While Ezra
Mir is widely and better known as the pioneer
of the Indian Documentary, few know he was
also a Hindi Film Director directing several
films in the 1930s like Noorjehan (1931),
Zarina (1932), Rickshawala
(1938) and Sitara (1939).
Mir was born Edwin Myers in Calcutta in
a Jewish family. It is said he adapted the
name of Ezra Mir bacause he felt his original
name lacked 'Indianness.' Mir graduated
from Calcutta University in 1921 before
initially joining his family business. Not
quite taken up by the family business, Mir
moved to Madan Theatres. Here he worked
as an actor on the Madan stage and acted
in some silent films as well and even played
opposite then India's biggest star, Patience
Cooper, in Noorjehan (1923).
As the filmmaking bug got deeper into Mir,
he set sail for New York in 1924. Here he
worked as an extra in the Rudolf Valentino
- Nita Naldi starrer A Sainted Devil
(1924). He then worked in the editing
and story departments at Universal Pictures
from 1925 - 1927 and moved on to United
Artists from 1927 -1929 as a story editor.
He even made a short film, The Symbolesque
(1929) in this period.
Mir
returned to India in 1931 joining Imperial
Film Company, a company with a glorious
past and one of the leading film companies
in India then. Imperial was set up by Ardershir
Irani in 1926 who, would go on to make the
very first Indian talkie Alam Ara
in 1931 just beating out Mir's former empoyers
Madan Theatres' Shirin Farhad.
Imperial became closely associated with
the historical film genre following Anarkali
(1928), was the first studio to shoot
night scenes using incandescent lamps and
also had stars like Sulochana,
Zubeida and Jilloo on their payrol and were
perhaps responsible for developing a star
cult as a marketing strategy. The studio
made films in at least nine languages and
even made the first ever Iranian sound film
Dukhtar-e-Lur in 1932! At Imperial,
Mir directed Noorjehan (1931) being
in familiar territory as he had acted in
the 1923 version of the same story. But
he soon left Imperial for Sagar Film Company
where Mir directed films like Zarina
(1932) and other Parsee Theatre derived
films.
Mir returned 'home' so to speak as he returned
to Madan Theatres in 1934-5. Here he made
a number of popular romanctic and social
films with artists like Kajjan that helped
delay the demise of the studio. But by the
late 30s Madan Theatres nevertheless had
to close down, it is said on a failed deal
with Columbia Pictures, but the truth is
that by then the studio was already in decline
caused by crippling sound conversion costs,
the stabilization of film imports and the
spread of the more efficient managing agancy
system able to attract more speculative
funding.
Mir left for Europe for a study tour and
returned to India to make perhaps his most
well-known films, Rickshawala (1938)
for Ranjit Movietone in Bombay and Sitara
(1939), made at Everest Pics that he
set up himself.
Sitara was a romantic drama set
in a fantasy version of a gypsy camp telling
of an amorous rivalry spanning two geneartions.
The film starred Rattan Bai as Azurie who
marries Zamorra (Jamshedji) rather then
his rival Eureka (Mubarak). Zamorra accuses
her of adultery and she dies in the 'dance
of death' inflicted on her as punishment.
Her daughter Sitara (Khursheed), abandoned
in the forest, is unable to reconcile her
gypsy habit with the bourgeois society as
she grows up. Things get more complicated
when Eureka's wild son Tanzi (Nazir) falls
in love with her and kidnaps her. The film
won Mir much acclaim.
With the onset of World War II, Mir found
himself inpsired by the March of Time
series and turned to documentary. He made
Road to Victory (1939) that used
newsreel material lent by Universal and
20th Century Fox. Mir joined the Film Advisory
Board in 1940. The Film Advisory Board,
established in 1940, was the first example
of direct state documentery film production
in India. JBH Wadia, V
Shantaram and Mir worked as Chief Producers
here. The advisory Board was replaced by
the Information Films of India. Mir worked
as Chief Producer for them till 1946, producing
over 170 films. The Information Films of
India produced war propaganda documentaries
and the Indian News Parade, the
ancestor to Films Division's Indian
News Review .
Mir moved on to India Film Enterprises
and then to Films Division in 1951, becoming
its Chief Producer in 1956 continuing till
1961. Mir was also the founding president
of IDPA, the Indian Documentary Producers
Association in 1956 and the Producer-In-Charge
of Children's Film Society from 1962 - 1964.
From 1940 onwards, once he entered the field
of documentary filmmaking, Mir was responsible
in various capacities as script-writer,
cameraman, editor, director and producer
for over 700 films! Of these over 400 were
in his tenure at Films Division. Some of
the well-known films are Pamposh (1954),
Do You Know? (1958), This Our
India (1961) and Raju aur Gangaram
(1964).
Ezra Mir was honoured by the Government
of India with the Padmashri in 1970. He
passed away in Mumbai on 7th March, 1993.
Today the highest award of IDPA, awarded
to a senior professional in recognition
of his/her service to the documentary film
movement in India movement in India. Recipients
include Animation filmmaker Ram Mohan, cinematographer-filmmaker
NS Thapa and eminent cinematographer KK
Mahajan.
Image courtesy Indian Documentary
Producers' Association (IDPA).
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