Hubbry Logo
search
logo

36 Chowringhee Lane

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

36 Chowringhee Lane
DVD cover
Directed byAparna Sen
Written byAparna Sen
Produced byShashi Kapoor
StarringJennifer Kendal
Debashree Roy
Dhritiman Chatterjee
Geoffrey Kendal
CinematographyAshok Mehta
Edited byBhanudas Divakar
Music byVanraj Bhatia
Release date
  • 29 August 1981 (1981-08-29)
Running time
122 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguagesBengali
English

36 Chowringhee Lane is a 1981 film written and directed by Aparna Sen and produced by Shashi Kapoor. It marked the directorial debut of Sen, who had until then been known as a leading actress of Bengali cinema. The film was very well received upon release. It stars Jennifer Kendal in a critically acclaimed role, along with Dhritiman Chatterjee and Debashree Roy.Two major songs used in the film were 1960's song "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini" by Brian Hyland and 1964 version of "Silent Night" by Mary Martin.

Plot

[edit]

In post-independence India an Anglo-Indian teacher, Violet Stoneham (Jennifer Kendal), lives a quiet and uneventful life at 36 Chowringhee Lane in Calcutta, now Kolkata. Her brother Eddie (Geoffrey Kendal, Jennifer's father in real life) is senile and ailing in a nursing home. After the marriage of her niece Rosemary (Soni Razdan), she is alone except for her cat, Sir Toby. Her only joy in life is teaching Shakespeare, despite the lack of interest from her students.

Returning home from church on a Christmas Day, Violet runs into a former student, Nandita (Debashree Roy), and her author-boyfriend Samaresh (Dhritiman Chatterjee), and invites them over for coffee. They accept her invitation after some hesitation. However, they quickly realize that Violet's apartment would be convenient for their tête-à-têtes while she is at work. When Samaresh requests the use of Violet's apartment during school hours, saying he would like to work on his novel, she agrees. For some time, this arrangement works to the benefit of all. Samaresh and Nandita get the privacy they seek, and Violet has company when she returns home from work. Over time, she grows very fond of them, and begins to look upon them as friends. Her old friends die or go away, she isn't appreciated at her job, and they are the only friends she has.

Eventually Samaresh and Nandita get married, and move on with their lives. Violet wants to meet them on Christmas Day, and bake them a cake. They have a party organized at home, however, and think she would be 'a fish out of water' if invited. So they lie about not being in town during Christmas. Violet comes over anyway, to drop off the cake, and finally sees that she has been deceived by them. She walks home to her lonely life, slowly. The final scene shows Violet reciting aloud from King Lear, her only audience being a stray dog.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Script and casting
The idea of the film emerged from a story Sen had written, and that had taken the shape of a screenplay. When she showed it to Satyajit Ray, he suggested she make the film. He also suggested Shashi Kapoor as the producer.[1] After approaching several producers and repeatedly being asked what she was trying to sell, she finally sent a synopsis of the plot to Kapoor. He liked it and asked her to come over to Mumbai, and the film took off from there.[2]

Aparna Sen had not thought of Jennifer Kendal to play the lead. She was looking for someone older, perhaps an Anglo-Indian. She was persuaded by Utpal Dutt to cast Kendal, who herself suggested the look of Violet Stoneham with her hair in a bun.[1]

Shooting
Originally, Sen had thought of Govind Nihalani to shoot the film. However, he was not free, and she would have to wait a year to begin work on the film. Kapoor suggested several other cinematographers. Sen saw a film shot by Ashok Mehta, and decided she wanted him for her film.[3]

The film was shot at almost a namesake address of 26, Chowringhee Road with a beautiful view of the Indian Museum and the Maidan along with its landmarks like the Eden Gardens, the High Court, Pratt Memorial School, Governor's House, the Shaheed Minar and Fort William.

