Aparna Sen (née Dasgupta) (Ôporna Shen; born 25 October 1945) is an Indian filmmaker, screenwriter and actress who is known for her work in Bengali cinema. A leading actress of the late 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, she has received eight BFJA Awards, five for best actress,two for best supporting actress and one for lifetime achievement She is the winner of three National Film Awards and nine international film festival awards for her direction in films. She was awarded the Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award, by the government of India in 1987.
Aparna Sen | |
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Sen during the 38th International Kolkata Book Fair (2014)
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Native name | অপর্ণা সেন |
Born | Aparna 25 October 1945 Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India |
Occupation | actor, film director, screenwriter |
Awards | Cinemanila Film Festival – Best Film 1982 36 Chowringhee Lane Cinemanila Film Festival – Best Screenplay 2003 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer Mumbai International Film Festival – FIPRESCI Prize 2000 Paromitar Ek Din Karlovy Vary Film Festival – Ecumenical Jury Award 2000 Paromitar Ek Din Hawaii Film Festival – Best Feature Film 2002 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer Locarno Film Festival – Netpac Award 2003 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer Locarno Film Festival – Youth Jury Award 2003 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer Philadelphia Film Festival – Best Feature 2003 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer New York Indian Film Festival-Best Director |
Sen made her debut in Teen Kanya (1961) and received her success with Aparichito (1969). She went on to establish herself as a leading actress of Bengali Cinema with the films Aranyer Din Ratri (1970), Ekhane Pinjar (1971), Jay Jayanti (1971), Memshaheb (1972), Jiban Saikate (1972), Basanta Bilap (1973), Sonar Khancha (1973), Sujata (1974), Alor Thikana (1974), Kajallata (1975), Raag Anuraag (1975), Jana Aranya (1976), Ajasra Dhanyobad (1977), Proxy (1977), Mohonar Dike (1984), Ekanto Apon (1987), Swet Patharer Thala (1992). She also garnered critical acclaim for her work in Indira (1984), Kari Diye Kinlam (1989), Ek Din Achanak (1999), Mahaprithibi (1991), Unishe April (1995), Paromitar Ek Din (2000), Titli (2001), Antaheen (2009), Chatushkon (2014).
In addition to acting in films, Sen has also been directing films since 1981, starting with 36 Chowringhee Lane for which she won National Film Award (India) for Best Director. She went on to achieve further success in direction with films Paroma, Sati, Yugant, Paromitar Ek Din, Mr. and Mrs. Iyer, 15 Park Avenue, The Japanese Wife, Iti Mrinalini, Goynar Baksho. She won her second National Film Award as a director for Mr. and Mrs. Iyer.
Contents
Biography
Sen was born in a Bengali family, originally from Jessore District, now in Bangladesh. Her father was the veteran critic and filmmaker Chidananda Dasgupta. Her mother Supriya Dasgupta was a prominent costume designer and earned the National Film Award for Best Costume Design for Chidananda Dasgupta's directorial venture Amodini (1995), at the age of 73. Supriya is the cousin of renowned Bengali poet Jibanananda Das. Sen spent her childhood in Hazaribagh and Kolkata and had her schooling at Modern High School for Girls, Kolkata, India.
She studied her B.A. English at Presidency College.
Acting career
Sen made her film debut at the age of 15, when she played the role of Mrinmoyee in the Samapti portion of the 1961 film Teen Kanya (Three Daughters) directed by Satyajit Ray (who was a longtime friend of her father's). She then studied at Kolkata's Presidency College.
Later in life she would work with Satyajit Ray in several of his films, including the short Pikoo (1981) where she played the role of an adulterous wife and mother.
In 1965, Sen resumed her film career in Mrinal Sen's Akash Kusum, which was later remade into a Hindi film Manzil starring Amitabh Bachchan and Moushumi Chatterjee. Later she also brought out the different nuances of a widow in Mrinal Sen's Mahaprithibi for which she was awarded the prize for Best Actress at the Moscow Film Festival. . From then until the end of the 1970s, she worked steadily in the Bengali film industry, as a leading heroine of the time. She acted in a few Hindi films as well during this time, including Imaan Dharam (1977) with Bachchan, Shashi Kapoor, Sanjeev Kumar and Rekha. Sen was successful in mainstream Bengali films. Her chemistry with Soumitra Chatterjee in films such as Basanta Bilap, Baksa Badal and Chhutir Phande was loved as much as her work with Uttam Kumar in films like Joy Jayanti, Memshaheb and Alor Thikana.
In 1969, Sen appeared in The Guru, an English-language feature by Merchant Ivory Productions. She would make two more films with Merchant-Ivory, Bombay Talkie (1970), and Hullabaloo Over Georgie and Bonnie's Pictures (1978).
In 2009, Sen appeared with Sharmila Tagore and Rahul Bose in Annirudh Roy-Chowdhary's Bengali film Antaheen. The film went on to win four National Film Awards.
Director
In 1981, Sen made her debut as a film director with 36 Chowringhee Lane. She also wrote its screenplay. The film, about an aged Anglo-Indian teacher living in Calcutta, won positive reviews from critics. For her debut feature, Sen won the Best Director award at the Indian National Film Awards. 36 Chowringhee Lane also won the Grand Prix (the Golden Eagle) at the Manila International Film Festival.
