
BHUMIKA
(The Role)
1976, Hindi, color, 140 minutes
Directed by Shyam Benegal
Based on the Marathi memoir Sangtye aika, by Hansa Wadkar.
Screenplay: Girish Karnad, Pandit Satya Dev Dubey, Shyam Benegal; Dialogue:
Pandit Satya Dev Dubey; Lyrics: Majrooh Sultanpuri; Music: Vanraj Bhatia; Cinematography:
Govind Nihalani
Shyam Benegals haunting and masterful film, based on the memoirs of a
famous Marathi actress, explores the often tragic dilemma of the female entertainer
in 20th century India, the public woman who moved freely in the
social world and whose body was exposed to the desiring gaze of a largely male
audience. The price for her freedom was that her chastity
(meaning, in this context, her sexual fidelity to a single man) was constantly
doubted and she was excluded (at least in the minds of many people) from the
full respectability of the domestic woman, the gharwali or house-wife,
whose life (ideally) transpired within the home and whose body belonged to her
husband alone. This theme, explored in several mainstream courtesan
films (PAKEEZAH, UMRAO JAAN), is here examined in the international neo-realist
mode of Indias parallel or alternative cinema of the late
1970s, and with special reference to the popular cinema itselfthe direct
descendant of earlier performance genres that relied on the talents of singers
and dancers who were themselves often courtesans.

This genealogy is cleverly
suggested by the credit sequence, in which the films heroine Usha/Urvashi
(Smita Patil) dances suggestively in front of the lurid backdrop of what appears
to be a small proscenium stage, such as that used in early 20th century folk
theatrethe nautanki of north India, or the tamasha of Maharashtrabefore
a leering audience of turbaned men. Only at the end of this sequence (and just
before director Benegals name appears in the credits) does the presence
of an overhead camera and its operators reveal that in fact this is a soundstage
set on which a film scenepresumably depicting an earlier theatrical milieuis
being shot. The shooting ends abruptly, with its pre-recorded playback
music (which Usha has been lip-synching) grinding to a halt, when one of the
backup dancers sprains her ankle: the first of many small but telling revelations
of the human frailtyand feminine sufferingbehind cinematic artifice.
The heroines two names are telling as well. Apart from the not-uncommon
household name Usha (dawn, the name of a Vedic goddess), she also
carries the stage name Urvashi, that of an apsara or celestial courtesan
celebrated for her mythological seduction of a great king. In
Hindu mythology, apsaras were dancing girls in Indras heavenly paradise;
unmarried, and perpetually available for casual liaisons with men whom they
(or Indra) might choose to tempt or favor; indeed, Indra used them regularly
to keep the chastity-derived powers of saintly ascetics in check, lest they
threaten his own cosmic dominance. In the ancient origin myth of Sanskrit drama,
such celestial callgirls became the first actresses, and they also became
the
prototype of the vaishya or professional woman of classical
and medieval times, the courtesan who was both a highly educated and glamorous
entertainer and a potential mistress to well-to-do patrons.

Ushas life story unfolds through a series of flashbacks that begin as
sepia-toned reminiscences of her childhood (and of the black-and-white era of
Hindi cinema), which saw her first exposure to the camera as a baby artiste
(well played by Baby Ruksanathe term Baby being a film industry
label for a pre-pubescent child actress). Usha is the granddaughter of a famous
female singer of the old traditionevidently, a hereditary courtesanwhose
own daughter rejected her lifestyle in favor of a hard-won respectable
yet painful marriage to an abusive and alcoholic brahman. Following his early
death, and over her mothers objections, Usha is taken to Bombay by family
hanger-on Keshav Darvi (Amol Palekar) to successfully audition as a singer in
a Bombay studio: the first step in a process, watched approvingly by her doting
grandmother and with horror by her mother, that will eventually carry her to
on-camera adolescent stardom, and to an ill-starred love marriage
with Keshav. Ushas motives for stubbornly pursuing this relationship (culminating
in a pre-marital pregnancy) with the unattractive and much older Keshavwho
appears to have lusted after her since childhoodare not spelled out. Presumably
she feels indebted to him for his loyalty to her family (of which he frequently
reminds her) and for her own worldly success; she is also a headstrong girl
who clearly enjoys her acting career and is bent on challenging her uptight
mother (who opposes the match because of Keshavs non-brahman status, just
as she opposes the cinema itself on the grounds of its supposed disrespectability).

