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Filmmaker Jagat Murrari no more

Noted filmmaker and former director of the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) Jagat Murari passed away recently.

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Noted filmmaker and former director of the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) Jagat Murari passed away recently. He was 85. He is survived by his wife, daughter and three sons.

“He had been suffering from cancer and died on Friday at his Pune residence amid family and friends,” daughter Radha Chadha told DNA.

Murari studied filmmaking in the US before joining the Films Division in Mumbai. He later got associated with FTII first as a lecturer and later as a director.

“In those days, he was one of the few people to have acquired a degree in filmmaking,” said FTII dean Satish Kumar, who studied sound recording at the institute during Murari’s tenure. Those who have followed his work insist that Murari’s contribution to the industry is noteworthy since he did 50 years ago what is considered world class today.

“The institute that spawned a number of leading Bollywood lights flourished under his tutelage,” said Kumar.

Murari, known for his quick wit and persuasive manner with temperamental students, headed FTII for nine years between 1962 and 1971 — a period when a new breed of talented actors and directors (including Jaya Bhaduri, Shabana Azmi, Subhash Ghai among others) graduated from the institute. Most of his students remember him as a polite, kindhearted and dedicated man.

“Jagat Murari was a thorough gentleman who cared for his students. He constantly tried to reinvent teaching methods in filmmaking at FTII, the first national institute of its kind in Pune,” said Ghai.

“He never antagonised anyone and went about his work with quiet determination,” Kumar said.

The acclaimed filmmaker won the first ever President’s gold medal for his movie Mahabalipuram in 1954. His films won several national awards and international acclaim at festivals in Berlin, Venice, Edinburgh, San Francisco and Cannes.

“He saw filmmaking as a way of building the nation. He raised the calibre of the Indian film industry by bringing in structure and professionalism,” said  wife Lakshmi Murari.

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