Amit Bose

Amit Bose (26 February 1930 - 13 December 2019) was an Indian filmmaker, film director and editor, who directed all-time classics like Abhilasha (1968) and, as an Editor, worked on movies like Madhumati (1958), Sujata (1959), Parakh (1960), Usne Kaha Tha (1960), Kabuliwala (1961), Prem Patra (1962), Bandini (1963) and Shakespeare Wallah (1965). He worked as Chief Film Editor for Bimal Roy and with several other directors including Sanjay Khan.

Amit Bose
Born(1930-02-26)26 February 1930
DiedDecember 13, 2019(2019-12-13) (aged 89)
NationalityIndian
Alma materVisva-Bharati University
Occupationfilmmaker
SpouseMonica
Parent
  • Meera Devi (mother)

Early life

Bose was born in Jamshedpur/Bihar, India. His grandfather was the geologist Pramatha Nath Bose, who discovered rich iron ores, that made the Empire of J.R.D. Tata possible, which today belong to the Tata Group. Eminent economic historian and civil servant Romesh Chunder Dutt was his great grandfather. Dutt's daughter Kamala Dutt Bose, a renowned educator who founded the “Kamala Girls School” at Ballygunge was married to Pramatha Nath Bose and was his grandmother. His mother Meera Devi (born Sharma) was a Bengali actress. After her first marriage ended in divorce, she married the classical singer and actor Pahari Sanyal), who was like a father to Bose. Amit's name was given by Rabindranath Tagore, who was a cousin of Bose's mother in Kolkata.

First steps in filmmaking

Bose with Vittorio De Sica on the set of "Il Tetto" ("The Roof") in Rome (1954/55).

As a child Bose was a student in Rabindranath Tagore's open-air institution Visva Bharati in Bolpur, Santiniketan. As a young man he took his first steps in the film industry in 1946 in Kolkata. He worked as an assistant to the film director Nimai Ghosh during the making of Chinna Mul ("Broken Branch" - a movie reflecting the up-rooting of the nation during the Great Famine). This film won several awards, both in India and abroad. It is still hailed as one of the great classics of Indian Cinema. Bose then went to Mumbai and worked as an assistant to the Director Phani Majumdar at Bombay Talkies Studios in Malad, in 1947. He also appeared in a bit-part in Majumdar's film Tamasha, which starred the Great Indian Screen Heroine of all time, Meena Kumari.

In 1952, Bose went to England, where he did an apprenticeship at Pinewood Studios and A.B. Pathé.

In 1953 he directed and performed in Sharat Chandra Chatterji's classic novel, Devdas, as Devdas on stage (in English, translated by Monica Sen).

During the next few years he did his diploma in film direction, screenplay writing and film editing at Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome, Italy. During that period in Rome he also was an apprentice assistant to Luigi Zampa (during the making of Ragazze d'oggi / "Girls of Today", 1955), Vittorio De Sica (Stazione Termini / "Terminal Station", 1953 & Il Tetto / "The Roof", 1956) and Mario Soldati (Guerra e Pace / "War And Peace", 1956).

Life and work

On his return to India, and after his marriage in Kolkata in September 1957, Bose settled in Mumbai, where he worked as the Chief Film Editor for Bimal Roy. He edited films like Madhumati (1958, the shorter English version for entry to the American Oscars), Sujata (1959), Parakh (1960), Usne Kaha Tha (1960), Kabuliwala (1961), Prem Patra (1962) and Bandini (1963), which he left before completion, because of an opportunity to direct a Children's Film, for which he was awarded the Best Director Award in the same year.

In India, he worked with directors from Bimal Roy to Sanjay Khan, Krishna Shah, Firoze Khan, Kewal Kashyap and many others, knowing actors like Sunil Dutt, Nutan, Sadhana, Meena Kumari, Shashi Kapoor, Raaj Kumar, Felicity Kendal, Rex Harrison, John Saxon, Sulochana, Kamini Kaushal, Dharmendra and Rehman closely.

