Satyajit Ray Age, Death, Wife, Children, Family, Biography & More
Satyajit Ray Age, Death, Wife, Children, Family, Biography & More
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Quick Infoâ
Hometown: Kolkata
Death Date: 22/04/1992
Father: Sukumar Ray
Bio/Wiki | |
---|---|
Nickname | Manik check sources Suprabha Ray - A Biographical Sketch |
Profession(s) | ⢠Indian Director ⢠Producer ⢠Screenwriter ⢠Composer ⢠Writer ⢠Graphic Designer |
Career | |
Debut | Film: âThe Apu Trilogyâ (1955) |
Last Film | âAgantukâ (1991) |
Awards, Honours, Achievements | International Awards ⢠1957: Selznik Golden Laurel, Berlin for the film, âPather Panchaliâ ⢠1979: Best Feature Film, Hong Kong Film Festival for the film, âJoi Baba Felunath (The Elephant God)â (1978) ⢠1980: Wington Award for each film, London Festival, for the film âApu Trilogyâ Indian Awards ⢠1958: Padma Shri ⢠1965: Padma Bhushan ⢠1985: Dadasaheb Phalke Award ⢠1992: Bharat Ratna Honours ⢠1974: Doctorate in Literature by the Royal College of Arts, London ⢠1978: Honorary degree from Oxford University ⢠1979: Honorable Prize for the contribution to cinema at the 11th Moscow International Film Festival ⢠1992: Honorary Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 64th Academy Awards by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars) |
Personal Life | |
Date of Birth | 2 May 1921 (Monday) |
Birthplace | Kolkata, West Bengal |
Date of Death | 23 April 1992 |
Place of Death | Kolkata, West Bengal |
Age (at the time of death) | 70 Years |
Death Cause | Heart and lung ailments check sources The Washington Post |
Zodiac sign | Taurus |
Signature | ![]() |
Nationality | Indian |
Hometown | Kolkata |
School | Ballygunge Government High School |
College/University | ⢠The Presidency College, Calcutta ⢠Visva-Bharati University |
Educational Qualification | ⢠Bachelor of Arts in Economics Honours check sources Satyajit Ray Organization ⢠Fine Arts check sources Satyajit Ray Organization |
Religious Views | Satyajit Ray was an atheist. check sources India Today |
Controversy | In 1960, during the promotions of the film titled âDevi,â Satyajit Ray talked about how the film was all about highlighting the religious narrow-mindedness. The general public slammed him for not being a Hindu and making such films against Hinduism. Satyajit was quoted saying in an interview "This happens in India all the time. We have a fairly backward audience here." check sources The Times of India |
Relationships & More | |
Marital Status (at the time of death) | Married |
Marriage Date | 20 October 1948 |
Family | |
Wife/Spouse | Bijoya Ray (Deceased) (Bengali actress and playback singer) ![]() |
Children | Son- Sandip Ray (Bengali film and music director) ![]() |
Parents | Father- Sukumar Ray (Deceased) (Bengali writer and poet) Mother- Suprabha Ray (Deceased) (Singer) ![]() |
Other Relatives | ⢠Bengali writer, painter, and entrepreneur Upendrakishore Ray Chowdhury was Satyajit Rayâs paternal grandfather. check sources Speaking Tiger Books ⢠Indian freedom fighter Deshbandhu was Satyajit Rayâs wifeâs uncle. check sources Confluence ⢠Bengali singer Sati Devi was Satyajit's sister-in-law. check sources Nupur De Roy Music - Facebook ⢠Indian actress, singer, and Kishore Kumar 's first wife Ruma Guha Thakurta was Satyajit's niece. check sources The Times of India ⢠Satyajitâs mother, Suprabha Ray, was the granddaughter of philanthropic zamindar Kali Narayan Gupta. check sources The Daily Star |
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Film Director | Jean Renoir |
Actor(s) | Naseeruddin Shah , Nana Patekar |
Musician | Beethoven |
Some Lesser Known Facts About Satyajit Ray
In 1942, Satyajit Ray dropped his fine arts course in mid-year at the Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal as he lost interest in the course and it was the same day when Calcutta was bombed by the Japanese for the first time.
Satyajit Rayâs ancestors belonged to the Chakdah village in the Nadia district of present-day West Bengal and migrated to Sherpur in East Bengal.
It was Rabindranath Tagore who wanted Satyajit Ray to join the Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan as Tagore was a close friend of Satyajitâs grandfather.
During the first half of the 18th century, his ancestors migrated to the village Masua in Katiadi Upazila of Kishoreganj district.
Satyajitâs ancestors were Bengali Kayasthas (a Hindu caste of Bengal) who later adopted the name âRayâ since the Rays were âVaishnavasâ who were known as the Lord Vishnu worshippers.
Satyajit Rayâs father, a Bengali writer and poet Sukumar Ray passed away on 10 September 1923 after suffering from black fever. Satyajit was only 2 years old at the time of his fatherâs passing.
Satyajit Ray and his wife Bijoya Ray were first cousins and they met for the first time when he was 10 and she was 14. Bijoya was the daughter of his uncle Charu Chandra Das and she came to live with his family in 1931 after the death of her father.
Satyajit and Bijoya secretly got married at Bijoyaâs sisterâs house in Mumbai as mothers were against their marriage as they were first cousins; however, they later agreed and accepted their marriage.
In 1943, Satyajit joined the advertising industry and he was appointed as the junior visualiser at the Calcutta office of DJ Keymer. He was later promoted to the position of art director of the office.
