Pahadi Sanyal
was without doubt one of the finest actors
that Bengali cinema has seen.
He was born in the hill-station of Darjeeling
in the year 1906. Though his real name was
Nagendranath, he was nicknamed Pahadi (one
from the hills) and the name stuck throughout
his professional career.
From his childhood itself, Sanyal was extremely
fond of music and he took training under
several famous music teachers of the day.
Finishing his school, he joined the engineering
course at the Benaras Hindu University but
soon left to study Indian classical music
at the Morris College of Music in Lucknow.
In Lucknow, the young Pahadi came in contact
with the poet and composer Atulprasad Sen
and soon earned fame as one of the best
exponents of Atulprasad’s songs. In
1931, he joined the service of the Maharaja
of Dewar as his private secretary.
In 1932, Pahadi Sanyal came to Kolkata
and got introduced to PC
Barua through his friend the cinematographer
Krishna Gopal. Pahadi got a chance to act
in the New Theatres’ production Rooplekha
but due to contractual problems he was ultimately
unable to appear in the film. But he caught
the eye of Debaki Bose and joined the New
Theatres as an actor on a monthly salary
of Rs.150.
Pahadi Sanyal made his screen debut as
a singer-actor in Debaki Bose’s musical
Rajrani Mirabai (1933) as Chand
Bhatta, a role he also did in the Hindi
version Meerabai (1933). Both the
films were very popular and helped in establishing
him as one of the major film stars of the
day. In the same year the famous music director
Pankaj Mullick used him to re-record all
the songs sung originally by SD
Burman for Yahudi Ki Ladki
– a New Theatres’ production
directed by Premankur Atharthi. As he was
fluent in both the languages, Pahadi Sanyal
starred in most of the Hindi/Urdu versions
of the Bengali films produced by New Theatres.
In the 1930s he had a string of hits as
an actor and singer in Bengali/ Hindi bilinguals
like Chandidas/ Chandidas (1934),
Bhagyachakra/ Dhoop Chhaon (1935),
Devdas/ Devdas
(1935), Millionaire/ Karorpati(1936),
Bidyapti/ Vidyapati (1937), Sapurey/
Sapera (1939), Abhinetri/ Haar
Jeet (1940) and Noukadubi/ Milan
(1946). Bhagyachakra,
one of the first films in India to use playback
singing, had Pahadi singing the evergreen
Keno Paran Holo Bandhan Hara while
in its Hindi version he sang Prem Ki
Naiyaa Chali Jal Mein Mori. In Karorpati
he had the hit song Jo Naukri Dila De
– a duet with the legendary KL
Saigal. In Haar Jeet he sang
another wonderful duet, Mast Pawan Shake
Hein with Kanan
Devi. Woh Kahein Aap Ki Do Chaah
Ka Inaam Mujhe, a song sung by him
in the film Milan was also very
popular. Pahadi Sanyal’s performance
as Jhumro, a young and audacious snake-charmer
who elopes with the heroine Chandan (Kanan
Devi) in the film Sapuery/ Sapera
was extremely well appreciated by both the
general audience and critics.
With playback singing getting well established
in the late 1930s, Pahadi Sanyal cut down
on his singing and concentrated more on
acting. The 1940s were his salad days as
an actor. In 1941, he received the Best
Actor Award from the Bengal Film Journalists
Association (BFJA) for his brilliant performance
as Kumarnath in the film Pratisruti
directed by Hem Chandra. After this he went
to Mumbai and acted in films like Saugandh
(1942), Mohabbat (1943), Insaan
(1944) and Shravan Kumar (1946).
Back in Kolkata, Sanyal, as he got older,
gradually transformed himself from the dashing
hero into an outstanding character actor.
He made his mark playing the roles of a
sophisticated urbanite with a heart of gold.
Along with Chhabi
Biswas and Bikash Roy he developed the
technique of delivering dramatic dialogues
first in English and then uttering the same
in perfect Bengali. His major films during
this period include Sadharan Meye(1948),
Rang Berang(1948), Ulto Rath
(1949), Vidyasagar(1950),
Babla (1951), Sadanander Mela
(1954), Shap Mochan (1955)
and Saheb Bibi Golam (1956). He
was greatly appreciated as the poet-dramatist
Girish Chandra Ghosh in the biographical
film Mahakobi Girish Chandra (1956).
Sanyal continued as a character actor in
films such as Prithibi Amare Chaay (1957),
Pathey Holo Deri(1957), Harano
Sur (1957) – as Roma’s (Suchitra
Sen) ever understanding father, Dweep
Jweley Jai (1959) – he acted
in the role of a psychiatrist and Hospital
(1960). He was also greatly appreciated
in the role of the understanding father
to Suchitra Sen in her award winning film
Saat
Pake Bandha (1963). That same year Pahadi
played the role of a Hindu ascetic (the
Swamiji) in the Merchant-Ivory film The
Householder. He won the BFJA Award
as the Best Supporting Actor for his efforts
in Jaya (1965), a film by Chitta
Basu. He also had significant roles in Grihadaha
(1969), Shakti Samanta's Aradhana
(1969) - an undertsanding and sympathetic
father to the heroine Sharmila Tagore, Nimantran
(1971) and Shesh Parba (1972).
Kaya Hiner Kahini (1973) was his
final film.
Pahadi Sanyal made a cameo appearance in
the party scene in Satyajit
Ray’s Paras Pathar (1957).
He also excelled as the bird-loving Jagadish
in Ray’s Kanchanjungha (1962)
and as Sadashiv Tripathi in Aranyer
Din Ratri (1969).In the later film he
sang Atulprasad’s song Shey Daake
Aamare Bina Shey Shokhare in his own
voice.
Pahadi Sanyal was an extremely sophisticated
man in real life. He was fluent in Hindi,
Urdu and English and read French literature
in the original language. When he died on
10 February 1974, Bengali cinema lost one
of its leading lights.
Contributed by Monish K Das, an
alumnus of the Film and Television Institute
of India (FTII), Pune with specialization
in Film Editing, 1992. He now lives and
works as a documentary filmmaker and social
communication consultant in Kolkata.
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