Abroad he worked in the United Kingdom, United States, Italy, France, Germany, Cyprus, Mauritius and Lebanon, amongst many other countries. He directed and/or edited more than thirty feature films around the world, working with such prestigious directors as Vittorio De Sica, Luigi Zampa, Franco Zeffirelli, Louis Malle, James Ivory and many other well known Filmmakers around the world.

He also directed the children's film Five Puppets (Panch Puthliyan) for the Children's Film Society India, for which he was awarded best Director by the President of India, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, in 1964.

Among many other feature films, Bose edited a documentary on the Chinese invasion of India, produced by the Films Division in Mumbai, that took place in 1961/1962.

His credits include movies like Chori Chori (1956), Godaan (1963), Kaajal (1965, as Ghost Director and Editor, winner of over 40 awards), Abhilasha (1968), At Five Past Five (1969) (a play about the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi), Chandi Sona (1977) and The Courtesans of Bombay (1983).

Bose taught film technology in the Film Institute in Pune, India. He introduced and helped many unknown actors to stardom and more than 20 editors, from assistantship to full editorship. He helped young talents grow, by telling them all his secrets, as De Sica once upon a time told him.

Bose was retired and lived with his wife Monica in London, United Kingdom. In his spare time, he worked, as a volunteer, at the local Association for the Blind. His daughters Roma and Papri-Tara are settled with their families in Germany and England. He has five grandchildren, including television producer Simone Thorogood. He passed away during January 2020.

Selected works

Picture/Sound/Music Editor Year/Country Production Notes
Shakespeare Wallah 1965/US Merchant Ivory Production, that won acclaim all over Europe and America.
Shalimar 1978/India/US Directed by Krishna Shah.
Cinema Cinema 1979/India Directed by Krishna Shah.
In Search of God 1981/Cyprus Directed by Evangelos Ioannidis.
Gathering Storm 1982/UK Channel 4 production.
The Courtesans of Bombay 1983/UK Merchant Ivory TV-Production.
American Drive-In 1985/US Directed by Krishna Shah.
Dabbawallahs 1985/UK Channel 4 production.
Street Musicians Of Bombay 1994/UK Merchant Ivory Production.
Dubbing/Sound Editor Year/Country Production Notes
Summer of the Falcon 1981/US AKA Lovespell.
Anna Ballerina (Series) 1987/Germany German TV series.
Anna Ballerina (Movie) 1988/Germany Movie based on the series.
Young Toscanini 1988/Italy/France Franco Zeffirelli production.
Milou en mai 1990/France/Italy Louis Malle production.

Bose was specialized in dubbing films from different languages to English and vice versa. To name a few, the following is a short list:

Dubbing Year/Country Dubbing Languages Production Notes
Diva 1981/Italy/France French/English A film by Jean-Jacques Beineix.
Summer of the Falcon 1981/US German/English/German AKA Lovespell. Featuring Richard Burton.
The Children of Noisy Village 1986/Sweden Dutch/English Written by Astrid Lindgren.
A Boy from Calabria 1987/Italy/France Italian/English A film by Luigi Comencini.
Anna Ballerina (Series) 1987/Germany German/English/German German TV series.
Anna Ballerina (Movie) 1988/Germany German/English/German Movie based on the series.
Franco Zeffirelli's Young Toscanini 1988/Italy/France English/Italian/English Featuring Elizabeth Taylor and Sophie Ward.
Eurocops 1988/Spain/Italy/France/Germany/
UK/Austria/Switzerland
English/French/Italian/
Spanish/German
TV series 1988–1993. Featuring Heiner Lauterbach.
The Year Of The Black Butterflies 1989/Germany German/English N/A.
African Timber 1989/Germany/France English/English Featuring Heiner Lauterbach.
Peter in Magicland 1990/Germany German/English/German Full length Animation film.
Louis Malle's Milou en mai 1990/France/Italy French/English US Title: May Fools
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