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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early years  





2 Success  





3 Decline  





4 Timeline  





5 Filmography  





6 References  





7 Further reading  














Bombay Talkies






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Coordinates: 19°1045N 72°5035E / 19.17903°N 72.84292°E / 19.17903; 72.84292 (Bombay Talkies Compound)
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Bombay Talkies
IndustryEntertainment
Founded22 June 1934 (22 June 1934)
Founders
  • Devika Rani
  • Defunct13 October 1953 (13 October 1953)
    HeadquartersMalad, Maharashtra, India

    Area served

    British India
    Products
  • Film production
  • Bombay Talkies was a movie studio founded in 1934. During its period of operation, Bombay Talkies produced 40 movies in Malad, a suburb of the Indian city of Bombay.

    The studio was established in 1934 by Himanshu Rai and Devika Rani. After Rai's death in 1940, Rani took over the studio. Besides the founders, Ashok Kumar was the leading actor of the studio until 1943, when he founded another studio, Filmistan, with Shashadhar Mukherjee. After Rani's retirement, Kumar and Mukherjee took over Bombay Talkies. The company went out of business in 1953. A last film produced by the studio was released in June 1954.[1][2]

    Early years[edit]

    For the period in cinematic history it represented, Bombay Talkies was considered to be an innovative and highly resourced movie studio. In line with international standards, the studios' facilities included sound and echo-proof stages, laboratories, editing rooms and a preview theater. The reputation of Bombay Talkies was further enhanced by employing experienced European technicians, the most prominent of whom was Franz Osten.

    Bombay Talkies set a high technical standard for film making in India and was credited with introducing a level of professionalism to the medium of movie making and acting, reputedly higher than standards set by rival Indian film production companies. Bombay Talkies acquired a reputation for changing the aesthetics and technology traditionally associated with Indian films. It was also renowned for producing films on (then) controversial topics such as those dealing with love between an untouchable lower caste girl and a high caste Hindu Brahmin boy e.g. (Achhut Kanya).

    Devika Rani, who became one of Bombay Talkies' most successful actresses, and India's first film diva, appeared in Jawani ki Hawa (1935) and Jeevan Naiya (1936), as well as a number of other highly successful productions by the company. The studio was similarly recognized as having launched the careers of several prominent Indian film actors including Devika Rani, Ashok Kumar, Leela Chitnis, Mehmood Ali, Madhubala and Dilip Kumar. Madhubala and Dilip Kumar, who co-starred in four Bombay Talkies films, engaged in a long term, highly covert love affair.[3] Raj Kapoor worked as an assistant to Amiya Chakravarty of Bombay Talkies, before becoming a famous director.[4]

    Success[edit]

    Following the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the company faced a number of problems. The most significant change for the studio involved Himanshu Rai, the studio's founder, suffering a nervous breakdown which ultimately resulted in his demise. Following the shock caused by his demise, control of the film company passed on to Devika Rani who was appointed as the key producer of the Bombay Talkies studios. Despite, or perhaps because of, her prior experience as an actress, Devika Rani was highly successful in sustaining the production values of the company, and the studio subsequently retained its dominance over the rapidly expanding Indian film industry. The most successful Bombay Talkies films produced during this period included Kangan and Bandhan, both of which featured Leela Chitnis and Ashok Kumar. In 1943, Kismet created a local record for the longest continual showing of the same film. The movie continued to run for more than three and half years at the Roxy movie theater in Calcutta, India.[citation needed]

    Decline[edit]

    Despite Devika Rani's success as the Bombay Talkies' head producer, in 1943 a rift arose between her and her managers Sashadhar Mukherjee and Ashok Kumar. Although reasons for the rift have never been made public and largely remain unclear to film industry observers, Sashadhar Mukheerjee and Ashok Kumar allegedly attempted to begin their own production house under the guise of Bombay Talkies. Despite Devika Rani, Sashadhar Mukherjee, and Ashok Kumar attempting to create a working relationship which involved alternating production of major films between the two rival production camps, the relationship proved untenable and was fraught with allegations of sabotage, dramatic ego clashes, in-fighting, and the relentless circulation of malicious rumors.[citation needed]

    Negotiations between Devika Rani on the one hand and Sashadhar Mukherjee and Ashok Kumar on the other failed to unite the company. Shashdhar Mukherjee, Ashok Kumar and a few others left the company in 1943 to found Filmistan. In 1945, Devika Rani married the Russian painter Svetoslav Roerich, sold her Bombay Talkies shares and left the industry. After several attempts to reunite the studio, it was sold to Tolaram Jalan, a businessman, who decided to cease its operations in 1953.

