Jeevan Prabhat

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Jeevan Prabhat
British India
LanguageHindi

Jeevan Prabhat (Dawn Of Life) is a

Renuka Devi,[4] with Mumtaz Ali, Maya Devi and M. Nazir.[5]

The film deals with the social evils of the

Harijan
, bings censure and misunderstanding from her husband and society.

Plot

Set in a village, a young Brahmin couple Nandlal (Mumtaz Ali) and Uma (Devika Rani) are unable to have any children. The husband plans to take another wife, Padma. Ramu (Kishore Sahu) belongs to the potters family, where Uma normally spent most of her time before marriage. The friendship has been frowned upon as Ramu is from the Harijan caste. Nandlal sends Uma to her father's house, where she renews her friendship with Ramu. Nandlal sees Uma talking to Ramu (Kishore Sahu). While at her father's house, Uma discovers that she is pregnant. Misunderstandings arise when Nandlal gets suspicious about Uma and Ramu, but all is set right by Padma, Nandlal's second wife. She clears Uma's name, and gets Nandlal and Uma together before walking out of their lives.

Cast

  • Devika Rani as Uma
  • Mumtaz Ali as Nandlal
  • Kishore Sahu as Ramu
  • Renuka Devi
  • Chandraprabha
  • Maya Devi
  • Vimala Devi
  • Aloka Aloka
  • Tarabai Solanki
  • Saroj Borkar
  • Kamta Prasad
  • P.F. Pithawala
  • M. Nazir
  • N. M. Joshi
  • G.S. Vaishampayan

Review

Ad from the cine-magazine Filmindia, December 1937

Jeevan Prabhat was released on 2 November 1937, at Minerva Talkies, Bombay. Baburao Patel, the Filmindia editor, in his review of December 1937, called it Osten's "better work than ever before". Saraswati Devi's music composition and Wirsching's cinematography were praised, as was Niranjan Pal's screenplay, "a good story with plenty of entertainment". Devika Rani was hailed for scoring "another triumphant". Renuka Devi was praised for her looks but criticised for her acting. Kishore Sahu was stated to be a "big disappointment".[2]

The audience reception was good with the film running for over 17 weeks in Bombay, while doing good business in the rest of the country too, becoming a commercial success.[7]

Production

The film starred Kishore Sahu with Devika Rani, who was cited as a "bankable star".

Achhut Kanya was made in six weeks.[7] In a little over four years, Osten had directed about sixteen films for Bombay Talkies.[9]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Saraswati Devi, with lyrics by J. S. Casshyap. The singers were Devika Rani, Balwant Singh, Mumtaz Ali, Saroj Borkar and Saraswati Devi.[10]

Song List

# Title Singer
1 "Tum Meri Tum Mere Sajan" Balwant Singh, Devika Rani
2 "Bane Chandni Ka Palna Jhoole Chanda Sa Lalna" Devika Rani
3 "Ek Chandi Ka Hai Mandir Sone Ki Murat Sundar" Mumtaz Ali, Devika Rani
4 "Hori Aayi Re Kanha Bruj Ke Basiya" Saraswati Devi
5 "Kyun Janam Diya Bhagwan Gar Ro Ro Ke Marna Tha"
Renuka Devi
6 "Mera Lalna Jhoole Palna" Devika Rani, Saroj Borkar
7 "Mujhe Pehchante Ho Hanh Mujhe Tum Jaant Ho" Devika Rani, Mumtaz Ali
8 "Un Motorwalon Ke Yahan" Devika Rani, Balwant Singh
9 "Chale Thay Bade Dushman-e-Jaan Bankar" Balwant Singh
10 "Chal Chal Re Chakwa Ghar Ghar Ghar"

References

  1. ^ "Jeevan Prabhat". gomolo.com. Gomolo. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Patel, Baburao. "Review". Filmindia. 3 (8): 36. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  3. . Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  4. . Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  5. ^ "Jeevan Prabhat". citwf.com. Alan Goble. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  6. . Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  7. ^ a b Patel, Baburao (April 1938). "Filmindia". Filmindia. 3 (12): 13. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  8. . Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  9. ^ "Prem Sanyas". San Francisco Silent Film Festival. Silent Film.org. Archived from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  10. ^ "Jeevan Prabhat". muvyz.com. Muvyz, Ltd. Retrieved 9 April 2015.

External links