Patience Cooper,
who played the lead in various Madan Theatres
pictures - Nala Damayanti (1920),
Dhruva Charitra (1921), Pati Bhakti (1922),
Ratnavali (1922) and Noorjehan (1923)
to name some, was perhaps the first ever
Indian female film star well before Sulochana.
An Anglo-Indian from Calcutta, she appeared
in many silent films before switching to
talkies with comparative ease.
She
started as a dancer in Bandmann's Musical
Comedy, a Eurasian troupe before being employed
by Madan's Corinithian Stage Company. Cooper
was often cast as the sexually troubled
but innocent woman at the center of moral
dilemmas, a forerunner to the type of roles
played later by Nargis.
Cooper first made an impact with Nala
Damayanti (1920). The film starred
Keki Adajania as Nala and Cooper as Damayanti
. The film was a big budget Madan Theatre
production and was directed by Italian Eugenio
De Liguoro, known in Italy for his Orientalist
spectacles like Fascino d'Oro (1919).
Nala Damayanti was famous for its
special effects at the time - Narada's ascent
of Mount Meru to heaven, the transformations
of four gods into impersonations of Nala,
the transformation of Kali into a serpant
among others.
De Liguoro also directed Dhruva Chartitra
(1921), a mythological based on the
legend of Dhruva whose quest for eternal
knowledge and salvation was rewarded when
he became the brightest star in the heavens,
the pole star also known as Dhruvatara.
The film was made as a bid for an international
breakthrough for Madan Theatres and featured
many Europeans in the cast along with Cooper
who played the female lead, Suniti.
One of Cooper's biggest successes was Pati
Bhakti (1922). Cooper played Leelavati
in the film, directed by the great JJ Madan
himself, advocating that women should be
devoted to their husband. The film is regarded
as her greatest film and was also involved
in a small controversy as in Madras, the
censor demanded that a dance number be removed
on the grounds of obscenity!
A major aspect of Cooper's star image was
the successful achievement of the 'Hollywood
look' in spite of different light and technical
conditions. Her dark, sharp eyes and skin
tone allowed technicians to experiment with
the imported convention of eye-level lighting.
Cooper also played perhaps the first ever
double roles in Hindi films - Patni Pratap
(1923), where she played two sisters
and Kashmiri Sundari (1924), where
she played mother and daughter.
Cooper did films right through to the mid
1930s. One of her last major films was Zehari
Saap (1933). The film was a typical
Cooper vehicle about a medieval chieftain's
revolt against the good Nawab Bakar Malik.
The nawab's outlaw son vows revenge and
finally all's well that ends well. The dramatic
conflict in the film sees the chieftain
wanting to marry the princess, whom he had
raised as his own daughter! (The theme of
incestious agression is pravalent in many
Parsee hsitoricals).
Cooper's last film was Iraada (1944).
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