Shyam Benegal (
Hindi:
श्याम बेनेगल; born 14 December 1934) is an Indian director and screenwriter. With his first four feature films
Ankur (1973),
Nishant(1975),
Manthan (1976) and
Bhumika (1977) he created a new genre, which has now come to be called the "
middle cinema" in India. He has expressed dislike of the term, preferring his work to be called New or Alternate cinema.
[1]
EARLY LIFE AND EDUCATION[EDIT]
Shyam Benegal, was born on 14 December 1934 in
Trimulgherry,
[2] Secunderabad, then a British
Cantonment, and now a twin city of the state capital, as Shyam Sunder Benegal. It was here, at age twelve, that he made his first film, on a camera given to him by his photographer father, Sridhar B. Benegal. He received an
M.A. in Economics from
Nizam College,
Osmania University,
Hyderabad.
[3] There he formed the Hyderabad Film Society.
Famous film director and actor
Guru Dutt's maternal grandmother and Shyam's paternal grandmother were sisters.
[4]
Early career[edit]
In 1959, he started working as a
copywriter at a Bombay-based
advertising agency, Lintas Advertising, where he steadily rose to become a creative head. Meanwhile, Benegal made his first documentary in
Gujarati,
Gher Betha Ganga (Ganges at Doorstep) in 1962. His first feature film had to wait another decade while he worked on the script.
[5]
In 1963 he had a brief stint with another advertising agency called ASP (Advertising, Sales and Promotion). During his advertising years, he directed over 900 sponsored documentaries and advertising films.
Between 1966 and 1973, Shyam taught at the
Film and Television Institute of India (FTII),
Pune, and twice served as the institute's chairman: 1980–83 and 1989–92. By this time he had already started making documentaries. One of his early documentaries,
A Child of the Streets (1967), garnered him wide acclaim.
[6] In all, he has made over 70 documentary and short films.
[7]
Feature films[edit]
In Benegal's next,
Nishant (
Night's End) (1975), a teacher's wife is abducted and gang-raped by four
zamindars; officialdom turns a deaf ear to the distraught husband's pleas for help.
Manthan (
The Churning) (1976) is a film on rural empowerment and is set against the backdrop of
Gujarat's fledgling dairy industry. For the first time, over five lakh (half a million)
[8] rural farmers in Gujarat, contributed

2 each and thus became the film's producers. Upon its release, truckloads of farmers came to see "their" film, making it a success at the box office.
[9] After this trilogy on rural oppression, Benegal made a biopic,
Bhumika (
The Role) (1977), broadly based on the life of well-known
Marathi stage and film actress of the 1940s, Hansa Wadkar (played by
Smita Patil) who led a flamboyant and unconventional life. The main character sets out on an individual search for identity and self-fulfillment, while also grappling with exploitation by men.
[10]
"...what Benegal has done is to paint a magnificent visual recreation of those extraordinary days and one that is also sensitive to the agonies and predicament of a talented woman whose need for security was only matched by her insistence on freedom."
[12]
The 80s[edit]
Unlike most
New Cinema filmmakers, Benegal has had private backers for many of his films and institutional backing for a few, including
Manthan (
National Dairy Development Board), and
Susman (1987) (Handloom Co-operatives). However, his films did not have proper releases. He turned to TV where he directed serials like
Yatra (1986) for the Indian Railways, and one of the biggest projects undertaken on Indian television, the 53-episode television serial
Bharat Ek Khoj (1988) based on
Jawaharlal Nehru's book,
Discovery of India.
[2] [2] This gave him an added advantage, as he managed to survive the collapse of the New Cinema movement in the late 80s due to paucity of funding, with which were lost many neo-realist filmmakers. Benegal continued making films throughout the next two decades. He also served as the Director of the
National Film Development Corporation (NFDC) from 1980 to 1986.
[3]
Benegal's next film,
Mandi (1983), was a satirical comedy about politics and prostitution, starring Shabana Azmi and Smita Patil. Later, working from his own story, based on the last days of
Portuguese in Goa, in the early 1960s, Shyam explored human relationships in
Trikal (1985).
Soon, Shyam Benegal stepped beyond traditional narrative films and took to biographical material to achieve greater freedom of expression.