    Timeline[edit]

    Filmography[edit]

    Year Film Director Music Director Cast
    1935 Jawani Ki Hawa Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Najamul Hussain, Devika Rani
    1936 Achhut Kanya Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1936 Janmabhoomi Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1936 Jeevan Naiya Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1936 Mamta and Miya Biwi Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Devika Rani, Najmul Hussain, J. S. Casshyap
    1937 Izzat Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1937 Jeevan Prabhat Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Kishore Sahu, Devika Rani
    1937 Prem Kahani Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Maya Devi
    1937 Savitri Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1938 Bhabhi Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Renuka Devi, P Jairaj
    1938 Nirmala Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1938 Vachan Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Ashok Kumar, Devika Rani
    1939 Durga Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Devika Rani, Rama Shukul
    1939 Kangan Franz Osten Saraswati Devi + Ramchandra Paal Leela Chitnis, Ashok Kumar
    1939 Navjeevan' Franz Osten Saraswati Devi Hansa Wadkar, Rama Shukul
    1940 Azad N R Acharya Saraswati Devi + Ramchandra Paal Leela Chitnis, Ashok Kumar
    1940 Bandhan N. R. Acharya Saraswati Devi + Ramchandra Paal Leela Chitnis, Ashok Kumar
    1940 Punar Milan Najam Naqvi Ramchandra Paal Snehprabha, Kishore Sahu
    1941 Anjaan Amiya Chakrabarty Pannalal Ghosh Devika Rani, Ashok Kumar
    1941 Jhoola Gyan Mukherjee Saraswati Devi Leela Chitnis, Ashok Kumar
    1941 Naya Sansar N. R. Acharya Saraswati Devi + Ramchandra Paal Renuka Devi, Ashok Kumar
    1942 Basant Amiya Chakrabarty Pannalal Ghosh Mumtaz Shanti, Ullhas, Madhubala (debut)
    1943 Hamari Baat M.I. Dharamsey Anil Biswas Devika Rani, Jairaj
    1943 Kismat (orKismet or Qismat) Gyan Mukherjee Anil Biswas Ashok Kumar, Mumtaz Shanti
    1944 Char Ankhen Sushil Majumdar Anil Biswas Jairaj, Leela Chitnis
    1944 Jwar Bhata Amiya Chakravarty Anil Biswas Dilip Kumar (debut), Mrudula, Shamim
    1945 Pratima Jairaj Arun Kumar Mukherjee Dilip Kumar, Swarnalata, Jyoti, Mukri
    1946 Milan Nitin Bose Anil Biswas Dilip Kumar, Meera Mishra, Ranjana, Moni Chatterjee
    1947 Nateeja Najam Naqvi Rasheed Atre Yaqub, Shamim, Majid Khan
    1947 Noukadubi Nitin Bose Anil Biswas Abhi Bhattacharya, Meera Mishra
    1948 Majboor Nazir Ajmeri Ghulam Haider Munnawar Sultana, Shyam, Sohan
    1948 Ziddi Shaheed Latif Khemchand Prakash Kamini Kaushal, Dev Anand, Veera
    1949 Mahal Kamal Amrohi Khemchand Prakash Ashok Kumar, Madhubala, Kumar
    1950 Samar Nitin Bose S. D. Burman Sumitra Devi, Ashok Kumar
    1950 Sangram Gyan Mukherjee C. Ramchandra Nalini Jaywant, Ashok Kumar, Nawab
    1950 Mashaal Nitin Bose S. D. Burman Ashok Kumar, Sumitra Devi, Ruma Devi
    1952 Maa Bimal Roy S. K. Pal Bharat Bhushan, Leela Chitnis, Kusum Deshpande, Arun Kumar
    1952 Tamasha Phani Majumdar Manna Dey, S. K. Pal, Khemchand Prakash Dev Anand, Meena Kumari, Ashok Kumar
    1954 Baadbaan Phani Majudar Timir Baran, S. K. Pal Dev Anand, Ashok Kumar, Meena Kumari

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Tejaswini Ganti (2013). Bollywood: A Guidebook to Popular Hindi Cinema. Routledge. p. 17. ISBN 9780415583848.
  • ^ Christian Rogowski (2010). The Many Faces of Weimar Cinema. Camden House. p. 169. ISBN 9781571134295.
  • ^ "The legend of Madhubala | Magazines | DAWN.COM". Archived from the original on 8 June 2011.
  • ^ Madhu Jain (2009). Kapoors: The First Family of Indian Cinema. Penguin UK. ISBN 9788184758139.
  • Further reading[edit]

    19°10′45N 72°50′35E / 19.17903°N 72.84292°E / 19.17903; 72.84292 (Bombay Talkies Compound)


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    This page was last edited on 26 October 2023, at 16:53 (UTC).

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