Smita Patil,
along with Shabana
Azmi, Naseeruddin Shah and Om Puri,
was one of the leading performers of Indian
parallel cinema or the 'Indian New Wave'
of the 1970s and 80s. What's more, Smita
'adjusted' herself to be equally adept at
mainstream Hindi cinema as well and was
a major Bollywood star right through to
her untimely and tragic death in 1986, when
she was just 31.
Smita was born in 1955 in Pune, her father
a minsiter in the Maharashtra State Government
and her mother, a social worker. Smita studied
Literature and Humanities at the University
of Mumbai.
Smita's first brush with acting came in
a diploma film made at the FTII in 1974,
Arun Khopkar's Teevra Madhyam.
She became a popular newscaster on televison
and was noticed by Shyam Benegal who cast
her in small but pivotal roles in Charandas
Chor (1975) and Nishant (1975).
Smita broke through the following year with
her earthy, rustic performance in Benegal's
Manthan (1976), set against the
backdrop of Gujarat's fledgling dairy industry.
Incidentally 5 lakh farmers in the state,
each of whom contributed 2 Rs, produced
the film! They came in truckloads to see
'their film' once released thereby making
it extremely succesful at the box office!
Smita
won her first National Award for Best Actress
for Bhumika (1977),
perhaps both her's and Benegal's finest
film. The film looks at an individual's
search for identity and self-fulfillment
and is broadly based on the life of well-known
Marathi Stage and screen actress of the
1930s and 1940s, Hansa Wadkar who led a
flamboyant and unconventional life to say
the least. Smita Patil’s essaying
of the role is amongst the best performances
in not just Indian cinema but comparable
to any peformance the world over. Within
the film, her depiction of different roles
in the films that she performs in, not only
traces the evolution of acting styles in
Hindi cinema over three decades, but also
demonstrates her remarkable histrionic ability.
It is a standout performance.
Following Bhumika, Smita went
from strangth to strength as an actress
giving superlative and heartfelt performances
in off-beat films like Jait re Jait
(1977), Kondura/Anugrahan (1977),
Gaman (1978), Albert Pinto
ko Gussa Kyon Aata Hai (1980), Aakrosh
(1980), Mrinal
Sen's 'film within film' - Alaker
Sandaney (1980), Bhavani Bhavai
(1980) and Chakra (1980).
Special mention must be made of Akaler
Sandhaney where Smita had the extremely
difficult job of playing two radically different
characters – 'herself' (the sensitive
actor Smita Patil) and a poor village woman
in the 'film within film' who ultimately
sells her body to contractors from the city
to save her son and family from the terrible
pangs of hunger caused by the Great Bengal
Famine. Needless to say she excelled in
the film. Smita's dusky sensuous looks,
unconventional beauty, amazing histrionic
talent and unique voice impressed American
critic Elliott Stein enough for him to comment,
"At 25 Smita is clearly the queen
of Indian parallel cinema, as much an icon
for film-makers of the milieu as was Anna
Karina for young directors in France at
the outset of their new wave. Patil is not
a classic beauty but the lady glows. She
never makes a false move on screen."
Chakra won Smita her second
National Award for Best Actress as well
as the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.
In the film Smita gives a landmark performance
as a slum dweller, Amma trying to shield
her son, Benwa (Ranjit Choudhury) from the
local dada Looka, whom Benwa idoldizes,
and looking to better her life. Chakra
is perhaps the best and most realistic depiction
of slum-life on the Indian screen. It is
said Smita merged so beautifully with the
actual slum dwellers that she moved about
the slum unrecognised (the slum dwellers
thought she was one of them) with a hidden
camera following her. The film mixes the
actual locales with set pieces most impressively
thanks to Bansi
Chandragupta's brilliant recreation
of Mumbai's slums.
Smita
breathed life into each of her performances.
She always tried to play roles of women
of substance and those which explored women
trying to discover their true identity and
try to live life on their own terms. In
her films, Patil's character often represents
an intelligent femininity that stands in
relief against the conventional background
of male-dominated cinema. This is aparent
when one sees Manthan, Bhumika,
Chakra and Umbartha (Marathi)/
Subah (Hindi) (1981).
Umbartha/ Subah sees perhaps Smita's
finest ever performance, Bhumika
and Chakra notwithstanding. The
film, scripted by Vijay Tendulkar traces
the self for quest of Sulabha (Smita Patil),
married to a progressive advocate. She accepts
the post of director of a mahila ashram
for abandoned women. She finds herself in
the midst of a dark and corrupt world where
the inamtes are at the mercy of power-hungry,
rotten bureaucrats. Some women are drawn
to suicide, others to prostitution. Sulabha
discovers a sense of belonging, a feeling
of community, as she assumes resposnsibilty
for the inmates and gets their affection
in return. She is, however, transferred
when she persuades the women to resist the
abusive practices to which they are subjected.
Sulabha returns home after two years to
find her daughter a starnger and her husband
involved with another woman. The film sees
Sulabha walking out and ends with her on
a train heading for an unknown destivation.
The great director Costa-Gravas saw Umbartha
and totally taken in by Smita's poised
and dignified performance, set events into
motion that would make Smita the first Indian
artiste to have a full fledged retrospective
of her films in France.
