25,000 Artefacts In This Archive On Indian Cinema

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    • Publish Date: May 30 2016 5:04PM
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    • Updated Date: May 30 2016 5:04PM
25,000 Artefacts In This Archive On Indian Cinema

 The Film Heritage Foundation in Mumbai houses some of the best movies of Bollywood 

On the periphery of Tardeo's AC market in Mumbai, inside a climate-controlled vault in a large office building, Raj Kapoor's Mitchell camera sits alongside K L Saigal's harmonium and P C Barua's stopwatch. This is the Film Heritage Foundation (FHF), set up in 2014, where conservationists restore film posters, censor certificates and old photographs wearing powder-free gloves that leave no fingerprints. Posters are stored in acid-free plastic jackets — imported from the US — while old film magazines are stacked in special cardboard boxes flown in from Italy. "Liquids aren't allowed here," says founder Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, "So even the hourly temperature and humidity reports are written in pencil." While directing 'Celluloid Man', a film based on the life of archivist P K Nair, Dungarpur was struck by how little of India's cinema history was preserved. "We made 1,700 silent films but only 5 complete films and 15 fragments remain," he says, "By the time the National Film Archive of India (NFAI) was set up in 1964, we had lost 70-80% of our heritage." This realisation fed Dungarpur's desire to create a non-profit archive — parallel to the NFAI — that would preserve old movies, conduct film-restoration workshops and collect artefacts like posters, tickets and props. "A true archive doesn't have just a film but everything revolving around a film-maker including their personal notes, scripts and belongings," he explains, using the analogy of a Gandhi museum, which might display his clothes, writings and books. The collection was initially drawn from Dungarpur's personal archive but has grown because of donations from film families. That's how they got hold of singer K L Saigal's tabla, harmonium and Urdu 'shahiris', scrawled on the back of train tickets when he was still an employee of the Indian Railways. And the archive is growing. Every day, film posters, newspapers and magazine articles get added to the collection along with advertisements of new film releases in the 'Bombay Times'. During our visit, trained paper conservationists were busy restoring P K Nair's personal notes and Dungarpur demonstrated how cuts in the 'Duplicate' trailer had been restored on film turntables. Currently, FHF has a staff of six and an advisory council that includes Jaya Bachchan and Gulzar. In 2015, they also became members of the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF). Dungarpur's favourite item in the collection? P C Barua's stopwatch. It was bought by the director to time the dialogues in the 1936-version of 'Devdas', he explains. Playback had just been introduced, so the director needed to time each shot before it was dubbed, he adds. Barua's son — named Dev after 'Devdas' — gave the watch to Dungarpur before he died. "I value it a lot because it was a very personal gift," he says.


THE BIG COLLECTION

Today, the archive has over 25,000 artefacts spread across their premises in Tardeo and Navi Mumbai. This includes 3,500 posters, over 500 films and 8,000 song booklets, which in pre-IMDb days were treasured as a repository of lyrics, cast names and plot synopsis. Future plans include setting up a conservation centre, which will have space for exhibitions, a digitised catalogue, and annual film festivals, lectures and workshops.

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