FROM
ODISSI DANCER
TO DOCTOR'S WIFE
After
Indira Verma and Sarita Chowdhury, Mira Nair has played god-mother to yet
another Indian stunner, Ellora Patnaik who plays the lead role in Miras
new film, My Own Country.
Patnaik
was born and brought up in Orissa where she learnt Odissi dance first from
her mother, Chitralekha Patnaik, and then from leading gurus like Gangadhar
Pradhan, Sanjukta Panigrahi and Kelucharan Mohapatra. Mid-90s, she
went abroad and trained in acting at New Yorks American Academy of
Dramatic Arts. The course covered, among other things fencing, and horse
riding. After receiving her associate degree in drama, she acted in several
plays in the Big Apple which included The Country Wife, The Heidi Chronicles,
The Sea Gull and my most acclaimed role, that of Catherine in
Standing On My Knees. From New York, Patnaik moved to Toronto where she gives
regular dance recitals, teaches Odissi at the Chitralekha Dance Academy and
pursues her acting career.
Mira Nair
happened to be busy with pre-production plans for her new film in Toronto
when Patnaik was playing the lead at Tarragon Theatre in Girish Karnads
Naga Mandala. The play had a successful run with eleven shows over a two
week period. Nairs initial choice of Nandita Das as her lead actress
did not work out and hearing rave reviews of Patnaiks stage performance,
Nair rushed across, saw the play, held a hurried audition and quickly signed
Patnaik for her next film. Patnaik is a mature and committed
actress, says Nair. She gives the role its right ethnic balance.
Her talent as a dancer is also an asset.
My Own Country
was shot over autumn 1997 in Toronto. Post-production was rushed through
in Nairs home-base in Cape Town, with the sound track being fine-tuned
in Los Angeles. The film will hopefully have a Cannes premiere. Its producers,
Show Time Television, have slated a National release in
September.
During the
Toronto Film Festival, I spent a September afternoon watching Nair shoot
a sequence in a quiet suburb. Adjoining streets were lined with cars and
vans but at the location there were no gawking crowds, confusion and chaos.
The neighbourhood was quite indifferent to the shoot in progress. The ebullient
Nair was in control, ready with her observant asides and quick
repartee.
Ellora Patnaik
was not around that day. I watched the lovely Marisa Tomei (Oscar winner
and star of Nairs The Perez Family) and London-based actor Naveen Andrews
(The English Patient and Kama Sutra) enact a key scene when over an impromptu
meal they unwind and talk of their personal lives. In the film Andrews is
playing a doctor and Marisa is a nurse working in the same
hospital.
I watched
video runs of the shoot with Nair later and that was when I saw Patnaik in
action. I met her the next day and she informed me that it was Sally Jones,
the American theatre academic and director who also researches Eastern dance
forms and in India studies Kathak under Munna Shukla, who got her her Toronto
break in Naga Mandala. I was deeply moved when I read the play. I play
the role of Rani whose journey from a gentle flower to a Durga-like goddess
was a major challenge, particularly because I had to blend my experience
as a known dancer with that of an actress, a career Im just launching
into, Patnaik maintained.
Soon after,
she was spotted by Mira Nair and rushed headlong into playing the lead role
of Rajani in Nairs film. I had acted on screen just once in 1989
in Hara Pattanayaks Oriya film Dauda Daudi. Nairs film was my
first North American venture, Patnaik confessed. She found Nair very
interactive as a dirctor, always open to the actors interpretation.
At times, she shoots a scene in several different ways and selects
the one she likes later. Patnaiks initial apprehension at playing
a big role was allayed by the units patience and support. Naveen
Andrews in particular was very helpful, she asserted. He lends
a giving, generous nature to his incredible
professionalism.
My Own Country
is based on Dr Abraham Vergheses semi-autobiographical book. Verghese,
of Indian origin, was born in Ethiopia, studied in India, worked in many
places before arriving at Johnson City in Tennessee, which is where the film
is set. The film sees the doctor as someone lacking a sense of identity
or country. Thats why he marries Rajani, a girl he meets on a visit
to Mumbai, whom he symbolises as authentic, educated India, Patnaik
explained. Johnson City becomes his first real home, his own country, as
it were. He opts for the AIDS department as the hospitals Head of
Infectious Diseases. His terminally-ill patients find solace in his concern
for them. His work becomes self-redeeming.
With his
job turning into an obsessive preoccupation, the doctors home life
falls apart. His wife, who has a son and is expecting again, is appalled
by the sordidness of his work, the company he keeps and the dreaded disease
that he lives with. In real life, Vergheses marriage breaks up. In
the film, the exhausted doctors reserves crumble when his superiors
blame him for the hospitals rising graph of AIDS patients. He leaves,
reunites with his wife, and looks for a better life elsewhere.
My Own Country
sees Nair returning true to form in a film that conveys her insights into
the migrant worlds of today.
Ellora Patnaik
was in India recently. Training in Odissi with her dance gurus was first
on her agenda. This will be followed by a dance concert in Delhi in April
with another hopefully in Mumbai, before returning to Toronto. |
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