Sai Paranjpye


Sai Parānjpye is an Indian movie director and screenwriter. She is the director of the award-winning movies Sparsh, Katha, Chasme Buddoor and Disha. She has written and directed many Marathi plays such as Jaswandi, Sakkhe Shejari, and Albel.
The Government of India awarded Sai the Padma Bhushan title in 2006 in recognition of her artistic talents.

Early years

Sai Paranjpye was born on 19 March 1938 in Mumbai to Russian Youra Sleptzoff and Shakuntala Paranjpye. Sleptzoff was a Russian watercolor artist and a son of a Russian general. Shakuntala Paranjpye was an actor in Marathi and Hindi films in the 1930s and 1940s, including V. Shantaram's Hindi social classic – Duniya Na Mane, and later became a writer and a social worker, was nominated to Rajya Sabha, Upper House of Indian Parliament and was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 2006.
Sai's parents divorced shortly after her birth. Her mother raised Sai in the household of her own father, Sir R. P. Paranjpye, who was a renowned mathematician and educationist and who served from 1944 to 1947 as India's High Commissioner in Australia. Sai thus grew up and received education in many cities in India, including Pune, and for a few years in Canberra, Australia. As a child, she used to walk up to the home of her uncle Achyut Ranade, a noted filmmaker of the '40s and '50s, on Fergusson Hill in Pune, who would tell stories as if he were narrating a screenplay. Sai took to writing early in her life: Her first book of fairy tales – Mulānchā Mewā, was published when she was eight.
Paranjpye graduated from the National School of Drama, New Delhi in 1963.

Career

Paranjpye started her career in All India Radio in Pune, Maharashtra, India as an announcer and soon got involved with AIR's Children's Program.
Over the years, Paranjpye has written and directed plays in Marathi, Hindi, and English for adults and children. She has written and directed six feature films, two children's films, and five documentaries. She has written many books for children, and six of them have won national or state level awards.
Paranjpye worked for many years as a director or a producer with Doordarshan Television in Delhi. Her first made-for-TV movie – The Little Tea Shop, won the Asian Broadcasting Union Award at Teheran, Iran. Later that year, she was selected to produce the inaugural program of Bombay Doordarshan.
In the 1970s, Sai twice served as the Chairperson of Children's Film Society of India, which is a government of India organization with the objective of promoting and ensuring value-based entertainment for children. She made four children's films for CFSI, including the award-winning Jādoo Kā Shankh and Sikandar.
Paranjpye's first feature film Sparsh, was released in 1980. It won five film awards, including the National Film Award. Sparsh was followed by the comedies Chashme Buddoor and Kathā. Kathā was a musical satire based on the folk tale of a tortoise and a rabbit.
She next made the TV serials Ados Pados and Chhote Bade. Paranjpye worked as director, writer and narrator for the Marathi drama Maza Khel mandu de. It was played on 27 September 1986 at Gadkari Rangayatan, Thane.
Paranjpye's subsequent movies include Angoothā Chhāp about the National Literacy Mission; Disha about the plight of immigrant workers; Papeeha ; Saaz ; ; and Chakā Chak, which was aimed at creating public awareness about environmental issues.
She also made the serials Hum Panchi Ek Chawl Ke, Partyana and Behnaa. Sridhar Rangayan assisted her in the film Papeeha and in the serials Hum Panchi Ek Chawl Ke and Partyana
Sai directed several documentary movies, including Helping Hand, Talking Books, Capt. Laxmi, Warna Orchestra, and Pankaj Mullick. Sai's 1993 documentary Choodiyan, on the anti-liquor agitation in a small Maharashtra village for the Films Division, received the National Film Award for Best Film on Social Issues.
In 2001, Sai made the movie for children, Bhago Bhoot. At the first Indian International Women's Film Festival in Goa in 2005, a review of Sai's movies was held, and it featured her best movies. She headed the jury in the feature film category of the 55th National Film Awards for 2007.
In July 2009, Sai's documentary film Suee was released, emerging from the South Asia Region Development Marketplace, an initiative spearheaded by the World Bank. Suee explores a number of areas in the lives of injecting drug users including treatment, care, peer and community support, rehabilitation and the workplace, and was produced in partnership with the Mumbai-based NGO Sankalp Rehabilitation Trust. The 29 minute film was aired on Doordarshan on World AIDS Day, 1 December 2009.

Personal life

Sai was married to theater artist Arun Joglekar; they had a son, Gautam, and a daughter, Winnie. Sai and Arun separated after two years. They remained friends until Arun's death in 1992. After their separation, Arun acted in Sai's Sparsh and Katha. Their son, Gautam Joglekar is a director of Marathi films and a professional cameraman, and their daughter Winnie Paranjpe Joglekar is a homemaker. Winnie acted in many of Sai's movies, dramas and TV serials in the 1980s. Winnie and her husband, Abhay, have two children; Abeer and Anshunee. Gautam starred as the male lead in Nana Patekar's directorial venture Prahaar with Madhuri Dixit playing the female lead.
Sai Paranjpye is a multimedia personality. She made her own way, creating entertainment that obliterated previous material and created an indelible line between mainstream and parallel cinema.

Awards

;National Film Awards
;Filmfare Awards
;Social Awards