The depiction of pre-marital sex in the film was ahead of its time. About the intimate scenes, Sen said: "I feel scenes of sexual intimacy are ruined if the director is embarrassed. I wasn't embarrassed. There was nothing in it that I thought was obscene."[1]

Post-production
At the post-production stage, Debashree Roy's voice was dubbed over with Sen's own voice. Sen explained that this was done partly in order to save time. Moreover, Dhritiman Chatterjee was a good deal older than Roy, and she wanted a voice that was slightly older.[1]

The art direction of the film was done by Bansi Chandragupta, art director of the Apu Trilogy and other Ray films. In June 1981, when the film was in the final stages of post-production, Chandragupta died of a heart attack. The film is dedicated to him.

Music
Two major songs used in the film were 1960's "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini" by Brian Hyland and the 1964 version of "Silent Night" by Mary Martin.

Reception

[edit]

When initially released, the film was appreciated by a niche audience but did not do well commercially. Describing it as a "total loss", Shashi Kapoor lamented that at places he had to hire the theatres himself to exhibit it.[4]

Critically, however, the film was very well received. It won the Best Direction award for Sen at the National Film Awards. Ashok Mehta's camera work was much appreciated. 36 Chowringhee Lane was also entered in the first edition of the Manila International Film Festival, where it won the top prize. Scholar Wimal Dissanayake sees the film as a portrayal of the patriarchal social system: "The film portrays the plight of a lonely woman in a society that cares little for questions of female subjectivity and self-fulfillment."[5]

Legacy

[edit]

(see also English-language Indian films)

Prior to 36 Chowringhee Lane, filmmakers in India did not consider English to be a viable choice of language for feature films. After it, there has been a thin but steady stream of such films, including Sen's Mr. and Mrs. Iyer and 15 Park Avenue.

[edit]

The title of the film has become symbolic of the city of Kolkata, particularly its cuisine. A Bangalore restaurant is called 36 Chowringhee Lane.[6] A fast-food chain in Delhi is called 34 Chowringhee Lane.[7]

Awards

[edit]

The film has been nominated for and won the following awards since its release:

1982 Manila International Film Festival (Philippines)
  • Won – Golden Eagle – Best Feature Film – 36 Chowringhee Lane – Aparna Sen
1981 National Film Awards[8][9]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
36 Chowringhee Lane is a 1981 Indian English-language drama film written and directed by Aparna Sen in her feature directorial debut.[1] The story centers on Violet Stoneham, an aging Anglo-Indian schoolteacher portrayed by Jennifer Kendal, who resides alone in a modest flat at 36 Chowringhee Lane in Calcutta following her niece's marriage, accompanied only by her cat.[1] Produced by Shashi Kapoor, the film depicts Violet's encounter with a young couple—Samaresh, a former student played by Dhritiman Chatterjee, and his wife Anna, enacted by Debashree Roy—leading to a brief romantic entanglement that underscores her isolation and the fading relevance of the Anglo-Indian community in post-independence India.[1] Set against the backdrop of 1970s Calcutta, the narrative highlights the cultural limbo experienced by Anglo-Indians who remained in India after partition and independence, neither fully integrated into Indian society nor returning to Britain.[2] Sen's screenplay draws on Shakespearean motifs, reflecting Violet's passion for teaching the Bard, to evoke themes of unrequited longing and obsolescence.[3] The film's intimate portrayal of urban decay and personal disillusionment earned it acclaim for Kendal's nuanced performance, often cited as one of her finest.[4] 36 Chowringhee Lane received the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in English, affirming its status as a landmark in Indian parallel cinema.[5] Critically, it has been praised for its empathetic depiction of marginalization without sentimentality, influencing subsequent explorations of minority experiences in Indian filmmaking.[6] Despite modest initial commercial success, its enduring legacy stems from Sen's assured direction and the film's unflinching realism about identity and solitude.[2]

