Guru Dutt is remembered in the history of Indian cinema as
the brooding intense romantic who attempted to reflect the changing social
situation in India in the fifties. Within his short life, he created some of
India's most socially-conscious movies like Pyaasa(Thirsty, 1957), Kaagaz ke
Phool (Paper Flowers, 1960) and Baazi (1951). He also introduced Waheeda Rehman
inCID (1956) and propelled her to stardom through his films.
Born in Calcutta in 1925, Guru Dutt worked as a telephone
operator before he embarked on his career as an actor and director in 1944. The
fifties was the time when India, under Nehru's brand of state socialism, was
embarking on massive industrialization. The conventional wisdom has it that
rapid changes introduced by industralization were undermining'traditional
values'. What is certain is that industrialization, and the accompanying
migration from rural to urban areas, was creating -- as it still does in India
-- anomie, dislocation, and new social norms. In the urban enviornment, new
social relations developed. It is, therefore, not surprising that a recurring
theme in his films is the attraction, bound to be fatal, that develops between
a middle class girl and a tough but likeable character from the lower class.
His most memorable movie in this genre is probably Pyaasa. Inspired by Sarat
Chandra's novel, Srikanta, it depicts the romance between a poet and a
prostitute. The genuine poet cannot survive amidst philistines and publishers
interested only in profiteering: the spectre of the big city is everywhere in
Guru Dutt's films.
Guru Dutt's films are also said to be marked by a certain
nostalgia, most evident in Sahib, Bibi aur Gulam (Master, Mistress, and
Servant), a film that explores the decline of feudal landed family. An
aristocratic demeanor, a flair for style, characterize this film. Yet in all of
his films, Guru Dutt was to show mastery over cinematic elements, from lighting
and camera-work to film composition; and every films bears the unmistakable
imprint of his work. Though not known widely outside India, Guru Dutt's work
compares with that of any director working at that time around the world. His
brilliant career came to a premature end with his suicide, following a
protracted struggle with alcoholism, in 1964.
Sources
Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul. Encyclopedia of Indian
Cinema. London: British Film Institute; New Delhi: Oxford University Press,
1994
Mahmood, Hameeduddin. The Kaleidoscope of Indian Cinema. New
Delhi: East West Press, 1974
Brief Filmography
Baazi (1951)
Pyaasa (1958)
Kaagaz Ke Phool (1959)
Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962)
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