रविवार, 10 नवंबर 2013

AYE MERE DIL KAHIN AUR CHAL

AYE     MERE      DIL   KAHIN    AUR   CHAL
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     There are many moments of the  past which make me happy. Strangely, incidents in modest and simple surroundings/circumstances have given me more happiness than even travelling  to foreign locales. Among many such adolescent/childhood memories are the moments watching those countless ‘Black and White’ films in Allahabad. ‘Morning shows’, at various distant cinema halls were meticulously followed through the information in ‘Northen Indian Patrika’. ‘Palace’ was nearest at civil lines, others such as ‘Moti Mahal’, ‘Vishambhar’ were far; later ‘Jhankar’ also screened old cinema.
    Those days the popular  culture was not hit by the Television invasion and the citizens were not caged in their drawing rooms chained to the ‘Soap Operas’. Many cinema Halls screened old films at ‘reduced rates’, because the new releases could not keep pace with the number of Cinema Halls, and therefore the ‘reruns’ of old films were a norm. More so, as the cost of print at that time was very high ,even new releases were screened in only one Cinema Hall, and very rare we would witness a release in two Halls- ‘Sholay’ and ‘Bobby’, were exceptions . The reruns gave us a chance to see the Cinema of the yesteryears and appreciate the Art of Dilip Kumar, Balraj Sahni etc. They were still in reckoning but the best years were behind them. They belonged to the generation of my father, but still we liked them  as the world was moving slow then and the gulf between the generations was tolerable. Unlike the young of today who make faces whenever an old song plays on TV or a yesteryear Actor appears.
  However I am writing to day of  the intense impact  the film ‘Daag’ ( 1954, Dilip Kumar-Nimmi starrer) had on me when I saw it in the late sixties/early seventies. I may have been 12-13 old then and had by then bitten by the movie bug. My parents too never restricted  my love for the movies and the entire family on occasions witnessed the new releases by booking tickets in advance. It was always a big family outing and often an award at the end of the Annual examination or receipt of results. We  three brothers would dress well, make our hair in style of the Hero we were worshipping at that point in time, make gestures copying the Hero on the poster, utter some famous dialogues from the film or recite songs made famous by then; this used to be our ritual prior to witnessing the film ;after return from the Hall, the story with dialogues was narrated to our friends and relatives  and for days I was specially affected  by the charm and beauty of the heroine and imagined her to be mine.
   However at the  beginning of my cinematic affair the avenues and opportunities were few owing to my age as I had yet not embarked on college life and therefore my solitary movements were marked to the borders of my colony; Ashok Nagar .Therefore we looked for alternate cinematic experience and my friend’s residence was one such place. His father too was fond of cinema so much so that he would regularly walk to cinema halls in the evening after the end of his walk and return home on rickshaw; he was an eminent professor in the University. He was member of the ‘Chalchitra vibhag’ and could loan films for private screenings. We children therefore saw many good films at my friend’s place on his 16mm projector- ‘Kanoon’, ‘Bahu-Rani’, ‘Kundan’ are some of the films I still recall. Films were also shown to us at our school- St Joseph’s Academy; ‘Kohra’ is one suspense film which terrified us to the extent that we students had made a cluster in the middle of the hall and our chairs were all hugging each other ;it was a sight at the end of the show1

 Returning to ‘Daag’, it remains in my memory as the earliest film I saw for free , on the Annual Day celebrations of the ‘Valmiki School’ which was just opposite the ‘Chakbandi’ office at the beginning of the Ashok Nagar crossing. ‘Valmiki School’ as my memory goes was a municipal school with rudimentary structure , classrooms with tin roof in straight lines on three sides. A big tamarind tree provided shade to a large  grassless ground in the center. As it grew dark we were on the ground swatting on a mat which was partly provided and covered some portion of the ground. Soon the ground was filled with  people , they were standing along the wired boundary wall, on the roof top, on the adjoining trees.
 The film began and I was transferred to another world. It was a simple story of Dilip Kumar whose weakness was drinking, despite his girlfriend’ and mother’s ( Nimmi and Lalita Pawar)advise and remonstrations  he is unable to quit this habit , however one day he is sobered and leaves his village for a job in town, on his return one day he finds his mother is dead, he takes to drinking again and dies in the end. However what has remained with me forever ‘etched’  is the song – Aye mere dil kahin aur chal, gham ki duniyan de dil bhar gaya, mein yahan jite ji mar gaya…. Sung by Talat Mahmood, composed by Shankar Jaikishan and penned by Shailendra, this song is soul stirring and appears in the film on many occasions. The long shot of Dilip returning triumphantly to his village suitcase in hand and the song on his lips still haunts me. The strong and yet melodious sound of the ‘Piano-accordion’ is the core of that song.

  Even now, whenever I hear the song the sound   takes me to those happy moments , moments of freedom, imagination, creativity. It remains a moment of ‘Catharsis’ for me; always!

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