Synopsis

Plot Summary

36 Chowringhee Lane centers on Violet Stoneham, an elderly Anglo-Indian schoolteacher residing in a modest single-room flat at the titular address in 1970s Calcutta, following the marriage and departure of her niece Rosemary, which leaves her in solitude amid the city's post-independence bustle.[7] Her daily routines involve teaching at a girls' high school, caring for her aging pet dog Bandit, and navigating the fading Anglo-Indian community in a changing India.[8][6] The narrative introduces a brief respite when Anna, one of Violet's former students, and her boyfriend Nick relocate nearby and form a tentative friendship with her, allowing Violet moments of companionship through shared conversations and small acts of kindness in her otherwise isolated existence.[7] This connection prompts Violet to reminisce about her past, including personal losses from World War II, against the backdrop of everyday urban life in Calcutta.[4] The story arcs toward Violet's deepening realization of her marginalization as the young couple's priorities shift, underscoring her return to solitude.[9]

Cast and Crew

Principal Cast

Jennifer Kendal starred as Violet Stoneham, the central character, an elderly Anglo-Indian schoolteacher facing isolation in post-independence Calcutta. Kendal, born in 1933 to British expatriate parents in India and immersed in the Anglo-Indian milieu through her family's touring Shakespeareana theater company, embodied the role's nuances of cultural estrangement and faded colonial elegance; her performance earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Actress in a Leading Role.[1][10][11] Dhritiman Chatterjee portrayed Samaresh Moitra, a visiting academic who interacts with Stoneham. Chatterjee, an established figure in India's parallel cinema movement with prior roles in films like Padatik (1973), contributed to the film's understated interpersonal dynamics.[1][11] Debashree Roy played Nandita Roy, Stoneham's former pupil. Roy, then an emerging Bengali actress debuting in Hindi cinema, brought youthful energy to the supporting part.[1][11] In the supporting role of Eddie Stoneham, Violet's ailing brother, Geoffrey Kendal appeared; as Jennifer Kendal's real-life father and co-founder of the Shakespeareana troupe that toured India for decades promoting English theater, his casting reinforced familial authenticity in depicting Anglo-Indian decline.[1][12][11] Soni Razdan featured in a key supporting capacity, marking an early screen role for the actress who later became prominent in Indian parallel and mainstream films.[1][11]

Key Crew Members

Aparna Sen served as director and screenwriter for 36 Chowringhee Lane, marking her feature film directorial debut following a background in acting and scripting for Bengali cinema.[13] Her script drew from personal observations of Anglo-Indian life in post-independence Calcutta, emphasizing introspective character studies.[4] Shashi Kapoor produced the film through his Film-Valas company, which backed several parallel cinema projects to foster artistic filmmaking outside commercial mainstreams.[13] Kapoor's involvement provided crucial financial and logistical support, enabling Sen's vision amid limited industry backing for English-language or debut works.[14] Cinematographer Ashok Mehta employed a naturalistic approach to lighting, capturing the subdued tones of aging interiors and urban decay in Calcutta to underscore the protagonist's isolation.[15] His composition highlighted subtle facial expressions and environmental textures, enhancing the film's intimate scale.[15] Composer Vanraj Bhatia crafted a minimalist score featuring piano motifs that amplified the narrative's melancholy and emotional restraint.[4] Editor Bhanudas Divakar maintained a precise rhythm in pacing, preserving the story's quiet introspection without unnecessary cuts.[3] Art director Bansi Chandragupta recreated authentic Anglo-Indian domestic and street settings in Calcutta, using period-appropriate details to evoke a fading colonial milieu.[16]

