Dak Ghar

Dak Ghar
Directed by Zul Vellani
Produced by Children's Film Society
Written by based on play by Rabindranath Tagore
Starring Balraj Sahni
Mukri
Sachin
Music by Madan Mohan (composer)
Kaifi Azmi (lyricist)
Release dates
1965
Running time
60 min
Country India
Language Hindi

Dak Ghar 1965 Bollywood fim based on an eponymous play by Rabindranath Tagore.[1] It was directed by Zul Vellani and starred Sachin, Mukri, AK Hangal, Sudha and Satyen Kappu among others, with cameo appearances by Balraj Sahni and Sharmila Tagore.[2]

Background

Dak Ghar is a 1912 Bengali play by Rabindranath Tagore. W.B. Yeats produced an English-language version of the play and also wrote a preface to it.[3] It was also translated into Spanish and French. It was performed in English for the first time in 1913 by the Irish Theatre in London with Tagore himself in the attendance. The Bengali original was staged in Calcutta in 1917. It also had a successful run in Germany with performances in concentration camps during World War II.[4] A Polish version was performed under the supervision of Janusz Korczak in the Warsaw ghetto.[5]

Plot

Amal, a young boy with an incurable disease is trapped inside the house by the local pandit-doctor’s orders. He spends the day chattering with passersby and villagers while daydreaming about those encounters later. When the chowkidar tells him the new building across the road from his house is a new Post Office belonging the Raja, Amal starts fanatasising about visiting the King beyond the hills, and getting a letter or delivering the letters going all around, setting out from the confine of his house.[2]

Cast

Soundtrack

See also

References

  1. "Dak Ghar". IMDB. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Dak Ghar (1966)". Memsaab Story. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  3. Yeats, William Butler (1989). Prefaces and introductions: uncollected prefaces and introductions by Yeats to works by other authors and to anthologies edited by Yeats. Simon & Schuster. p. 311.
  4. "Tagore for today". The Hindu. August 30, 2012.
  5. Dutta, Krishna; Robinson, Andrew, eds. (1998). Rabindranath Tagore: an anthology. Macmillan. pp. 21–50.

External links


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