Chhaya Devi
acted in over 150 films mainly in Bengali
but also in Hindi, Tamil and Assamese and
was known for her powerhouse performences.
Chhaya Devi was born in Bhagalpur. Her
family was associated with the performing
acts and she was related to Ashok
Kumar. She took early lessons in classical
Hindustani films from Bundi Ustad and in
Calcutta from KC Dey who introduced her
to Debaki Bose.
Her
first lead role was in Bose's Sonar
Sansar (1936) a parable about human
suffering and capitalist enterprise but
she came into prominence the following year
with Bose's Bidyapati (Bengali)/ Vidyapati
(Hindi) regarded as perhaps New Theatres'
finest film. In the film she played the
role of the Queen Lakshmi who falls in love
with the pacifist court poet Bidyapati much
to the distress of the king. In the climactic
scene the king dies of shock and the queen
accepts a cup of poison offered to her by
the wily Chief Minister. The film, Bose's
most accomplished work both on the script
level and technically as well sees perhaps
Kanan Devi's best ever performance, was
a huge triumph in both Hindi and Bengali
and its success got Chhaya Devi national
recognition as well.
Chhaya Devi's early films were often with
director Jyotosh Banerjee. She was often
teamed with the great Chhabi
Biswas and went on to acquire a strong
screen presence in films notably those directed
by Tapan Sinha
- Nirjan Saikate (1963), Hatey
Bazarey (1967) and in particular Apanjan
(1968) where she brilliantly played
the role of the old woman who 'adopts' a
group of lumpen youth sensing the emotional
vulnerability beneath their violent reduction
of democracy to a series of gang wars. Meena
Kumari enacted the same role in Gulzar's
remake of the film, Mere Apne (1971)
and good though she was, the purists still
swear by Chhaya Devi's performance in the
original. Chhaya Devi also acted in early
Mrinal Sen
films like Raat Bhore (1956) and
Abasheshe (1962).
Some of her other prominent films include
Abhinetri (Bengali)/ Haar Jeet (Hindi)
(1940), Samadhan (1943), Era
Bator Sur (1955) in Assamese that was
also Bhupen Hazarika's directorial debut,
Saptapadi
(1961), Saat
Pake Bandha (1963), the original of
Kora Kagaz (1974) where she excelled
in the role of Suchitra Sen's snobbish and
domineering mother who destroys her daughter's
marriage to a university professor, Uttar
Falguni (1963), Arohi (1964),
Antony Firingee (1967), Arundathi
Devi's Padi Pishir Barmi Baksha (1972),
an adaptation of Leela Majumdar's classic
children novel where she played the young
hero, Khokka's famed aunt Padipishi (Her
exploits, shown in flashback, were shot
in colour while the rest of the film was
in black and white), and the Amitabh Bachchan,
Rekha starrer Alaap (1977).
Chhaya Devi passed away in Calcutta in
2001.
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