Patience Cooper

Patience Cooper was an Anglo-Indian actress, and one of the early superstars of Bollywood. She was the daughter of Phoebe Stella Gamble (born in Calcutta in 1881; daughter of John Frederick Gamble and Phoebe Stella Clement whose mother was Armenian and James Alfred Cooper. An Anglo-Indian[1] born in Howrah, West Bengal, and baptised on 30 May 1902,[2] Cooper had a successful career in both silent and sound films. She is credited with the first double roles of Indian cinema—as twin sisters in Patni Prataap and as mother and daughter in Kashmiri Sundari,[3] even though earlier in 1917, actor Anna Salunke had played roles of both the male lead character Ram and the female lead character Seeta in the film Lanka Dahan.[4]

Patience Cooper
Cooper in a publicity portrait in 1930
Born(1902-01-30)30 January 1902
Died1993 (aged 9091)
Karachi, Pakistan
OccupationActress
Years active1920–1946
Spouses
(m. 1926, divorced)
    (m. 1930; died 1936)

    Stage career

    Cooper began her career as a dancer in Bandmann's Musical Comedy, a Eurasian troupe. She later joined Jamshedji Framji Madan's Corinithian Stage Company as an actress.

    Film career

    Patience Cooper in the 1920s.

    Cooper first made an impact with Nala Damayanti (1920). The film starred Keki Adajania as Nala and Cooper as Damayanti. The film was a big budget Madan Theatre production and was directed by Eugenio de Liguoro, known in Italy for his Orientalist spectacles like Fascino d'Oro (1919). Nala Damayanti was famous for its special effects at the time — Narada's ascent of Mount Meru to heaven, the transformations of four gods into impersonations of Nala, the transformation of Kali into a serpent among others.

    Her next film was Vishnu Avtar, released in 1921. De Liguoro also directed Dhruva Chartitra (1921), a mythological based on the legend of Dhruva whose quest for eternal knowledge and salvation was rewarded when he became the brightest star in the heavens, the pole star also known as Dhruvatara. The film was made as a bid for an international breakthrough for Madan Theatres and featured many Europeans in the cast along with Cooper who played the female lead, Suniti.

    One of Cooper's biggest successes was Pati Bhakti (1922). Cooper played Leelavati in the film, directed by the great JJ Madan himself, advocating that women should be devoted to their husband. The film is regarded as her greatest film and was also involved in a small controversy as in Madras, the censor demanded that a dance number be removed on the grounds of obscenity.

    Cooper also played perhaps the first ever double roles in Hindi films Patni Pratap (1923), where she played two sisters and Kashmiri Sundari (1924), where she played mother and daughter.

    Cooper did films right through to the mid-1930s. One of her last major films was Zehari Saap (1933). The film was a typical Cooper vehicle about a medieval chieftain's revolt against the good Nawab Bakar Malik. The nawab's outlaw son vows revenge and finally all's well that ends well. The dramatic conflict in the film sees the chieftain wanting to marry the princess, whom he had raised as his own daughter.

    Cooper acted in over 40 films until she retired in 1944, after performing in her last film, Iraada. Cooper was often cast in the role of a sexually troubled but innocent woman, always at the centre of moral dilemmas, often caused by the men in her lives.

    A major aspect of Cooper's star image was the successful achievement of the 'Hollywood look' in spite of different light and technical conditions. Her distinctively Anglo-Indian features, like dark eyes, sharp features, ebony hair and light skin tone, allowed technicians to experiment with the imported technique of eye-level lighting and achieve an appearance similar to Hollywood stars of the silent era.

    The low number of women, especially Hindus, in the film industry during the 1920s (due to conservative attitudes) meant Anglo-Indian actresses like Cooper, were in demand. Her appearance in a string of successful films has led her to being called the first ever female Indian film star.

