Leela
Chitnis (9 September 1909 – 14 July 2003) was an actress in the
Indian film industry, active from 1930s to 1980s. In her early years
she starred as a romantic lead, but she is best remembered for her
later roles playing a virtuous and upright mother to leading
stars.
She
was born in Dharwad, Karnataka to an English literature professor.
She was one of the first educated film actresses. After graduation
she joined Natyamanwantar, a progressive theatre group that produced
plays in her native Marathi language. The group's works were greatly
influenced by Ibsen, Shaw and Stanislavsky. With the theatre group,
Leela played the lead role in a series of comedies and tragedies and
even founded her own repertory.
Chitnis'
early stage work included comedy Usna Navra (1934) and with her own
film group Udyacha Sansar. She started acting to support her four
children. She started as an extra and went on to stunt films.
In
Gentleman Daku ("Gentleman Thief") in 1937, Chitnis played
a polished crook dressed in male apparel and was publicised in the
Times of India as the first graduate society-lady from Maharashtra.
By then she had already made her first major mark as an actress on
the silver screen. Chitnis worked at Prabhat Pictures, Pune and
Ranjit Movietone before going on to be the leading lady in Bombay
Talkies.
Specialising
in controversial films that challenged accepted societal norms,
especially those regarding marriage and the invidious caste system,
Bombay Talkies was having limited luck at the box office. But it
bounced back with Kangan ("Bangles", 1939), which
introduced Chitnis playing the lead role as the adopted daughter of a
Hindu priest in love with the son of a local landlord who opposes the
relationship and threatens the holy man. Her love, however, stands up
to his father's prejudices, an unusual theme for the time, but one
that appealed to the public imagination enough to ensure it success
at the box office.
With
Kangan's success, Leela replaced Bombay Talkies' ravishing leading
lady Devika Rani. Leela made a particularly good partner with Devika
Rani's leading man Ashok Kumar for a series of box-office hits such
as Azad (Free, 1940), Bandhan (Ties, 1940) and Jhoola ("Swing",
1941) that broadly deal with societal issues.. Ashok Kumar was so
impressed by her acting abilities that he admitted to having learnt
how to speak with his eyes from her. In 1941 Chitnis, at the height
of her popularity and glamour, created history of sorts by becoming
the first Indian film star to endorse the popular Lux soap brand, a
concession then only granted to top Hollywood heroines.
By
the mid-1940s her career went downhill as the new leading ladies came
in. Leela accepted the reality and in 1948 entered the next, and
perhaps most renowned, phase of her career in Shaheed ("Martyr").
Cast as the hero's suffering, ailing mother, she played this role to
perfection. For 22 years, Chitnis played the mother of the later
leading men including Dilip Kumar, often playing an ailing mother or
a mother going through hardships and struggling to bring up her
offspring. In fact she created the archetype of the Hindi Film
mother, which was continued by later actresses. Leela's maternal
histrionics were portrayed in a range of films such as Awaara (The
Vagabond, 1951), Ganga Jumna (The Confluence, 1961) and, in 1965, the
runaway success Guide, based on the award-winning novel of the same
name by R.K. Narayan. She was busy through the 1970s, but cut down
her appearances thereafter before taking the final curtain call in
Dil Tujhko Diya ("I Give My Heart to You") in 1985. She
cthen emigrated to the United States in the late 1980s to join her
children. She died in Danbury, Connecticut at a nursing home, at age
94.
Leela
also briefly dabbled in movie-making, producing Kisise Na Kehna
("Don't Tell Anybody", 1942) and directing Aaj ki Baat
("The Talk of Today", 1955). She also wrote and directed a
stage adaptation of Somerset Maugham's Sacred Flame and published her
autobiography, Chanderi Duniyet, in 1981.
Her
father adhered to Brahmo Samaj, a religious movement that rejected
caste.
She
married a much older man named Dr. Gajanan Yeshwant Chitnis at the
age of 15 or 16, and quickly had four children. The couple supported
India's struggle for independence from Britain and once risked arrest
by harbouring Manabendra Nath Roy, a Marxist freedom fighter. After
she divorced her husband, she worked as a school teacher and began
acting on stage in melodramas typical of the time. She appeared in
several movies, and went through a Bombay university to be hired by a
major studio, Bombay Talkies; it hired only college graduates.
She
had three sons Manavendra, Benoy and Raj. She lived with her eldest
son in Connecticut in United States, until her death. She had three
grandchildren then.
Leela Chitnis's Filmography with Super Star Rajesh Khanna :
- Palkon Ki Chhaon Mein (1977)
- Aurat (1967)
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