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Top Indian filmmaker Sinha dies | Top Indian filmmaker Sinha dies |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Leading Indian filmmaker Tapan Sinha has died in the eastern Indian city of Calcutta (Kolkata) at the age of 84. | Leading Indian filmmaker Tapan Sinha has died in the eastern Indian city of Calcutta (Kolkata) at the age of 84. |
Sinha, who suffered breathlessness and a chest infection late last year, died in a city hospital. | |
Last year, he was awarded the prestigious Dada Saheb Phalke award - the highest national cinema honour - for his contribution to Indian cinema. | |
Sinha, who made some 40 films - mostly in Bengali - was a versatile filmmaker who straddled a range of themes. | Sinha, who made some 40 films - mostly in Bengali - was a versatile filmmaker who straddled a range of themes. |
Born in the eastern state of West Bengal - which was home to some of India's most-acclaimed directors like the Oscar-winning Satyajit Ray - Tapan Sinha carved out a niche for himself as an intelligent and popular filmmaker. | |
Making films in Bengali and later in Hindi, he took on a wide variety of subjects. | |
'Unassuming gentleman' | 'Unassuming gentleman' |
Some of his films like Kabuliwalla, Harmonium and Jhinder Bandi became box office hits in Bengal. Ek Doctor Ki Maut (A doctor's death), made in Hindi, gained him nationwide recognition. | Some of his films like Kabuliwalla, Harmonium and Jhinder Bandi became box office hits in Bengal. Ek Doctor Ki Maut (A doctor's death), made in Hindi, gained him nationwide recognition. |
"He was an unassuming gentleman who had a strong ear for music and great command over adaptation of famous literary works," film critic Shoma A Chatterji told Reuters news agency. | "He was an unassuming gentleman who had a strong ear for music and great command over adaptation of famous literary works," film critic Shoma A Chatterji told Reuters news agency. |
Sinha began his career as a sound engineer and shot into the limelight with his 1956 feature Kabuliwalla, based on the story of a relationship between a girl and an Afghan dry fruit-seller by Nobel Prize-winning author Rabindranath Tagore. | |
He then took up several political and social themes - Adalat O Ekti Meye (The Law and a Lady), for example, dealt with a rape victim ostracised by society. | He then took up several political and social themes - Adalat O Ekti Meye (The Law and a Lady), for example, dealt with a rape victim ostracised by society. |
Sinha won more than a dozen film awards in India for his work. |
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