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Mehboob Studio

Film and recording studio in Mumbai, India

Mehboob Studio

Summary

Film and recording studio in Mumbai, India

FieldValue
nameMehboob Studio
logoMehboob productions.jpg
logo_size200px
typePrivate
foundation
founderMehboob Khan
location100 Hill Road, Bandra (W), Mumbai, India
industryEntertainment
productsMehboob Productions Private Limited
servicesFilm studio, recording studio
homepage

Mehboob Studio is an Indian film studio and recording studio in Bandra (W), Mumbai, founded in 1954 by director and producer Mehboob Khan, who previously owned Mehboob Productions (founded 1942), and is most known for films such as Mother India (1957), which won the Filmfare Awards for Best Film and Best Director and was a nominee for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

It is spread over 20,000 square yards (4.2 acres) and includes five shooting stages.

The studio was used from November 2010 to January 2011 for the first-ever exhibition of sculptor Anish Kapoor in India; the other part was held at the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi.

History

A film set in making at Mehboob Studio's courtyard, in 2007.

Director Mehboob Khan, who started his directorial journey in 1935, had already established Mehboob Productions in 1942 and had made hits such as Anmol Ghadi (1946) and Andaz (1949). He started looking for land closer to central Mumbai, compared with older studios such as Filmistan and Bombay Talkies, which were in far-flung Goregoan and Malad. Eventually, he settled for seaside Bandra, then a quiet and marshy area, long before the Reclamation that took place later. The plot, close to historic Mount Mary's Church was bought in 1951 from Jaffer Bhai, a local Bohra Muslim. A portion of the land housed a school run by a Parsi woman and the rest had farmland for vegetables. The construction was completed in 1954.

Mehboob had made Aan (1952) and was in the midst of shooting the Dilip Kumar starrer, Amar (1954), when the studio opened its doors. Mehboob shot his next two films, Paisa hi Paisa and Awaaz, but it was not until he made Mother India here in 1957, that he tasted both critical and cinematic success again. Mother India went on to receive an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film nomination and won the Best Film and Best Director Best Film Awards at that year's Filmfare Awards.

Guru Dutt shot his iconic Kaagaz Ke Phool here, and actor-director Dev Anand shot many of his movies under the Navketan Films banner here, starting with Hum Dono and followed by Guide; he even maintained an office at the studio complex for 20 years.

Mehboob Khan could never recapture his mantle after the success of Mother India. His subsequent films flopped including his last one: Son of India (1962). When he died in 1964 at the age of 56, he left behind financial debts on his family. Son of India was the last film produced under the Mehboob Productions banner. The fortunes of the studio revived in the 1970s with the rights of Mother India reverting to the family, and a recording studio was added. In the coming decades it survived the onslaught of real estate development and a fire, which gutted stages 1 and 2 in December 2000.

Commemorative postage stamp

As a part of Khan's birth centenary celebrations, the Indian postal department released a commemorative stamp at a function held at the studios in September 2007.

The studio saw its reinvention as an arts and cultural space when its stage no. 3 was used from for the first-ever exhibition of sculptor Anish Kapoor in India, November 2010–January 2011 and later became the venue for the Mahindra Blues Festival 5 and 6 February 2011 and 11 and 12 February 2012.

Filmography at Mehboob Studio

YearFilmNotes
1992Tirangaa
1957Mother India
1962Hum Dono
1962Son of India
1963Sapni
1964Sangam
1965Guide
1966Amrapali
1970Johny Mera Naam
2005Black
2007Aap Kaa SurroorProducer
2009De Dana Dan
2010Ethan's House
2012Housefull 2
2012Dabangg 2
2013Chennai Express
2018Alexa

References

References

  1. "Filmfare Awards Winners List [Mother India (1957 film)]: Awards".
  2. Hetal Vyas. (1 November 2008). "Mehboob mere, Mehboob tere". Pune Mirror newspaper.
  3. Ranjona Banerji. (7 February 2011). "Mumbai, meri mehboob?". DNA newspaper.
  4. (4 November 2010). "Dates Announced for First Ever Exhibition of Anish Kapoor in India". [[British Council]].
  5. (1 February 2011). "Iconic studio now cultural hotspot". Hindustan Times, Mumbai.
  6. Karanjia, B. K.. "A many-splendoured cinema". New Thacker's Fine Art Press.
  7. Govind Nihalani, Saibal Chatterjee. (2003). "Encyclopaedia of Hindi cinema". Popular Prakashan.
  8. "Mehboob Khan profile and filmography".
  9. (13 August 2007). "Historic Mehboob Studio ticks away in anonymity". Hindustan Times.
  10. (28 January 2007). "Commemorative postage stamps 2007".
  11. (29 Nov 2010). "Anish Kapoor adds glitz to the Mehboob studio". CNN-IBN website.
  12. "Event Calendar - Mahindra BluesFestival". www.mahindrablues.com.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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