other than his wife Saraswati bai.
Phalke left no stone unturned to transform his dream into a reality; despite the warning of people to give up his dream, he went ahead brimming with confidence, enthusiasm, knowledge and zeal backed by his versatility and wife. Phalke borrowed some money from a well wisher friend and pledged his insurance policy to raise funds to pursue his dream. He went to England in early 1912 to study the art and craft of film making and film technology and returned with the best equipment and machinery that the funds could buy.
He then started the film ‘”Raja Harishchandra”, a story from the great Indian epic Mahabharata, under the banner Phalke Films. He shot a few scenes with his wife and children and showed the prints to a financier to raise funds; he had nothing left to offer as security and finally, mortgaged his wife’s jewellery.
He cast Dattatreya Damodar Dabke as Raja Harishchandra but getting a female actor to play Taramati, the queen’s role, posed a formidable problem as girls from respectable families were sceptical about entering the ‘ill reputed’ showbiz world. Even girls from the red light areas were reluctant and some of them backed out at the last moment.
Finally, as in the English plays, Phalke almost tempted an effeminate looking youth, Anna Salunkhe, who worked as a cook in a restaurant in Grant Road for Rs. 10 per month, to play the character of Taramati. Phalke offered him much more only to shave off his moustache and get into the queen’s garb and he succeeded! As women were prohibited from taking part in commercial performing art, the other female characters in the film were also played by men!
With finance arranged and the female lead finalised, half the battle was won. But the real hurdle awaited Phalke. He single handedly trained his actors and technicians and supervised the erection of sets, besides directing, photographing, developing and printing and finally editing the film. Of course, during the entire shooting of the film, his wife Saraswati bai stood like a sturdy rock.
As mentioned by their grandson Chandrashekhar Pusalkar, “Saraswati bai not only managed her nine children (Picture at left shows Dadasaheb Phalke with his son Neelkanth and daughter Mandakini) but also held white bed sheets for hours together in the scorching sun as light reflectors; mixed film developing chemicals; perforated the raw film sheets at night in the candle light; cooked food for the entire unit comprising 60 to 70 people and generally was his enlightened partner in every enterprise. That makes her the first technician of the film industry”!
Dadasaheb Phalke almost ruined his health and risked his eyesight only to give a visage to his vision!
Dadasaheb Phalke made the first indigenous film “Raja Harishchandra“. The film was released successfully in Bombay’s Coronation Theatre on May 3, 1913. That heralded the Silent Era in films and the ‘sounds of silence’ dominated for almost two decades.
The film elicited a frenzied response and Phalke made several other silent films mostly based on epics and legends, films like “Mohini Bhasmasur”, “Satyavan Savitri”, “Lanka Dahan”.
Following the spectacular success of “Lanka Dahan”, Phalke received several offers of finance from eminent industrialists and businessmen. And, in 1917, the Hindustan Cinema Film Company was formed as a partnership company with Phalke as its working partner and a few others as managing and financial partners. Ownership rights of his films were taken over by the new company. Under the new banner, he directed films like “Shree Krishna Janam”, “Kaliya Mardan”, “Kansa Vadha”, “Shree Rama Janma”, “Pundalik” to name a few.
With his innovative skills, trick photography, special effects and all the visual appeal, his films attracted huge audience and he met with more success.
However, differences in the matter of running the studio and the type of films to be made cropped up between him and his other partners and he quit the company in 1919 only to rejoin in 1921 on his own terms. He made “Sant Tukaram” and a string of successful films followed in the next ten years till the advent of sound in 1931.
But by then, he was a changed man, much older but not worldly wise and practical, his heart still ruling his head. He was tired of his ongoing battles with the financiers and his partners, disillusioned and disgusted with the changing scenario and crass commercialisation of art, constrained by several other factors which were not congenial to his artistic and creative temperament.
In the meantime, several other filmmakers and companies like Madan Theatres (Calcutta), Kohinoor (Bombay), Maharashtra Film Company (Kolhapur) joined the fray breaking the virtual monopoly of Phalke’s Hindustan Cinema Film Company.
With the arrival of sound, Phalke couldn’t adapt to changing tastes, emerging trends and new techniques. The last silent film he made for the company was “Setu Bandhan” in 1932. With a vain attempt at synchronising sound and relying mainly on visual appeal, the film failed to attract audiences.
In 1937, he directed his first and last talkie film “Gangavataran” for Kolhapur Cinetone and the film met with the same fate.
In 1938, under the leadership of Chandulal Shah of Ranjit Movietone, the film industry celebrated the Silver Jubilee of Indian Cinema. Among the innumerable and illustrious guests was a man in his late sixties, totally unnoticed and unrecognized. He had sacrificed his life for films; he had made about a hundred silent films; he had a sprawling studio with all in-house facilities and which he ruled like a benevolent patriarch; the advent of sound and the changing times and trends affected his kind of films; he was a legend who was no more in the reckoning; he was relegated to the annals of history and had become forgotten name even when he was alive; he had lost everything that he owned and was reduced to penury; age and ailments had made him really unrecognisable!!
Who was this man who was literally sidelined and whose immense contribution to cinema was forgotten ruthlessly? Shantaram identified him and ushered him respectfully onto the stage and ‘introduced’ him to the then present movie moghals who owed every bit of their achievement and success to this man! That man was, hold your breath, none other than Dadasaheb Phalke, the Father of Indian Cinema who had single handedly and virtually shaped the future of Indian Cinema!!
The year 1938 will be remembered for this dishonourable and unforgivable act of discredit to the ‘Bhishma Pitama‘ of Indian Cinema if not for any other major cinematic contribution.
Dadasaheb Phalke died an embittered man and in penury on 16 February, 1944 at the age of 74.
In appreciation and recognition of his pioneering effort, the Government of India instituted in 1969 the Dadasaheb Phalke Award in his name; the prestigious award is given away every year to film personalities for achieving excellence and their significant contribution to Indian Cinema. A commemorative postage stamp was also issued in 1971.
But Dadasaheb Phalke, the Man with a Mission and Method to his Madness called Movies, in whose name the award is given, is an unforgivably forgotten name today!
This truism must have dawned on the ‘Dawn’ of Indian Cinema at the twilight of his life:
वक़्त की धूप में यादें भी पिघल जाती हैं
लोग मुझे भी भुला देंगे फ़साने की तरह।
On February 18 was Dadasaheb Phalke’s 75th death anniversary and no one cared to remember him and I don’t know how many will remember him today. But they will keep giving Dadasaheb Phalke’s award in every hall, lane and suburb to make The Father of Indian Cinema an object to sell tickets and make money.
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