Kamal Ghosh
Kamal Ghosh | |
---|---|
Born | 1910 Bordhwan, West Bengal. |
Died | 1983 (aged 72–73) 73 years Chennai |
Nationality | Indian |
Occupation | Cinematographer, director |
Kamal Ghosh (1910–1983; often misspelled in film credits as Kamaal) was an Indian cinematographer and film director. Although a native of Kolkata, he was active primarily in Tamil and Telugu cinema.[1]
Career[]
Kamal Ghosh was the nephew of filmmaker, writer and actor Debaki Bose. He received training from his uncle, working with New Theaters, Calcutta (now Kolkata), in various aspects of film making. It was the lawyer turned filmmaker K. Subramanyam who brought Ghosh to South India. He started his career as an assistant cinematographer to Sailen Bose in the film Balayogini released in 1937.[2] Ghosh worked as the cinematographer in-charge for the Tamil-language Jupiter Pictures film Anaadhai Penn (1938), directed by R. Prakash. Ghosh's photography, especially the lighting, was widely praised.[1] Ghosh also worked as a director in three 1953 films: Paropakaram and Rohini in 1959 he directed Manorama ( film) which was a huge commercial success.Still in spite of his success as a director, he decided to drop that career and continued to work as a cinematographer.[2]
Select filmography[]
As director[]
- Paropakaram (1953)
- Rohini (1953)
- Manorama (1959)
As cinematographer[]
- Balayogini (1937) – as assistant to Sailen Bose
- Anaadhai Penn (1938) (First film as independent cinematographer)[2]
- Bhaktha Chetha (1940)
- Krishnan Thoothu (1940)[2]
- Harichandra (1944 )[2]
- Kacha Devayani (1941)
- Chandralekha (1948)
- Apoorva Sagodharargal (1949)
- Kaadhal (1952)
- Prema (1952)
- Paradesi (Telugu), Poongothai (Tamil) (1953)
- Anarkali (Tamil, Telugu) (1955)
- Amara Deepam (1956)
- Kaalam Maari Pochu (1956)
- Nalla Theerpu (1959)
- Maa Babu (1960)
- Kathiruntha Kangal (1962)
- Babruvahana (1964)
- Bobbili Yuddham (Telugu) (1964)
- Oonche Log (1965)
- Govula Gopanna (1968)
Illness and death[]
Ghosh was affected by glaucoma and died in 1983.[2]
References[]
- ^ a b Guy, Randor (16 October 2015). "The wizard of lens". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f Vamanan (24 September 2018). "கேமரா கண் தந்த கமல் கோஷ்!" [Kamal Ghosh, who was given camera-like eyes!]. Dinamalar (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 26 September 2018. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
External links[]
- Kamal Ghosh at IMDb
- 1910 births
- 1983 deaths
- 20th-century Indian film directors
- 20th-century Indian photographers
- Cinematographers from West Bengal
- Film directors from Kolkata
- Tamil film cinematographers
- Tamil film directors
- Telugu film cinematographers