Museum of Art & Photography
Curated by Damini Kulkarni
“Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought.”
So wrote Percy Bysshe Shelley in his much-vaunted poem Ode to a Skylark. It is splendidly ironic that the words of a 19th century English romantic poet should resonate deeply with the characterization of sorrowful women in postcolonial Hindi cinema.
Photographic still of Kamini Kaushal from the Hindi film, Rakhi (1949) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Early post-independence Hindi cinema’s image of the sorrowful woman—who suffers the slings and arrows of fortune in service of the ‘greater good’—is caught in contradictory narratives. A thing of beauty that poignantly enlivens a bleak horizon, she also serves as a reminder of deep fault-lines and violent fissures in the contemporary social and political landscape. As popular Hindi cinema loads the figure of the stoic and sorrowful woman with tremendous metaphorical significance, it endorses the idea that while bold might be beautiful, melancholic is no less magnificent.
The collection of film ephemera at the Museum of Art and Photography affords an opportunity to explore some of the contours of Golden Era Hindi cinema’s figuration of the melancholic woman.
Decoding the Vocabulary
Film still for unknown film by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Several researchers have remarked that popular Hindi cinema is unified in its reliance on a melodramatic aesthetic. Film theorist Anupama Kapse, in particular, has pointed out that melodrama could be seen as a “connective tissue that linked disparate genres” in early Indian cinema.
Film still for an unknown film by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The figure of the pained and suffering woman is directly implicated in melodramatic excesses.
As she weeps, her body becomes a site of excessiveness, leaking forth emotions that are meant to rouse similar feelings in sympathetic audience members. Her suffering also enables her to be easily cast as sacred and virtuous within the melodramatic juxtaposition of good versus evil: she is perceived as distilled by suffering, and purified by pain.
Photographic still of Waheeda Rehman from the Hindi film, Palki (1967) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
After India attained independence in 1947—and even during the freedom struggle—women occupied a crucial space in the discursive construction of national identity. According to Ira Bhaskar, the nationalist project burdened women with the task of “preserving the true spiritual and cultural identity of the nation, crucial to an essential and inner sovereignty despite the subjection to the colonial state.”
Film still for 'Bahu Begum' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
This gendering of labour, she adds, is an attempt to configure a form of modernity that would be compatible with a nationalist rubric. The woman’s body thus functions as the battleground where the apparent contradiction between the traditional and the modern reaches a resolution.
Photographic still of Kalpana Kartik from the Hindi film, Taxi Driver (1954) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The figure of the suffering and grieving woman, then, is a visible manifestation of the dust that is raised as the modern jostles for space with the nationalistic traditional before they reach an uneasy reconciliation.
The Sacred Mother
Poster produced for Hindi feature film ‘Mother India’ (1957) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The characterization of the suffering mother, ubiquitous in popular Hindi cinema, has been pivotal in the process of turning the feminine into the sacred center of the nationalistic project. In Mother India (1957), Radha (Nargis), who appears as a metaphor for the nation, wrestles with immense hardship to raise her infant sons into young men.
As she labours on a flooded field and persuades other villagers not to abandon their farms after a storm, Radha displays her rootedness by literally nurturing the soil of the country. When the village eventually builds a dam, she is called to inaugurate it as an old, almost mute woman. Venerated by the villagers as a sacred maternal figure emblematic of the virtues of traditionalism, she also becomes pivotal in the ushering in of modern technological innovation.
Radha navigates through several traumatizing occurrences by sacrificing her desires and resigning to her grief. While she mostly sobs and cries with plaintive quietness, the aural component of her grief most often appears in the guise of dramatically poignant songs. Her tendency to burst into melody fits perfectly with popular Hindi cinema’s penchant for song sequences, and the melodramatic mode’s proclivity for excess.
In Dekha Pyaar Tumhara (1963), Shanti (Achla Sachdev) melodically mourns her missing daughter- oblivious to the presence of a mother-hungry teenage girl spying on her maternal distress. Shanti is pathetically lulling a doll to sleep, a piteous solitary figure among billowing curtains in a large, but bloodless home.
The Lonely Wife
While mothers pine for their children, wives struggle with their longing for absent husbands as they balance the demands of domesticity with the needs of the nation. In Haqeeqat (1964), which dramatizes events of the 1962 Sino-Indian border conflict, a soldier’s wife (Indrani Mukherjee) is shaken by the absence of letters from her husband, and spurred to sing a deeply melancholic lament. The camera drinks in her tear-stained face with sustained avarice, and the screen is saturated with a mourning that meant to signify her devotion to her husband, and the country’s sympathy for its soldiers.
The plagued wife of Jaagte Raho (1956), on the other hand, is the victim of a wastrel husband who demands that she sing, dance and consume alcohol if she wants him by her side. Although she protests the humiliation at first, the wife eventually accedes to his wishes because she has been conditioned to prioritize her husband’s needs above her own dignity. Her self-sacrifice allows her to be cast in the narrative as a figure of great piety and purity.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam' by Possibly Kamat Photo FlashMuseum of Art & Photography
This figure makes an iconic reappearance in Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam (1962). Adapted from Bimal Mitra’s Bengali novel Saheb Bibi Golam, Abrar Alvi’s film centers on the unfulfilled desires of Chhoti Bahu (Meena Kumari), who lives in a palatial home as the wife of a wealthy zamindar (landowner), but languishes for her husband’s affection. Her degenerate husband, however, is enamored by a courtesan.
