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Baburao Patel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baburao Patel
Born4 March 1904
Maswan, Palghar
Died1982 (aged 77–78)
NationalityIndian
TitleMember of Parliament for Shajapur[1]
Term1967-1971[2]
SuccessorJagannathrao Joshi
Political partyBharatiya Jana Sangh
Spouse(s)Shirin (second), Sushila Rani Patel (third)[3]
Parents
  • Pandurang Vithal Patil
  • Jamuna
RelativesGeeta Patel-D'Souza (Grandchild from Second Wife)

Baburao Patel (1904–1982) was an Indian publisher and writer, associated with films and politics.

Career

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Baburao: A Pioneer of Indian Cinema. Baburao was a key figure in the early days of Indian cinema. He started his career as a journalist, working for the pioneering film magazine Cinema Samachar. This early exposure to the nascent film industry led him to transition into filmmaking.

As a scriptwriter and director, Baburao contributed to the shaping of Indian cinema. His filmography includes notable titles like Kismet, Sati Mahananda, Maharani, Bala Joban, and Chand ka Tukda. These films, produced between 1929 and 1935, were crucial in establishing the foundations of Indian cinema. Then in 1935, Baburao joined DN Parker, who owned New Jack Printing Press... The magazine, called Filmindia, was launched as a monthly in April 1935.[4]

He was the editor and publisher of India's first film trade magazine, Filmindia, the first edition of which was published in 1935.

Baburao was also the founder and editor of a political magazine, Mother India (different from the magazine of the same name started by the Aurobindo group).

He was elected to the Lok Sabha as the Jana Sangh candidate from Shajapur, Madhya Pradesh in 1967.[5]

Personal life

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Baburao Patel was born Baba Patil to politician Pandurang Patil (Pandoba Patil) in the Maswan village, near Mumbai, but changed his name to Baburao Patel because he mostly dealt with Gujarati community in professional life.[6] His formal education ended in high school, and he often referred to himself as a non-Matriculate.[7] Patel was an autodidact who owned a large library with hundreds of books on varied subjects.

He was married three times. His third wife was singer and actor Sushila Rani Patel (née Tombat), originally from Chennai. He directed her in Draupadi (1944) and Gwalan but both films flopped at the box office.[8]

Books

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  • The Rosary and the Lamp (1966), Girnar Publications
  • Burning Words: A Critical History of Nine Years of Nehru's Rule from 1947 to 1956 (1956), Sumati Publications
  • Grey Dust (1949), Sumati Publications
  • A Blueprint of Our Defence (1962), Sumati Publications

Filmography

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As director & scriptwriter

  • Kismet (1929)
  • Sati Mahananda (सती महानंदा) (1933)
  • Chand ka Tukda (1933-'35)
  • Bala Joban (1934)
  • Maharani (1934)
  • Pardesi Saiyan (1935)
  • Draupadi (1944)
  • Gwalan (1946)
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References

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  1. ^ "Master of the invective, trigamist, serial philanderer, sometime MP and closet admirer of Hindutva, Baburao Patel struck fear in the hearts of the best and brightest in Mumbai films". India Today. 16 July 2015.
  2. ^ Correspondent, D. C. (27 September 2015). "Bollywood’s first Bitch-in-Chief". www.asianage.com. {{cite web}}: |last1= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ "The Patels of Pali Hill". The Indian Express. 9 August 2015.
  4. ^ Bhatia, Sidharth (13 June 2015). "'Most wretched, boring and amateurish hotch-potch': Meet Baburao Patel, pioneering film journalist". Scroll.in.
  5. ^ "General Election, 1967 (Vol I, II) - General Election Archive (1951-2004) - Election Commission of India". Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  6. ^ Sarma, Ramya (August 29, 2015). "The Patels of Filmindia: A delicious potboiler". The Hindu.
  7. ^ Mukherjee, Debashree (2013). "Creating Cinema's Reading Publics: The Emergence of Film Journalism in Bombay". In Sundaram, Ravi (ed.). No Limits: Media Studies from India. Oxford University Press. pp. 165–198. ISBN 9780190124724.
  8. ^ "The Patels of Filmindia: A delicious potboiler". The Hindu. 29 August 2015.