Once the two are wed, Usha is shocked to find Keshav continuing to act as her business manager, arranging starring roles for her opposite hunky heartthrob Rajan (Anant Nag), who is himself in (unrequited) love with her. Since Keshavs other business ventures are unsuccessful, the family remains entirely dependent on Ushas earningsa fact that Keshav clearly resents. He thus becomes both a jealous husband with a fragile ego and nasty temper, as well as (in effect) a greedy pimp who compels his wife to take risqué work despite her dislike of her costar and her protests that she only wants to be a housewife now that their daughter has been born. Not surprisingly, the relationship becomes increasingly poisoned, particularly by Keshavs assumption (fed by star-magazine gossip) that she is in fact having an affair with Rajan. Verbally and physically abused by her husband and periodically obliged to live in a hotel, separated from her daughter and mother, the desperately-unhappy actress eventually does instigate two unsatisfying liaisonswith the nihilistic and self-centered director Sunil Verma (Naseeruddin Shah), with whom she plots a double-suicide (which he foils), and then with the wealthy businessman Vinayak Kale (Amrish Puri), who keeps her as a pampered mistress on his palatial estate. Here Usha briefly finds a kind of respectability as a de facto second wife, earning a measure of love and admiration from Kales mother, son, and bedridden first wifebut (as she learns one day when she tries to take the boy to a nearby fair) at the cost of even the most rudimentary freedom. Unable to abide by Kales hypocritical domestic rules, she finds her only hope of escape to lie in the intervention of the hated Keshav, who promptly brings her back to a Bombay festooned with billboards of her own face, and to the same drab hotel and lonely prospects. As Kales bitter wife remarks to Usha as the latter prepares to leave, The beds change, the kitchens change. Mens masks change, but men dont change.

The film, which is at once about the history of popular entertainment in modern
India and more broadly about gender relations under South Asian patriarchy,
offers surprising insights on both fronts. As in the opening sequences of Benegals
later, slicker, but less satisfying film ZUBEIDA (2000), the art-cinema directors
recreation of an earlier era of commercial filmmaking (with most of the action
transpiring during the 1940s and 50s, the chronology being regularly reinforced
by snatches of radio news broadcasts) reveals not merely the expected tawdriness
and cynicism, but more than a little homage and nostalgia. This may be read
as a tribute to a more innocent era and to the hard work and dedication of many
of its undersung artists (including dance masters, chorus girls, and even lowly
grips). Even the stock romantic songs, though used diegetically and ironically,
are treated with affection (as in the scene in which Usha and Keshav begin to
happily hum one of her recent hits). Needless to say, in this film Benegal especially
pays homage to the talented but often troubled women who moved from courtesan-entertainer
backgrounds to cinematic stardom. Their own love-hate relationship with the
roles into which they were molded is echoed by Ushas ambivalence about
her career. Yet the film boldly proposes that the dilemmas of such public figures
are more broadly akin to those of upper-class Indian women in general, whose
patriarchally-mandated role of chastity and respectability may at
any moment be scrutinized and held suspect by a misogynistic and leering gaze,
and whose lives can become a trial-by-fire (agni pariksha,
a reference to Sitas famous ordeal in the Ramayana, and the name
of the final film in which we see Usha acting). Such allusions, like the films
repeated juxtaposition of mirrors and (male) gazes, effectively convey the message
that women spend their lives being seen in ways and cast in roles that may not
correspond with how they see themselves.
The film boasts superb performances all around, and is masterfully structured
and pacedeven a small vignette such as the scene in which Usha walks into
an adjoining hotel room, drawn by the sound of her grandmothers voice
on a gramophone record, effectively enhances its wider theme, for the responses
she receives from the two businessmen in the room (played by Mohan Agashe and
Amrish Puri) convey twin aspects of the patriarchal gaze: desire and censure.
Above all, of course, the film belongs to the late Smita Patil, actress extraordinaire,
who convincingly transforms herself in its course from a vivacious teenage naïf
to a wiser but deeply wounded middle-aged woman.
[The Video Sound DVD of BHUMIKA is of tolerable quality, with decent subtitles
for dialogs and (intermittently) for song lyrics. However, although the print
used appears to have been of good quality, digital image transfer seems to have
been less than ideal, resulting in some blurring during the (many) sepia-toned
and low-lit flashback sequences. This is unfortunate since the film displays
artful cinematography by Govind Nihalani, who himself became a well known director.]