Basant Bahar (film)

Basant Bahar
Directed by Raja Nawathe
Produced by R. Chandra
Written by Rajinder Singh Bedi (dialogue)
Ta-Ra-Su (story)
Starring Bharat Bhushan
Nimmi
Music by Shankar Jaikishan
Cinematography M. Rajaram
Edited by P. S. Khochikar
G. G. Mayekar
Release date
December 7, 1956
Language Hindi

Basant Bahar, directed by Raja Nawathe,[1] is a 1956 Indian classic film. This musical[2] had nine outstanding songs, with lyrics written by Shailendra and Hasrat Jaipuri; and music composition by Shankar-Jaikishan. The story is based on the Kannada novel "Hamsageethe" by legendary novelist Tarasu. "Hamasa" means swan and "Geethe" means song. It is believed that before a swan dies,it will sing without opening its mouth. That mutter of melody is believed to be unmatched since any scene of lyricism falls short of its reach.

Plot

The film begins with Gopal Joshi (Bharat Bhushan) singing a raga. His father, Narsin Joshi (Om Prakash), the royal astrologer, comes and scolds him for singing and says he should become an astrologer. On the other hand, in his neighbourhood, his neighbour Malaya, the son of the royal musician is scolded by his father for being lesser than Gopal in singing. He is preparing him for a music competition, the winner of which will become the royal musician. At the same time, Gopal enters and says that he will not participate, to which Malaya's father refuses.

Cast

  • Bharat Bhushan ... Gopal
  • Nimmi ... Gopi
  • Kumkum ... Radhika (as Kum Kum)
  • Manmohan Krishna ... Lehri Baba
  • Parsuram (as Parashram)
  • Chand Burke ... Leelabai (as Chand Burque)
  • Shyam Kumar (actor)
  • S. K. Prem
  • Babu Raje
  • S. B. Nayampalli (as Nayam Pally)
  • Indira
  • Chandrashekhar (actor) ... Emperor (as Chandra Shekhar)
  • Leela Chitnis ... Gopal's mom
  • Om Prakash ... Narsin

Awards

Soundtrack

Track #SongSinger(s)
1 Badi Der Bhai Mohd. Rafi
2 Bhay Bhajana Vandana Sun Manna Dey
3 Duniya Na Bhaye Mohd. Rafi
4 Ja Ja Re Ja Balama Lata Mangeshkar
5 Kar Gaya Re Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle
6 Ketaki Gulab Juhi Manna Dey, Bhimsen Joshi
7 Main Piya Teri Lata Mangeshkar
8 Nain Mile Chain Kahan Lata Mangeshkar, Manna Dey
9 Sur Na Saje Manna Dey

References

  1. "Basant Bahar (1956)". The Hindu. 3 June 2011. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  2. "Basant Bahar (1956)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
  3. "4th National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.