She followed up this early success with several other films, notably Paroma (1984) winning the Silver Lotus at the National Awards for Best Bengali Film, Sati (1989), which won the National Award for Best Original Screenplay, and Yugant (1995), which won the National Award for Best Bengali Film. Paroma examined the feminine condition in modern-day India from different perspectives. She also starred in Unishe April (1994), the film by Bengali filmmaker Rituparno Ghosh.
Sen's next directorial effort Paromitar Ek Din (2000) was a critical hit and recalled the success of her first film. The film explored the relationship between a divorced woman (Rituparna Sengupta) and her mother-in-law, played by Sen herself. It won a number of awards on the international festival circuit and the National Award for Best Bengali Films.
Mr. and Mrs. Iyer (2002) was a love story set against the harsh backdrop of Hindu-Muslim sectarian violence in India. The film won a National Film Award for Sen's direction, and an acting award for Konkona Sen Sharma, the director's daughter. The film won more awards at the Locarno, Hawaii and Manila film festivals.
15, Park Avenue (2005) starred her daughter and the actors Shabana Azmi, Dhritiman Chaterji, Waheeda Rehman, Rahul Bose and Soumitra Chatterjee. The film deals with a girl (Konkona Sen Sharma) who is a schizophrenic and her relations with her elder stepsister, played by Shabana Azmi. It won the National Award for Best English Film.
Her next film, The Japanese Wife (2010), starred Raima Sen, Rahul Bose and Chigusa Takaku. This film focuses on two women and is based on a short story by West Bengal author Kunal Basu. It won Best Feature Film at the Calgary International Film Festival in Canada and the Audience Award at the Kerala film Festival.
In 2009, Sen announced her next Bengali film Iti Mrinalini, which starred Konkona Sen Sharma, Aparna Sen, Rajat Kapoor, Kaushik Sen, and Priyanshu Chatterjee. First-time screenwriter Ranjan Ghosh co-authored Iti Mrinalini. This was the first time that Sen collaborated with any film writer or became attached to the curriculum of a film institute. The screenplay of Iti Mrinalini was an assignment in the Screenwriting syllabus at the Mumbai-based film school Whistling Woods International. It was also a major first in Indian screenwriting, as the first time that any screenplay from an Indian film institute was actually filmed. The film was released on 29 July 2011.
In 2013, her film Goynar Baksho (The Jewellery Box) was released depicting three generations of women and their relationship to a box of jewels. It ran to packed houses and won critical acclaim from reviewers and critics. Thereafter, in 2015, Arshinagar, an adaptation of Romeo and Juliet was released.
Sen directed her first - and, to date, only - Hindi film Saari Raat in 2015. Based on a play by Badal Sircar and starring Konkona Sen Sharma, the film premiered at the Londoan International Film Festival.
Sen has made selective films and in the last three decades of her career, she has made only eleven films and one telefilm (Picnic, 1989).
Personal life
Sen has been married three times. Her first marriage, to Sanjay Sen, was when she was quite young. Her second husband was the science writer and journalist, Mukul Sharma. They later divorced amicably. Sen is presently married to Kalyan Ray, an author and professor of English who teaches at County College of Morris in Randolph, New Jersey, US. She has two daughters, Kamalini and Konkona—who is also an actress. She has three grandchildren Krittika, Deepto and Haroon.
Other achievements
Sen has served on juries at film festivals around the world. In 1989 she was a member of the jury at the 16th Moscow International Film Festival. In 2008, she was elected into the International Jury of the Asia Pacific Screen Awards. In 2013, she headed the jury of the second Ladakh International Film Festival.[7]
From 1986 to 2005, Sen was the editor of the fortnightly Sananda, a Bengali women's magazine (published by the Ananda Bazar Patrika group) that enjoys equal popularity in West Bengal and Bangladesh. From November 2005 to December 2006, she was associated with the Bengali 24x7 infotainment channel Kolkata TV as Creative Director. In 2011 she took charge as the editor of the magazine Paroma launched by the Saradha Group.[8] Following the Saradha Group financial scandal, Paroma ran into trouble. It finally closed down on 14 April 2013. Sen and her editorial team launched a new magazine called Prathama Ekhon, which was short-lived. [9]
In 1987, the then President of India, Giani Zail Singh bestowed the Padma Shri on Sen in recognition of her contribution to Indian cinema. Since then, she has received several lifetime achievement awards.
