Mira Nair's first film was Jama Masjid Street Journal, her Harvard thesis project, which explores the life of a traditional Muslim community from a Western perspective and was originally conceived as a silent film. After graduation, Nair moved to New York, where for six months she waitressed at night ("my parents said I didn't exist in New York, they were so ashamed"), so that she could pursue her film ideas during the day. Earning enough money to buy film stock, borrowing a 60 mm Bolex camera, and receiving a grant from the New York State Foundation for the Arts enabled Nair to begin her cinema verite film So Far From India, the story of an immigrant working in a Manhattan subway newsstand who returns to India to see the wife he left behind and to meet his newborn son. With her camera, Nair became like "a go-between," or "an ambassador," between her protagonist and his estranged wife. "This is what I mean when I talk about the extraordinariness of everyday life," she says.Nair, who tells John Lithgow she has "never regarded documentary as a stepping-stone to fiction," spent the next seven years making "a series of documentaries" in India on "things that got under my skin, ideas that appealed to me." Her most acclaimed documentary, India Cabaret, was inspired by the question "What divides good women from improper women in our society"? Centering on the aging strippers of a seedy strip club in Bombay, with whom Nair lived while making the film, India Cabaret explores "the double standards of an essentially patriarchal society." The story of one of the club's regular customers and his wife also enables Nair to grapple with "the eternal triangle, Indian-style."As much of a "struggle" as it was to make these movies, Nair feels her greater challenge was to find her audiences. For three weeks every year, she would "take all my films under my arm and get on a Greyhound and show them to anybody who wanted to see them." Despite the frustrations, Nair tells Lithgow she never thought she would give up. "I'm diseased. I'm permanently afflicted by cinema. I could not imagine life without making my work," she says.Nair's "epiphany" came when India Cabaret was chosen to open the Indian International Festival and she witnessed the documentary's impact. "The language in the film is very wickedly funny...bawdy, mish-mash…very much how we speak," and unlike the usual "heightened, artificial" language of Indian "Bollywood" movies. When Nair saw how "swept away" people were by this language, she suggested to her friend Sooni Taraporevala that they co-write a fictional screenplay, using the same spoken style, about the lives of Bombay street kids.Nair's "idea" for Salaam Bombay! was to "amalgamate" the "inexplicability of everyday life that we have in documentary" with "gesture, drama, and the controlled situation that we have in fiction." Although Nair shaped the film's narrative in the edit room with editor Barry Alexander Brown, she attributes much of the power of Salaam Bombay! to the twenty- four children who act in the movie. Following an "informal" acting workshop, Nair worked with these kids as she would with professionals, screen-testing them and paying them a day rate. "By the time we were out on the streets with 5,000 people watching…their focus was extraordinary." Their work, Nair reflects, contributed greatly to the "extraordinary experience" of making this film. For Salaam Bombay! Nair was awarded the Best New Director at the Cannes Film Festival. The film also was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards.
Exercise-
Read about the documentary films Mira has made.
How does she choose her protaganists?
How does she treat them?
In which film is she using the DocuDrama approach?
What is Docudrama?
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
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a pretty interesting read...
ReplyDeletetried searching a little for her other works like mississippi masala, children of a desired sex, women and development, my own country, etc...
i feel there is a pre dominant factor that somewhat gets reflected in the choice of the protagonists in her films and also the subjects that she uses for her films, ie, she tries to feature characters or protagonists who have or are stuggling and suffering against ignorance and oppression in society.
as for the docu-drama part, definition says it is fact-based representation of real events.it is produced in the manner of realist theater or film. it combines categories usually perceived as separate: documentary and drama.
so what i want to know is that does it mean that it is a portrayal of facts in a fictional manner? that is the premise of the film is based on real events and facts but the representation is acted out? m a bit confused here...
-Debarati
i was reading about docudrama ...and i wanted to know how we distinguish between docudrama and historical fiction as both narrate real historical events ?
ReplyDelete-Monisha
debarati,like you pointed out, a docudrama is a "fact based representation of real events" so we can look at it as a re-enactment of the events in a way?
ReplyDeleteso saying that "facts are being portrayed in a fictional manner" is to say that the scenes being shown might not be the exact replication of the original situation, but they convey the same message/story.
yes so its exactly that the premise of the film is based on real events and facts but the representation has to be re-enacted as it might not have been caught on camera when it actually occurred.
i hope i made some sense to you.
- meher
While searching for information on Mira Nair's films, I came across this google book titled 'Mercy in her Eyes' by John Kenneth Muir. It is the first book written on her works.
ReplyDeleteThe link is http://books.google.co.in/books?id=HEte5ilhCTcC&pg=PA28&lpg=PA28&dq=jama+masjid+street+journal&source=bl&ots=Iphv5yLbWX&sig=P7ps3Qf1FLbwiTkntknwQqeHfxU&hl=en&ei=LARySqLkEo2pkAXb_-WbDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10
Though its a limited preview book, there is a lot of info. about her style of film making and her global presence in the first few pages itself.
oh yea...i came across the book too...i've started reading it..!
ReplyDeleteyeah even i have started reading it.
ReplyDeleteWhat interests me the most about Mira Nair is the lengthening of shots..I still have some confusion regarding docu drama..
ReplyDeleteMili
never knew or noticed how mira nair and her work represents 'the result of globalisation'. interesting. What comes to my mind is jhumpa lahiri. She is the mira nair of books. As an author her stories are mostly about indians settled abroad(bengalis as her main protagonists) and their life and dilemnas.culture differences between their kids and them. Read unaccostomed earth, beautiful short stories.....
ReplyDeletefollowing is the link to an article on understanding the concept of docudramas:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-docudrama.htm
salaam bombay is a docudrama by Mira Nair. though it revolves mainly around one character called krishna, it tells the tale of a thousand street children. it has basically re-construcetd their lives. As i understand it, docudramas document reality and present it in the form of drama.
- Arundhati