Himansu Rai
is credited with bringing technical sophistication
to Indian Cinema. He was amongst the earliest
Indian filmmakers to collaborate with European
filmmakers and try to improve the quality
of Indian filmmaking with the help of foreign
technical know-how.
Rai was born into a wealthy Bengali family
which owned a private theatre. He took a
Law degree from the University of Calcutta
and studied with Tagore at Shantiniketan.
He trained as a lawyer in London in the
early 1920s and also began acting in plays
there, amongst them Niranjan Pal's The
Goddess.
With Pal's script, adapted from Edwin Arnold's
poem, The Light of Asia, and his
persuasive powers, Rai went into partnership
with the German producer Peter Ostermayer
whose brother Franz Osten directed the film,
The Light of Asia (1925) starring
Rai as Gautam Buddha. The film, co-produced
by the Great Eastern Film Corporation in
Delhi, was hyped as the 'first specifically
Indian Film' by Osten and was fairly successful
in Central Europe.
Rai collaborated with Germany's famous
studio UFA and made Shiraz (1928)
and A Throw of Dice (1929) there.
The films were known for presenting 'Indian
exotica' to the West.
In London Rai had met Devika Rani
who had designed the sets for The Light
of Asia and who continued to work with
him. The two got married and in 1933, Rai
joined forces with IBP of England and wholly
produced Karma, a bilingual in English
and Hindi. The film starring Devika Rani
was a critical success but failed to score
at the box office.
The Nazi seizure of power in Germany caused
Rai to abandon more International co-productions
and concentrate on the domestic film market
in India. Late in 1933, Rai and Devika Rani
came to India bringing with them the as
yet unseen Hindi version of Karma.
The film premiered in early 1934 and was
highly acclaimed.
That year Bombay Talkies Ltd. was formed
and a studio built. Under the painstaking
supervision of Himansu Rai, it purchased
the most modern equipment from Germany.
Franz Osten, director and a handful of technicians
came down from England and Germany. By 1935,
a stream of Hindi productions began to emerge
from Bombay Talkies Ltd.
Bombay Talkies like other big
companies was a self-sufficient organized
studio which had public issues, declared
dividends, bonus and which had an independent
financial standing in the stock exchange.
In addition Devika Rani and Himansu Rai
also initiated a trainee program. Each year
Rai interviewed scores of job candidates,
many sent by Indian Universities. Assignment
of staff workers to a variety of duties
that would broaden their conception of the
film medium was a policy he personally implemented. Ashok Kumar, their
leading man began as a laboratory assistant!
To quote him,
"In Bombay Talkies we were like students,
learning. The teacher teaches and you listen."
It was said that top actors on occasion
even helped to clean floors! Bombay Talkies
maintained a school for children of staff
members, which also became a school for
child actors. It also had its own physician
and supervised the sanitary practices of
the canteen.
Bombay Talkies settled down to a schedule
of about three films a year. Their films
were of a high technical standard and had
a glossy look to them reminiscent of the
films of MGM. (Devika Rani was lit up in
a manner not unlike Greta Garbo!)
The outbreak of World War II meant that
the German technicians and director Franz
Osten were interned by the British, thus
crippling the studio. Overwork and mental
strain took its toll on Rai who suffered
a nervous breakdown. He never recovered
and died in 1940.
After Rai's death, Devika Rani took over
the reins of Bombay Talkies. But by 1945,
she too left following tussles with other
studio executives. Though Bombay Talkies
came out with successful films like Ziddi
(1948) and Mahal (1949), its
days were numbered. Badbaan (1954),
a last ditch effort made for the workers
of Bombay Talkies proved unsuccessful and
the studio ceased production.
Today the Bombay Talkies compound houses
a vast industrial estate, its days of former
glory and filmmaking long forgotten...
|