Filmography
Actress
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
1955 | Mejo Bou | ||
1961 | Teen Kanya | Mrinmoyee | "Samapti" segment |
1965 | Akash Kusum | Monica | |
Baksa Badal | Minu | ||
1968 | Hangsa-Mithun | ||
1969 | Vishwas | ||
The Guru | Ghazala | ||
Aparichito | Sunita | ||
1970 | Padmagolap | ||
Aranyer Din Ratri | Hari's former lover | ||
Kalankita Nayak | |||
Bombay Talkie | Mala | ||
1971 | Khunjey Berai | ||
Ekhoni | |||
Ekhane Pinjar | |||
Jay Jayanti | Jayanti | ||
1972 | Nayikar Bhumikay | ||
Jiban Saikate | |||
Memsaheb | |||
1973 | Ali Baba (Animated film) | Marjina | |
Shesh Pristhay Dekhun | |||
Epaar Opaar | |||
Bilet Pherat | |||
Nakal Sona | |||
Sonar Khancha | |||
Kaya Hiner Kahini | |||
Basanta Bilap | Anuradha | ||
Rater Rajanigandha | |||
1974 | Sujata | ||
Jadu Bansha | |||
Asati | |||
Alor Thikana | |||
Sagina | Secretary Vishaka Devi | ||
1975 | Kajallata | ||
Chhutir Phande | |||
Raag Anurag | |||
Nishimrigaya | |||
1976 | Jana Aranya | Somnath's ex-girlfriend | |
Asamay | |||
Janeman | |||
Nidhiram Sardar | |||
1977 | Immaan Dharam | Shyamlee | |
Ajasra Dhanyabad | |||
Kotwal Saab | |||
Proxy | |||
1978 |
Hullabaloo Ovrer Georgie and Bonnie's Pictures |
Bonnie | |
1979 | Naukadubi | Kamala | |
1981 | Thee, Tamil starring Rajinikanth & Suman remake of Deewar | Anita | |
Bandi Balaka | |||
1982 | Bijoyini | ||
Amrita Kumbher Sandhane | |||
1983 | Bishabriksha | Suryamukhi | |
Abhinoy Noy | |||
Arpita | |||
Indira | Indira | ||
1984 | Paroma | Sheela | |
Pikoo | |||
Mohanar Dike | |||
1985 | Neelkantha | ||
1986 | Shyam Saheb | ||
1987 | Debika | ||
Ekanta Apan | |||
Jar Jey Priyo | |||
1989 | Kari Diye Kinlam | ||
1990 | Ek Din Achanak | Professor's student | |
Sankranti | |||
1991 | Mahaprithivi | Daughter-in-law | |
1992 | Shwet Patharer Thala | Bandana | |
Ananya | |||
1995 | Amodini | ||
1996 | Unishe April | Sarojini | |
Abhishapta Prem | |||
2000 | Paromitar Ek Din | Sanaka | |
Ghaath | Suman Pandey | ||
2002 | Titli | Urmila | |
2009 | Antaheen | Paromita | |
2011 | Iti Mrinalini | Old Mrinalini Mitra aka Mili | |
2014 | Chotushkone | Trina Sen |
Writer and director
Year | Film | Language | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1981 | 36 Chowringhee Lane | English, Bengali | Won, National Film Award for Best Direction Won, National Film Award for Best Feature Film in English |
1984 | Paroma | Bengali | Won, National Film Awards, BFJA Award for best Director. |
1989 | Sati | Bengali | Released: 23 November 1989 |
1995 | Yugant | Bengali | Won, National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali |
2000 | Paromitar Ek Din | Bengali | Won, National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali, Won, Kalakar Awards for Best Director. |
2001 | Mr. and Mrs. Iyer | English | Won, National Film Award for Best Direction Won, Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration Won, National Film Award for Best Screenplay |
2005 | 15 Park Avenue | English | Won, National Film Award for Best Feature Film in English |
2010 | The Japanese Wife | English, Bengali, Japanese | Released: 9 April 2010[10] |
2011 | Iti Mrinalini | Bengali | Won-Kalakar Awards-Best Director Award |
2013 | Goynar Baksho | Bengali | Nominated, Filmfare Awards East for Best Director |
2015 | Arshinagar | Bengali | Released: 25 December 2015 |
2017 | Sonata | English and Hindi | Released: 21 April 2017 |
Awards
- Padma Shri - the fourth highest civilian award by the Government of India in 1987.
- BFJA Award-Best Actress Award for Aparachito in 1970.
- BFJA Award-Best Actress Award for Sujata in 1975.
- BFJA Award-Best Actress Award for Ekanto Apan in 1988.
- BFJA Award-Best Actress Award for Swet Patharer Thala in 1993.
- BFJA Award-Best Actress Award for Paramitar Ek Din in 2001.
- BFJA Award-Best Supporting Actress Award for Mahaprithibi in 1992.
- BFJA Award-Best Supporting Actress Award for Abhishapta Prem in 1997.
- BFJA Award-Life Time Achievement Award in 2013.
- Anandalok Award-Best Actress in 2001.
- Anandalok Award-Best Actress for "Titlee" in 2002.
- Kalakar Award-Best Actress (Stage) Award for Bhalo Kharab Meye in 1993.
- Kalakar Award-Best Director Award for Iti Mrinalini in 2012.
- Washington D C South Asian Film Festival-Life Time Achievement Award in 2015.
Bibliography
- Parama and other outsiders: the cinema of Aparna Sen, by Shoma A. Chatterji. Parumita Publications, 2002. ISBN 81-87867-03-5.
- Aparna Sen calls the shots (Women in Indian film), by Rajashri Dasgupta. Zubaan, 2009.
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