Production

Development and Pre-Production

Aparna Sen developed the original story and screenplay for 36 Chowringhee Lane, drawing from her personal observations of the declining Anglo-Indian community in 1970s Calcutta, where many faced social isolation and economic marginalization after Indian independence.[8][17] This narrative stemmed from a self-written short story Sen had conceptualized, which she adapted into a feature-length script emphasizing themes of loneliness among the elderly and cultural displacement.[18] The project represented Sen's directorial debut, following her prominence as an actress in Bengali cinema, with pre-production commencing around 1980 under the banner of independent filmmaking.[18] Shashi Kapoor, a key figure in supporting parallel cinema during the post-1970s wave, served as producer, personally financing the low-budget venture at approximately Rs 26 lakh to enable its realization outside mainstream commercial constraints.[19][20] Casting focused on authenticity for the lead role of Violet Stoneham, an aging Anglo-Indian schoolteacher; Sen initially sought an unknown Anglo-Indian actress but selected Jennifer Kendal, whose background and nuanced performance aligned with the character's rooted yet estranged identity in Indian society.[21] This decision underscored the film's commitment to realistic portrayal over star power, fitting the parallel cinema movement's emphasis on social verisimilitude.[20]

Filming and Technical Details

Principal photography for 36 Chowringhee Lane occurred primarily on location in Calcutta (now Kolkata), West Bengal, India, during 1981, with key scenes filmed in the actual Chowringhee area to achieve a sense of realism in depicting urban life.[22] [23] Cinematographer Ashok Mehta employed black-and-white film stock, utilizing natural lighting techniques to produce crisp, textured visuals that highlighted environmental details and confined interiors.[24] [25] Mehta's work on the film earned the National Film Award for Best Cinematography in 1981.[26] Editing was handled by Bhanudas Divakar, who managed the assembly of footage to maintain a measured rhythm across the 123-minute runtime.[27] Sound recording and mixing were overseen by Mangesh Desai and Hitendra Ghosh, contributing to the film's audio layer in post-production.[28]

Themes and Historical Context

Depiction of Anglo-Indian Community

The film realistically portrays the Anglo-Indian community as socially and culturally marginalized in post-1947 India, capturing their transition from relative privileges under British colonial structures—such as reserved positions in railways, police, and administrative roles—to exclusion amid rising Indian nationalism that viewed them with suspicion due to inherited colonial affiliations.[29] This depiction aligns with causal factors including the community's primary adherence to English as a linguistic and cultural anchor, which created barriers to assimilation into vernacular-dominant Indian society, compounded by religious differences rooted in Christianity and a mixed-race identity often stereotyped as foreign or inauthentic.[29] Everyday discrimination manifests subtly through professional insecurity and social isolation, as Anglo-Indians faced rejection in marriages, employment, and community integration, prompting widespread emigration to destinations like the UK, Australia, and Canada that significantly reduced their presence in India.[29][30] Central to the film's representation is the community's cultural hybridity, illustrated through an interstitial existence blending British imperial legacies with Indian realities, such as references to Shakespearean drama—particularly echoes of King Lear in themes of betrayal and resilience—alongside localized elements like Catholic church attendance and familial ties evoking Indian caste markers.[31] These motifs highlight a psychological "unhoming," where Anglo-Indians, as postcolonial subjects, experience displacement in their birthplace despite physical rootedness, reflecting undervaluation as relics of empire in a nation reorienting toward indigenous priorities.[31] The portrayal incorporates community agency by showing deliberate retention of British-oriented identities, including Western education, literary traditions, and social affiliations, as choices that preserved cultural distinctiveness but exacerbated marginalization when colonial patronage evaporated, rather than pursuing full linguistic or customary assimilation.[29] This realism avoids idealization, grounding the community's decline in verifiable historical patterns of non-integration and outbound migration over victimhood narratives.[29]