Chhoti bahu is convinced that the only way to get her husband’s attention is to sing, dance and drink alcohol in his company.
Photographic still of actress, Meena Kumari, from the Hindi film Sahib Biwi Aur GhulamMuseum of Art & Photography
She descends into raging alcoholism, a miserable and lonely victim of unchanging patriarchal values and a suddenly altered socio-political scenario that has left the zamindaars penniless.
Meena Kumari’s haunting beauty as a tragic figure in films such as Jagir (1959), Sahib, Bibi aur Ghulam(1962), and Phool aur Pathhar(1966) caused her to stand out as a film star who had honed the performance of grief and suffering into a fine skill. Famously dubbed the tragedy queen of Hindi cinema, she became emblematic of a popular imagination that cast quiet suffering and self-sacrifice as characteristics of the ideal Indian woman.
Instructively, Jyotika Virdi in The Cinematic ImagiNation [sic] finds that a 1972 Sunday World report describes Kumari’s characters in Daaera(1953), Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam (1962), and Pakeezah (1971) as women “united in their ultimate response to life—the voluntary option to self-mortification, self-punishment and self-destruction, a characteristic of the masochism of the Indian female” [emphasis Virdi’s].
While the woman of popular Hindi films indeed displayed masochistic tendencies, it was her entanglement in complex structures of oppression and control that normalized trauma and grief in her life. As a representative of a traditional private finding its space in the modern public, she often struggled in silence while shouldering the burdensome duty of symbolizing sanctity and tolerance.
The banked embers of the suffering woman’s anger flicker briefly in the lyrics of Yahudi’s Ansoo Ki Aag Leke Teri Yaad Aai (Your memories come to me in a torrent of fiery tears), but her body language is that of quiet resignation at her lover’s betrayal. While she sings of the “thousands of complaints (shikve hazaar)” that come with her lover’s memories, she doesn’t appear angry or petulant. Instead, her body is suffused with a lethargic melancholy.
On the other hand, in Mirza Ghalib (1954) a traumatized Moti Begum (Suraiya) expresses her emotional strife by vehemently shutting her ears against the love-song that Ghalib (Bharat Bhushan) is singing. She has no words, but her body communicates suffering.
In Aandhiyaan (1952), Rani (Nimmi) is doomed to silence her unrequited love for Ram Mohan (Dev Anand). This iconography of the suffering woman—open tresses framing her face and grief leaking out of her eyes—underlines her the sexuality of her body, which has been rendered venerable because of its palpable vulnerability.
Asha Parekh in a still for the film 'Bharosa' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The Hapless Daughter
While the woman waits for her lover, she is also often required to suffer her father’s censure. In Bharosa (1963) Gomti (Asha Parekh) is pushed into grief and helplessness by her father, who refuses to understand why she would prefer a good-hearted but bumbling villager over an urban, educated sophisticate. Unable to stand the conflict with her father, Gomti eventually runs away to the city.
Subverting the Vocabulary
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Bandini' featuring actress Nutan by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
In Bandini (1963), Kalyani (Nutan) and Bikash (Ashok Kumar) fall in love while he is visiting her village. He promises to return to her after his work in the city is done. However, the village eventually learns that Bikash has married another woman, and Kalyani’s father is subjected to harsh judgment and censure. Unable to bear her father’s anguish, Kalyani runs away to the city, where she serendipitously encounters Bikash’s wife.
When she is mistreated by his wife, her repressed grief gushes out in a bout of helpless anger. Unlike the quiet sorrow of the archetypal grieving woman whose eyes tear in quiet grief, Kalyani’s suffering erupts forth in a violent torrent as beads of sweat on her forehead.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Pehli Jhalak' featuring actress Vyjayanthimala by Possibly Aristo Cine ServiceMuseum of Art & Photography
Vaijayantimala’s performance in the song Humdard Jo Banta Hai in Pehli Jhalak (1955) is a delightfully ironic rendering of the body language of the suffering woman.
As she points out that the wealthy reap monetary benefits by exploiting the labour of the poor (mehnat hamaari, khazaane tumhare), she strikes a pose that is iconic of trauma and pain in popular Hindi cinema. The song, however, is a tongue-in-cheek pushback against the condescension of the wealthy, a melodic assertion of agency against powerful oppressors.
Photographic still featuring Meena Kumari and Sachin, from the Hindi film, Majhli Didi (1967) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
As this exhibition demonstrates, the grieving woman in early post-independence Hindi cinema bears a contradictory burden of representation: not only does she stand for altered socio-political configurations in a newly independent country, but is also emblematic of a sacralised past.
Curation & Content: Damini Kulkarni
References:
Melodrama as Method by Anupama Kapse in Framework, Volume 54
Emotion, Subjectivity, and the Limits of Desire: Melodrama and Modernity in Bombay Cinema, 1940s–’50s, by Ira Bhaskar in Gender Meets Genre in Postwar Cinemas
Film Bodies: Gender, Genre and Excess by Linda Williams in Film Quarterly, Volume 44
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