    Later life

    It is generally supposed Cooper married Mirza Ahmad Ispahani Saheb (MAH Ispahani), a well-known Indian businessman. In 1947, they migrated to Pakistan.[5] Actually she was married to MAH Ispahani at the age of 21 and divorced soon after. She then married Gul Hamid Khan, one of the first early silent movie actors. He died six years later from Hodgkin's Disease. She remained friends with MAH Ispahani until the end of her life. Cooper changed her name to Sabra Begum and lived the last of her days with her two adopted daughters Zeenat and Haleema in Karachi, Pakistan. Her foster daughter Syeda Nafees Rizvi lives in Houston, Texas, USA. She fostered and/or adopted 17 children during her lifetime. Cooper died in 1993.[6]

    Filmography

    YearFilmDirectorNotes
    1920Nala DamayantiEugenio de Liguoro
    1921Bishu AbatarJyotish Bandyopadhyay
    Dhruba CharitraJyotish Bannerji
    Nal DamayantiJyotish Bandyopadhyay
    Dhruva CharitraEugenio De Liguoro
    BehulaC. Legrand
    Vishnu AvatarC. Legrand
    1922Sati
    RatnavaliJyotish Bannerji
    Pati BhaktiJ. J. Madan
    Kamale KaminiSisir Kumar Bhaduri
    RamayanJyotish BandyopadhyaySerial
    RamayanEugenio De LiguoroSerial
    Nartaki TaraJyotish Bandyopadhyay
    Ratnavali (1922 film)C. Legrand
    Raja Bhoj
    Mohini (1922 film)Sisir Kumar Bhaduri
    Bhagirathi Ganga
    Rajkumari BudurJ. J. Madan
    Laila Majnu (1922 film)J. J. Madan
    1923Matri SnehaJyotish Bannerji
    Noorjehan (1923 film)J. J. Madan
    1924Patni PratapJ. J. MadanSerial
    Turki HoorJ. J. Madan
    1925Sati LakshmiJyotish Bannerji
    Adoorat ChheleyJ. J. Madan
    Sansar Chakra
    Kashmiri Sundari
    1926PrafullaJyotish Bannerji
    JoydevJyotish Bannerji
    DharmapatniJyotish Bannerji
    1927JanaPriyanath Ganguly
    Krishnakanter WillPriyanath Ganguly
    Durgesh NandiniPriyanath Ganguly
    ChandidasJyotish Bannerji
    1928Aankh Ka Nasha
    Hoor-E-ArabRatansha Sinore
    BhrantiJyotish Bannerji
    1929GiribalaModhu Bose
    Kapal KundalaPriyanath Ganguly
    1930Bharat RamaniJyotish Bannerji
    Vaman Avatar
    RajsinghaJyotish Bannerji
    Kal ParinayaPriyanath Ganguly
    Ganesh JanmaJal Ariah
    1931Bibaha BibhratJyotish Bannerji
    Alladin And The Wonderful LampJal Ariah
    Samaj Ka Shikar
    Satyawadi Raja HarishchandraJ. J. Madan
    Bharati BalakAga Hashr Kashmiri
    1932Pati Bhakti
    Chatra BakavaliJ. J. MadanFantasy
    BilwamangalFram Madan
    Alibaba And Forty ThievesJ. J. Madan
    Educated Wife
    Hathili DulhanJ. J. Madan
    1933Madhur Murali
    Naqli DoctorJ. J. Madan
    Zehari SaapJ. J. Madan
    1934Kismet Ka Shikar
    Bhakta-Ke-BhagwanV. M. Gunjal
    Garib Ki DuniyaSorabji Kerawala
    Anokha PremF. R. Irani
    Kanya VikrayaMohammad Hussain
    Sakhi LuteraSorabji Kerawala
    1935Dil Ki PyaasJ. J. Madan
    Asmat Ka MotiFram Sethna
    Khudadad
    Prem Ki Ragini
    Sulagto SansarG. R. Sethi
    Mera PyaraEzra Mir
    1936Noor-E-WahadatG. R. Sethi
    Baghi SipahiA.R. Kardar
    Khyber PassGul Hamid
    1937Fakhr-E-IslamNanubhai Vakil
    1943RaniP. C. Barua
    1944Chandar KalankaPramathesh Chandra Barua
    IraadaS. Shamsuddin
    1946Khan SahebPrem Sethna

    References

    1. p 163, Parama Roy, Indian Traffic: Identities in Question in Colonial and Postcolonial India, University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-20487-5
    2. Ancestry.com. India, Select Births and Baptisms, 1786-1947 [database on-line].UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: India, Births and Baptisms, 1786-1947. Salt lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
    3. "Personalities of Indian Cinema - Silent screen stars". indiaheritage.org. Archived from the original on 19 October 2007. Retrieved 16 February 2009.
    4. "Dadasaheb Phalke Father of Indian Cinema". Dadasaheb Phalke Academy. Archived from the original on 18 December 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
    5. Article from Economic & Political Weekly
    6. "Bollywood Divas". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 16 February 2009.
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