Loneliness, Aging, and Social Marginalization

Violet Stoneham's isolation stems directly from familial disruptions, including the marriage and emigration of her niece Rosemary to Australia, which severs her primary emotional tie, and the institutionalization of her diabetic brother Eddie in an old age home, leaving her without immediate kin in Calcutta.[4][1] These losses compound the anonymity of urban life in 1970s Calcutta, where her single-room flat at 36 Chowringhee Lane symbolizes a shrinking personal world amid a bustling, indifferent metropolis. Empirical observations of Anglo-Indian demographics post-independence reveal how such individual trajectories reflect broader patterns of family fragmentation, with many community members facing emigration or dispersal due to limited opportunities.[8] Causally, Violet's marginalization arises from the structural irrelevance of Anglo-Indians after British withdrawal in 1947, as their intermediate class position—neither fully integrated into Indian society nor retaining imperial privileges—led to economic displacement in a decolonized economy prioritizing native advancement. This is evident in her replacement as a Shakespeare teacher by an Indian educator, Miss Majumdar, signaling the erosion of cultural authority once tied to colonial legacies. Generational disconnect exacerbates this, as Anglo-Indians like Violet, shaped by pre-independence hierarchies, encounter younger Indians whose priorities—career mobility and nuclear family formation—clash with her expectations of reciprocal loyalty, without either side's worldview being inherently superior or flawed.[4][32] Rather than framing her plight solely as postcolonial victimhood, the narrative underscores self-perpetuating elements, such as Violet's nostalgic adherence to Raj-era customs and Shakespearean recitations, which hinder adaptation to India's evolving social fabric and reinforce voluntary withdrawal from mainstream networks. Her conscious choice to remain unmarried after her boyfriend Davie's death, while rooted in personal grief, further entrenches solitude by forgoing opportunities for new bonds. This causal interplay—personal agency intersecting with systemic shifts—avoids romanticizing isolation, instead portraying it as a foreseeable outcome of unyielding attachment to a defunct imperial identity amid India's assertive post-1947 nation-building.[4][33]

Release

Initial Release and Distribution

36 Chowringhee Lane premiered in India on 28 August 1981 under the production banner of Shashi Kapoor's Film-Valas, targeting a niche audience through limited theatrical distribution typical of parallel cinema films.[13][3] As an English-language feature, a rarity in the Indian market at the time, its rollout faced challenges in securing widespread commercial screens, focusing instead on urban art-house venues and select cities.[13] Internationally, the film gained exposure through festival circuits, including a screening at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1983 and an entry in the inaugural Manila International Film Festival, where it received the Grand Prix award.[34][23] Post-theatrical availability expanded via home video, with DVD distribution handled by Shemaroo Video Pvt. Ltd. starting in 2003 for worldwide markets.[35] Recent restorations, overseen by producer Shashi Kapoor's son Kunal Kapoor, have enabled re-screenings, such as in retrospectives during 2024 events honoring director Aparna Sen.[36] Streaming options remain limited, with no major platforms offering consistent access as of recent checks.[37][38]

Reception and Analysis

Critical Response

Critics praised Aparna Sen's directorial debut for its sensitive portrayal of loneliness and cultural displacement, with Jennifer Kendal's performance as the aging Anglo-Indian teacher Violet Stoneham singled out for its emotional depth and authenticity.[39] [40] The film received a 7.5/10 average rating on IMDb from 458 user reviews and a 77% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on five critic reviews, reflecting appreciation for its realistic depiction of the Anglo-Indian community's marginalization in post-colonial Calcutta.[1] [6] Sen's handling of themes like urban isolation was noted as prescient, with the narrative's focus on Violet's solitude extending to broader communal decline rather than individual pathos alone.[4] The inclusion of an explicit sex scene marked a bold departure in Indian cinema, challenging prevailing prudishness and contributing to the film's international recognition as a nuanced character study.[41] Satyajit Ray, after reviewing Sen's work, acknowledged technical "mistakes" as inevitable in a debut but emphasized the value of any "moments" created that resonated with audiences, signaling qualified endorsement from a key figure in parallel cinema.[42] Some reviewers critiqued the film's deliberate pacing as requiring patience to appreciate its subtle nuances, potentially limiting broader accessibility.[43] Descriptions of the tone as overly melancholic or the rhythm as slightly sluggish appeared in later assessments, attributing this to the story's emphasis on quiet observation over dramatic momentum.[44] Despite such notes, the consensus highlighted the film's strengths in evoking empathy through restrained storytelling, positioning it as a minor masterpiece of intimate realism.[40]