[13] His first venture in this genre was with a documentary film based on
Satyajit Ray’s life,
Satyajit Ray, in 1985. This was followed by works like
Sardari Begum (1996) and
Zubeidaa, which was written by filmmaker and critic
Khalid Mohamed.
The 90s and beyond[edit]
He has authored three books based on his own films:
The Churning with
Vijay Tendulkar (1984), based on
Manthan;
Satyajit Ray (1988), based on his biographical film,
Satyajit Ray; and
The Marketplace (1989) which was based on
Mandi.
RECENT PROJECTS[EDIT]
In 2008, his film
Welcome to Sajjanpur, starring
Shreyas Talpade and
Amrita Rao, was released to a good response.
[16]The film's music was composed by
Shantanu Moitra,
[17] and it was produced by Chetan Motiwalla. Shyam Benegal is slated to direct an epic musical
Chamki Chameli,
[18] inspired by George Bizet's classic Spanish opera
Carmen. The story revolves around the eponymous Chamki, a beautiful gypsy girl with a fiery temper and is written by
Shama Zaidi. The music is by A. R. Rahman and lyrics are by
Javed Akhtar.
PERSONAL LIFE[EDIT]
Shyam Benegal is married to Nira Benegal and has a daughter, Pia, who is a costume designer for feature films.
FILMOGRAPHY[EDIT]
AWARDS AND NOMINATIONS[EDIT]
- National Film Awards
- Filmfare Awards
- Cannes Film Festival
- Berlin International Film Festival
- Moscow International Film Festival
- Nandi Awards
Honours[edit]
BIBLIOGRAPHY[EDIT]
- Benegal on Ray: Satyajit Ray, a Film, by Shyam Benegal, Alaknanda Datta, Samik Banerjee. Seagull Books, 1988. ISBN 81-7046-021-2.
- Shyam Benegal's the Churning (Manthan): Screenplay, by, Vijay Tendulkar, Shyam Benegal, Samik Banerjee. Seagull Books, 1984. ISBN 0-86132-070-0.
REFERENCES[EDIT]
- Jump up^ Indian directors at filmofdesire
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Shyam Benegal at rediff.com 1999 Rediff.com, 28 July 1999.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Homi Bhabha Fellowship Council, Fellows, Biodata, "During the period of his Fellowship, Mr. Benegal wrote and directed short films on social themes with special relevance to the lower-income groups of the middle and working classes. He also visited the US, the UK and Japan to study educational television films."
- Jump up^ "‘Book’ed for a cause — The Times of India". The Times of India. 15 October 2008. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
- Jump up^ Shyam Benegal at ucla.net South Asia Studies,University of California, Los Angeles.
- Jump up^ Indo American Centre, Shyam Benegal Retrospective, 2002
- Jump up^ Shyam Benegal Retrospective London's National Film Theatre, 2002 The Hindu, 17 January 2003.
- Jump up^ "'Manthan' made on Rs 2 donations". Times of India. 11 Sep '12. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
- Jump up^ NDTV movies NDTV.
- Jump up^ "In search of Shyam Benegal," LA Weekly, 29 August 2007
- Jump up^ Shyam Benegal biography at filmreference
- Jump up^ Shyam Benegal at Upperstall Upperstall.com.
- Jump up^ Shyam Benegal Retrospective, 2007
- Jump up^ "14th Moscow International Film Festival (1985)". MIFF. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
- Jump up^ "31st Moscow International Film Festival (2009)". MIFF. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
- Jump up^ Amrita Rao in Shyam Benegal's next
- Jump up^ dnaindia,12 November 2007
- Jump up^ Yashpal Sharma in Chamki NDTV.
- Jump up^ Benegal set to film story of British-Indian spy
- Jump up^ [1]
- Jump up^ ibnlive
- Jump up^ [2] webindia123
- Jump up^ Nishant - Awards Internet Movie Database
- Jump up^ Ankur - Awards Internet Movie Database
- Jump up^ "12th Moscow International Film Festival (1981)". MIFF. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
- Jump up^ "20th Moscow International Film Festival (1997)". MIFF. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
- Jump up^ Eenadu daily, Eeenadu Cinema, Page 10, Nandi life time achievement awards, retrieved, 24 March 2013.
- Jump up^ "Annual Convocation". University of Calcutta.
FURTHER READING[EDIT]
EXTERNAL LINKS[EDIT]
[show]
Awards for Shyam Benegal
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