Prithviraj
Kapoor was without a doubt the most handsome
Indian actor of Pre-Independence India and
the founder of India's first film family
- the Kapoors.
He was born in Prithvinath Kapoor in a
middle-class landlord family in Samundri,
a district of the industrial township of
Lyallpur, Punjab, the son of a police officer.
He got most of his early grounding from
his grand father, Dewan Keshavmal. After
finishing schooling at Lyallpur and Lahore,
he enrolled at Edward College, Peshawar
where he developed a taste for the theatre
and earned a major reputation on the amateur
stage in Lyallpur and Peshawar. He was married
at 18 and did a year of law after graduation
but interrupted his law studies to pursue
his dreams of acting. Taking a loan from
his aunt, he left Peshawar for Bombay in
the winter of 1928, leaving behind his wife
and three children saying he would send
for them later.
In Bombay, he joined the Imperial Film
company and acted in several B.P. Mishra
adventure and love stories such as Cinema
Girl (1930) opposite Ermeline, India's
Clara Bow. He acted in India's first ever
talkie Alam Ara (1931) though not
in the lead role, which was essayed by Master
Vithal. He then joined the Grant Anderson
Theatre Company performing Shakespeare in
English, winning special acclaim for his
role of Laertes in Hamlet.
The turning point in Prithviraj's life
came when he shifted to New Theatres, Calcutta
in 1933. He broke through that year with
Rajrani Meera (1933) and then with
Debaki Bose's Seeta (1934). He mainly
acted in their Hindi versions with Durgadas
Banerjee often playing the same role in
the Bengali version. Prithviraj was associated
with some of the best films of New Theatres
like Manzil (1936), President
(1937) and his crowning glory Vidyapathi
(1937) where he played the King Shiva
Singha whose wife falls in love with the
poet Vidyapathi.
Chandulal Shah hired Prithviraj for Ranjit Movietone where he
worked from 1938 - 1940. His best known
film with Ranjit was Pagal (1940),
where he played a psychotic doctor in an
asylum. Tricked into marrying the less beautiful
of two sisters, he injects the one he wanted
to marry with a drug that renders her insane.
He then keeps her in the asylum where he
brutalises her. It was a dark role unlike
anything he had played before.
The title role in Sohrab Modi's Sikander (1941)
immortalized Prithviraj Kapoor. This epic
film was set in 326 BC when Alexander the
Great, having conquered Persia and the Kabul
Valley, descends to the Indian border at
Jhelum and encounters Porus (Modi) who stops
the advance with his troops. Sikander's
lavish mounting, huge sets and production
values equalled the Best of Hollywood then
particularly for its rousing and spectacular
battle scenes and was rated by a British
writer as...
"…well up to the standard of that
old masterpiece The Birth of a Nation."
Its dramatic, declamatory dialogues gave
both Prithviraj Kapoor and Sohrab Modi free
reign to their histrionic proclivities.
Prithviraj made a handsome, dashing Sikander
and the film heightened his enduring reputation
for playing royalty, enhanced further by
his role as Akbar in Mughal-e-Azam (1960).
In 1944 he invested his earnings and set
up Prithvi Theatre. He was the first to
use the concept of modern, professional
urban theatre in Hindustani. Before him
there were folk and Parsi theatre companies
but his was the first modern professional
repertory of that scale and influence. When
there were losses at the box office or if
production costs went haywire, he channelled
his earnings from films to bridge the fiscal
gap. In over 16 years of its existence under
Prithviraj Kapoor, Prithvi Theatre did some
2,662 shows. He played the lead in every
single show, even when he was running high
fever - one play every alternate day for
16 years! In fact Prithviraj Kapoori was
so committed to Prithvi that when Jawaharlal
Nehru wanted him to lead a cultural delegation
abroad he said he couldn't due to Prithvi's
engagements. When Nehru asked him why he
didn't have an understudy to play his roles,
Prithviraj replied he knew another person
who did not have any understudy amd that
person's role was far more important than
his. Who asked Nehru. You, Prithviraj replied.
Some of Prithvi's well known plays include
Deewaar, Pathan (1947),
Gaddar (1948) and Paisa (1954)
- which he directed as a film in 1957. Prithvi
Theatre also launched many new talents such
as Ramanand Sagar, Shankar-Jaikishen and
Ram Ganguly.
His major film work in the 1950s include
V.Shantaram's
Dahej (1950) and his son, Raj Kapoor's
Awaara (1951). The
latter starring Prithviraj and Raj as father
and son was perhaps Raj Kapoor's finest
film. The dramatic confrontations between
Prithviraj and Raj were a highlight of the
film. The film and particularly the title
song (Awaara Hoon) swept through
Asia breaking box office records in the
Middle-East being dubbed in Turkish, Persian
and Arabic. The film also swept Russia where
it was called Bradyaga (Vagabond).
(An interesting fact here is that the villain
of the film K.N. Singh did hid own dubbing
in Russian!) Raj Kapoor and Nargis became
superstars in Russia. When they visited
Russia, bands played Awaara Hoon
at airports, a puppet show by a leading
Russian puppeteer had in its final play
puppets representing Raj Kapoor and Nargis!
While directing Paisa, he lost his
voice which sadly never regained its full
sonorousness. Subsequently he closed Prithvi
Theatre and reduced his film work.
Aasmaan Mahal (1965) saw another
memorable performance from Prithviraj as
an old Nawab who refuses the wealth offered
by capitalists who want to turn his dilapidated
mansion into a hotel. The film, which suggests
that the old feudal order must be allowed
to fade away with dignity while its descendants
take the cue from 'the people' rather than
from entrepreneurs, won Prithviraj laurels
at International Film Festivals.
Among his later films,
Teen Bahuraniyaan (1968) saw him
as the loveable head of the family trying
to knock sense into his giddy headed daughters-in
law enamoured by a film star staying next
door and Kal Aaj Aur Kal (1971) directed
by grandson Randhir Kapoor (son of Raj Kapoor)
saw him play the head of a family in a film
dealing with the generation gap between
the grandfather and grandson with the son
caught in between both . Interestingly Prithviraj
Kapoor, Raj Kapoor and Randhir Kapoor enacted
the main roles. By now however his health
had deteriorated and he completed the dubbing
from his hospital bed. He had also played
the patriachal head in the Punjabi film
Nanak Naam Jahaaz Hai (1969). The
film was the first really major successful
Punjabi film in Post-Independent India with
a major cultural impact on Punjabi sikhs
at home and abroad and is credited with
the revival of the Punjabi Film Industry
in India.
Around this time Prithviraj felt the need
for a theatre space which would provide
amateur theatre groups with professional
facilities. With this in mind he leased
out a plot of land in Juhu, Bombay with
the hope of some day building a theatre
on it. Unfortunately though, this was not
to be realised in his lifetime. He succumbed
to Hodgkin's disease in 1972 leaving behind
a rich cultural legacy and a vision for
Indian theatre.
Prithviraj Kapoor was posthumously awarded
the Dadasaheb Phalke Award for his contribution
to Indian Cinema. His son, Shashi, has revived
Prithvi Theatre in his honour, a most befitting
tribute for someone whose motto was - The
show must go on...
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