Commercial Performance and Audience Impact

As an English-language art-house film released in India on August 28, 1981, 36 Chowringhee Lane achieved only modest box office returns, constrained by the era's dominance of mass-appeal Bollywood productions featuring song-and-dance sequences and Hindi dialogue, which catered to broader rural and semi-urban audiences.[42] Its focus on introspective drama and limited marketing further restricted theatrical runs primarily to urban multiplexes and intellectual circles in cities like Kolkata and Mumbai, yielding no reported blockbuster status or widespread domestic earnings data typical of parallel cinema ventures.[39] The film's audience impact manifested through sustained niche appeal rather than mass viewership, resonating particularly with Anglo-Indian diaspora communities and viewers attuned to themes of cultural displacement amid India's post-independence shifts.[45] Festival circuit exposure amplified its reach, including a top prize win at the inaugural Manila International Film Festival in 1982, which introduced it to international arthouse enthusiasts and fostered a cult following evidenced by retrospective screenings decades later, such as restored prints at events in 2024.[23][36] This enduring draw among selective demographics—reflected in consistent critical reevaluations and academic discussions—contrasted with its initial limited theatrical footprint, highlighting how linguistic and stylistic barriers curbed immediate mass penetration while enabling long-term cultural percolation in parallel cinema spheres.[46][47]

Legacy

Cultural and Cinematic Influence

The film stands as one of the earliest and most nuanced depictions of the Anglo-Indian community in Indian cinema, portraying their post-independence marginalization and cultural isolation in a manner that challenged prevailing narratives of national unity.[8][17] This representation influenced subsequent arthouse explorations of minority identities, emphasizing everyday struggles over sensationalism and contributing to a shift in how hybrid communities were visualized on screen.[48] As Aparna Sen's directorial debut, 36 Chowringhee Lane marked a pivotal moment in parallel cinema, integrating Shakespearean allusions—such as echoes of King Lear in themes of abandonment and folly—into an Indian context, a technique rare for the era and pioneering for female filmmakers.[49][32] It inspired Sen's later works, like Paroma (1985) and Mr. and Mrs. Iyer (2002), which continued to foreground female agency and social realism, thereby elevating women directors' roles in sustaining the movement's focus on introspective, character-driven storytelling amid commercial dominance.[50][51] The film's emphasis on urban alienation in pre-globalization Kolkata resonated in academic analyses of postcolonial realism, where it is examined for its critique of diaspora and unhomed identities, influencing studies on code-switching and cultural hybridity in South Asian media.[52] Its enduring relevance was evident in 2021 commemorations marking the 40th anniversary, including retrospectives on its portrayal of aging and exclusion, and continued through 2024 screenings in parallel cinema festivals that highlighted its foundational role in independent Indian filmmaking.[53][54]

Awards and Recognition

36 Chowringhee Lane won the National Film Award for Best Direction (Golden Lotus Award) for Aparna Sen at India's 29th National Film Awards held in 1982.[55] The film also received the National Film Award for Best Cinematography (Silver Lotus Award) for Ashok Mehta at the same ceremony.[55] These honors recognized the film's technical and directorial merits amid its art-house style and English-language production, which limited its visibility in broader commercial award circuits dominated by Hindi films during the early 1980s. Internationally, the film earned a nomination for the Gold Hugo at the 1982 Chicago International Film Festival for Aparna Sen's direction.[56] It secured the Grand Prix (Golden Eagle Award) for Best Feature Film at the Cinemanila International Film Festival in the Philippines.[8] Jennifer Kendal received the Evening Standard British Film Award for Best Actress in 1983 for her portrayal of Violet Stoneham, along with a nomination for Best Actress at the BAFTA Awards that year.[57] The film's awards were concentrated in specialized categories, reflecting its niche appeal to festival circuits and its departure from mainstream Indian cinema tropes, with fewer nominations in popular audience-driven honors.

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.