President (1937 film)

President is a 1937 Hindi social romantic drama film from New Theatres.[1] The Bengali version was called Didi. The direction, screenplay and cinematography were by Nitin Bose. The film starred K. L. Saigal, Leela Desai, Kamlesh Kumari, Jagdish Sethi, Prithviraj Kapoor and Bikram Kapoor.[2] The story according to the credit roll of the film is "A tale of love and greater love" developed on an idea by M. M. Begg. It was a love triangle with a social content that highlighted the conditions of the mill workers. It was also the first film to show a liberated educated woman managing her own factory.[3]

President
Directed byNitin Bose
Produced byNew Theatres
StarringK. L. Saigal
Leela Desai
Kamlesh Kumari
Prithviraj Kapoor
Music byR. C. Boral
Pankaj Mullick
CinematographyNitin Bose
Production
company
New Theatres
Release date
1937
Running time
152 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

Prabhavati's (Kamlesh Kumari) parents died when she was very young and the onus of looking after the Prabhavati Cotton Mills Ltd. has come to her. Her entire focus is on the factory and she is a strict and hardworking proprietor. Her only close companion is Dr. Sethi but even here there is a reserve. Prakash (K. L. Saigal) works at one of the machines in the mill. He finds that the machines they are working on are old and dangerous. He designs a safer and more efficient one and takes the design to the President of the company. She gets angry at his suggestion that the machines in her factory are dangerous and fires him. Prakash is out of a job and looking desperately for any form of income. He meets a young girl Sheela (Leela Desai) outside a girl's hostel with whom he gets friendly. The girl unknown to him is Prabhavati's younger sister. The day Prakash is sacked from his work, the man who took his place at the machine has an accident. This gets Prabhavati thinking and she goes to Prakash's home to accept his design and re-instate him as head of the design unit. Over a period of time Prabhavati finds herself getting attracted to Prakash, without realising he's in love with her sister Sheela. During a conversation Sheela comes to know that Prabha loves Prakash. Sheela is devoted to her sister and feels deeply indebted to her for single-mindedly taking care of her and the factory. She leaves home and her attitude towards Prakash changes. Prakash unable to understand her behaviour takes out his frustration at work becoming despotic with the workers. The workers revolt and there is a showdown at the factory. Pratibha rushes to the factory; she manages to find what is troubling Prakash. Appalled at the situation she locks herself in her office and works herself into a state where she collapses.

Cast

K. L. Saigal and songs

K. L. Saigal was regarded as the first super star of Indian Cinema with films like President (Didi in Bengali), Devdas and Street Singer leaving an impact on Hindi film music.[4] President is cited as one of Saigal's finest films[5] in which he sang one of his most memorable songs "Ik Bangla Bane Nyara".[6] The lyrics of the song written by Kidar Sharma became an allegorical representation of the common man's dream of owning their own house.[7]

Songs

#TitleSinger(s)
1 "Rahegi Na Badariya" K. L. Saigal
2 "Ek Raje Ka Udane Wala Ghoda" K. L. Saigal
3 "Ek Bangla Bane Nyara" K. L. Saigal
4 "Na Koi Prem Ka Rog" K. L. Saigal
5 "Chandramukhi Ki Shaadi" Chorus
6 "Prem Ka Hai Is Jag Mein" K. L. Saigal
gollark: Mostly just because shares actually pay dividends and give you partial control of a company, giving them some actual use.
gollark: The stock market isn't really like that.
gollark: It's just some bizarre game where you try and guess whether people will buy shares in things, but it's totally disconnected from any property of the actual meme.
gollark: It's not really an economy for memes, it doesn't work like a real market.
gollark: 🦀

References

  1. "President 1937". citwf.com. Alan Goble. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  2. Rajadhyaksha, Wilemen, Ashish, Paul (2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (2 ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9781135943257. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  3. Banerjee, Srivastava (2013). One Hundred Indian Feature Films: An Annotated Filmography. Routledge. ISBN 9781135840983. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  4. Chaudhuri, Shantanu Ray. "Cinema of Bengal: A Historical Narrative (Part I)". projectorhead.in. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  5. "Saigal Who'". The Telegraph Calcutta. 4 April 2014. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  6. Dawar, Ramesh (2006). Bollywood: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow. India: Star Publications. p. 70. ISBN 9781905863013. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  7. Chandra, Balasubramanium, Pali, Vijay Kumar. "100 Years Of Bollywood President 1937". indiavideo.org. Invis Multimedia Pvt. Ltd. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
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