1982 was an extremely busy year for Smita
as along with some of her finest films like
Bazaar, Sitam and Arth,
she had a number of relases in mainstream
Hindi cinema as well including two films
opposite Amitabh
Bachchan - Shakti and Namak
Halal.
Though Shabana had the author backed role
in Arth and won the National Award
for Best Actress, Smita had her share of
admirers who felt it was she who scored
in the film in the far more difficult role
as the neurotic other woman, Kavita Sanyal,
based reportedly on Parveen Babi. Just watch
Smita in the scene where Shabana calls her
and pleads with her to leave her husband
alone. While the scene favours Shabana,
who is as good as ever, Smita has to just
listen to her and react silently, the gamut
of expressions that ever so subtly flit
across Smita's face in this sequence are
astounding to say the least.
While she had taken the plunge, Smita had
not quite come to terms with the demands
of mainstream Hindi cinema if her work in
Namak Halal and Shakti
are examples to go by. Though Namak
Halal was a huge success, Smita looks
distinctly awkward in the song and dance
routine, particularly in the sensuous rain
sing Aaj Rapat Jaaye. It is said
after the first day's shoot of the song,
she came home and cried wondering what she
was doing in mainstream cinema! And though
Smita has her strong moments in Shakti
like the scene where she invites Amitabh
home to her place saying she really makes
good coffee or when she tells him about
her pregnancy and makes it clear she doesn't
want to forcefully bind him her, she is
woefully out of her depth in the songs,
particularly the ghazal she sings at the
hotel where she works.
However, by and by Smita learnt to cope
with the demands of mainstream cinema and
learnt how to rise above the scripts she
was offered leading to some extremely effective
performances in Aaj ki Awaaz (1984),
Kasam Paida Karne Waali ki (1984),
Akhir Kyon? (1985), Ghulami
(1985), Amrit (1986), Nazrana
(1987) and Thikana (1987).
Parallely,
she continued to explore new avenues as
an actress with films such as Shyam Benegal's
Mandi (1983), Govind Nihalani's
Ardh Satya (1983), Kumar Shahani's
Tarang (1984), G Aravindan's Chidambaram
(1985) and one of her finest and most
popular performance, as Sonbai in Ketan
Mehta's Mirch Masala (1985).
Mirch Masala (Spices) is set in
colonial India during the early 1940’s
when tax collectors (subedars) used to travel
from village to village to demand taxes.
By making use of their power, they would
oppress villagers & seize women along
with property & money. One such subedar
(Naseeruddin Shah) commands a local woman,
Sonbai (Smita Patil) whose husband (Raj
Babbar) is away, to sleep with him. Sonbai
flees from his grasp and takes shelter in
a local spice factory. This plunges the
entire village into conflict. When a group
of women wants to join Sonbai in her unusual
insurrection, they are repelled by their
own husbands. The villagers and village
chief (Suresh Oberoi) must now decide whether
to hand over Sonbai to Subedar, or let him
destroy their village and molest their wives,
sisters and daughters. Finally it is the
women who take things into their own hands
and teach the subedar a lesson. Smita's
central, blazing performance is the life
and soul of Mirch Masala and was
hailed by critics the world over. Quoting
Rita Kempsky in the Washington Post,
"Acclaimed for her portraits of
exploited women, Patil gives an enigmatically
feisty performance. If she and the filmmaker
weren't so able and the backdrop not so
exotic, Spices would be little more than
an ineffectual rant. There is a grunting
ruthlessness to the drama, a vibrancy of
character and moral obstinacy that compare
favorably with Akira Kurosawa's admittedly
more elegant samurai movies."
Smita was open to working in any language
provided the script and her role excited
her. She worked in Marathi (Jait re
Jait , Umbartha), Gujarati
(Bhavani Bhavai), Telugu (
Anugrahan ), Bengali (Akaler Sandhaney),
Kannada (Anveshane (1980) )and
even Malayalam (G Aravindan's Chidambaram
). She also worked with the great Satyajit
Ray in a film made for televison, Sadgati
(1981), based on a Munishi Premchand
story. It is undoubtedly one of her most
memorable performances.
In her personal life, Smita Patil got involved
with fellow actor Raj Babbar who left his
wife Nadira for Smita. The couple had a
son Prateek but complications following
the childbirth saw Smita slip into a coma
and pass away on December 13, 1986. Indian
cinema had sadly lost one of its greatest
talents much, much too early.
Smita left behind a body of films in various
stages of completion that continued to release
after her death. Among her last films, her
most noteworthy performance came in Ravindra
Peepat's Waaris (1988). Though
Smita had completed the shooting of the
film, a Mother
India type drama of a woman fighting
to save her land set against a typical Punjabi
background, her dubbing was still left when
she passed away. It was Rekha who brilliantly
dubbed for Smita in the film, acknowledging
the respect she had for Smita as an artiste.
Smita's last release was the crass potboiler
Galiyon ka Badshaah (1989).
Smita Patil was awarded the Padmashri by
the Government of India in 1985 for her
contribution to Indian Cinema.
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