A letter from Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, expressing his interest in seeing more Muslims engage positively with the film industry | Photos from the book
Have you ever shown a child a photo of Waheed Murad, and the child innocently asked you who the fellow was while you tried to impress upon her or him the enormity of Murad’s ‘chocolate hero’ status during the 1970s? Or seen a scratchy print of a film that was once a super hit, but is now virtually unknown? How many of our youngsters would know that Lollywood was once a thriving, tri-lingual industry that produced cinematic masterpieces in Urdu, Punjabi and Bengali? Sadly, not many.
It is, therefore, quite a wonderful development that Lok Virsa: National Institute of Folk and Traditional Heritage — an organisation whose “mandate has been to preserve, document and promote cultural heritage” — recently published Journey Through Lens: Pakistani Cinema. Authored by Aijaz Gul and Jamal Sohail, the book preserves the memory of, and should revive interest in, what were once the glory days of Pakistani cinema.
Gul holds a master’s degree in film studies from the University of Southern California. He is a film reviewer and author of several books on various aspects of film and filmmaking in Pakistan. He was also born into one of the earliest film families of Pakistan. His father, Agha G.A. Gul — along with actor, producer and director Shaukat Hussain Rizvi and director and producer Anwar Kamal Pasha — was one of the key players responsible for establishing the post-1947 film industry. G.A. Gul founded Evernew Studios in Lahore which became one of the main centres of filmmaking where a number of classic Pakistani films were shot. Currently, the studios are headed by one of his other sons, Sajjad.
A glossy coffee-table book takes a pictorial excursion into Pakistan’s cinematic past
Co-author Sohail teaches film studies and is the founder and CEO of Chrono Pvt Ltd., a media, technology and trading company. In the book’s introduction, he notes that he did much of the legwork — interviewing people, sifting through library archives and searching for lost prints — while Gul provided contacts and connections in the Lollywood fraternity, as well as his knowledge of the good old days that have now receded into the distant past.
Skim through the pages of this glossy, beautiful pictorial and interesting facts pour out. Did you know that the first film produced in Pakistan was called Teri Yaad and starred legendary Indian actor Dilip Kumar’s brother Nasir Khan as the lead? He appeared opposite Asha Posley, arguably Pakistan’s first film heroine. Khan later moved to India, as did many other actors, including the Sikh actress Swaran Lata who acted in many super hit films of her time.
A visual delight such as any book on cinema should be, Journey Through Lens is filled with magnificent — and oftentimes rare — yesteryear images. There are reproductions of cinema posters and stills from films as well as publicity shots featuring actors who were once superstars and are now long forgotten — Darpan, Nasira, Aasia, Santosh Kumar, Kaveeta and Deeba to name just a few.