In the same year, Satyajit shifted to the publication house named âSignet Pressâ which was started by D. K. Gupta. The founder gave Satyajit the role of designing book cover designs for the company as per his own independent artistic ideas.
In 1947, Satyajit along with Chidananda Dasgupta, R. P. Gupta, Bansi Chandragupta, Harisadhan Dasgupta and others, founded a film club named âCalcutta Film Society.â It was Indiaâs second film society in the city of Kolkata.
Satyajit Ray (second from right) during the founding ceremony of the âCalcutta Film Societyâ (1947)
On 3 March 1949, both Satyajit and Bijoya got married again as per the Bengali rituals which included all their family members.
In the same year, the French filmmaker Jean Renoir came to Kolkata for the shoot of his English/Bengali film âThe Riverâ (1951). After meeting him, Satyajit decided that he wanted to become a filmmaker too.
Satyajit Ray met Jean Renoir in 1949 who was scouting for locations in Kolkata for his film,'The River' #IndiaFrance pic.twitter.com/57ZTkSCDec
â Indian Diplomacy (@IndianDiplomacy) April 11, 2015
In 1950, Satyajit took a trip to London where he watched the Italian filmmaker Vittorio De Sicaâs film âBicycle Thievesâ (1948). That film was a huge reason why Satyajitâs interest in films grew. That film was the main inspiration behind Satyajitâs debut film titled âPather Panchaliâ (1955).
Satyajit worked as the assistant director of the American Technicolor drama romance film titled âThe Riverâ (1951).
Jean Renoir, the director of the film âThe Riverâ (1951)
In 1955, Satyajit released the first part of the âThe Apu Trilogyâ titled âPather Panchaliâ which was an adaptation of Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyayâs 1929 Bengali novel of the same name.
The poster of Satyajit Rayâs debut film titled âPather Panchaliâ (1955)
In 1955, the Government of India and the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting inaugurated a university named âSatyajit Ray Film and Television Instituteâ (SRFTI).
âSatyajit Ray Film and Television Instituteâ
The SRFTI emphasises on providing education about filmmaking; Direction and screenplay writing, Editing, Cinematography, Sound Recording and Design, Producing for Film & Television, and Animation Cinema.
Ray was the first person to deploy a teaser advertising campaign (a type of advertisement that gradually discloses information) prior to the release of his directorial debut film titled âPather Panchaliâ (1955).
In 1956, the second part of the trilogy titled âAparajitoâ was released which was the adaptation of the first half of Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyayâs novel of the same name.
The poster of Satyajit Rayâs Bengali film titled âAparajitoâ (1956)
In 1959, the final part of the trilogy was released titled âApur Sansar,â also known as âThe World of Apu.â It was the adaptation of the second half of Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyayâs novel âAparajito.â
The poster of Satyajit Rayâs Bengali film titled âApur Sansarâ (1959)
Ray was the second film personality after the English comic actor Charlie Chaplin to have been awarded an honorary doctorate by Oxford University.
After 1961, Satyajit started composing music for all his films and he also composed the music for many English and Bengali films including âShakespeare Wallahâ (1965), âGlimpses of West Bengalâ (1967), âHouse that Never Diesâ (1969), âBaksa Badalâ (1970), âGangasagar Melaâ (1970).
After 1961, Satyajit also designed all the publicity posters for his films.
In the same year, Satyajit restored and republished the Bengali childrenâs magazine named âSandeshâ which was founded by his grandfather Upendrakishore Ray Chowdhury.
The cover of the republished magazine titled âSandeshâ (1961)
Satyajitâs aunt Lila Mazumdar helped him a lot by being the co-editor and writing regularly for the âSandeshâ magazine.
In 1962, Satyajit directed his first Bengali film titled âKanchenjunghaâ which was based on his own life.
Still from Satyajit Rayâs Bengali debut film titled âKanchenjunghaâ (1962)
The Bengali film titled âKanchenjunghaâ (1962) was the first coloured as well as the first Indian anthology film.
In 1963 Satyajit Ray formed a non-profit cooperative organisation named âSukumar Sahitya Samabaya Samity Ltdâ to publish and manage the âSandeshâ.
In 1971, the then-king of Sikkim asked Satyajit to make a documentary about Sikkim being a state surrounded by land. The king was worried about China and India taking over his land. Satyajit ended up making a documentary titled âSikkimâ on the requested subject.
Satyajit Ray (extreme left) during the shoot of the documentary titled âSikkimâ (1971)
In 1975, Sikkim became part of India and the Indian government banned Satyajitâs documentary titled âSikkim,â which was later allowed in 2010.
He also wrote various books and some of which include âOur Films, Their Films (1976),â âBishoy Chalachchitra (1976),â âEkei Bole Shooting (1979), âToray Bandha Ghorar Dimâ (1992), âMy Years with Apu: A Memoirâ (1994), and âChildhood Days: A Memoirâ (2000).
The cover of the memoir written by Satyajit Ray titled âChildhood Days- A Memoirâ (2000)
Ray used Indian elements and calligraphy to create four Roman fonts, two of which are named after him, Ray Roman and Ray Bizarre, as well as Daphnis and Holiday Script. âRay Romanâ and âRay Bizarreâ won an international competition in 1971.
The fascination for calligraphy that Satyajit Ray had been harbouring since his childhood took shape in his illustrations and logos â designs that were type-centric & unique to his style. Ray created four Roman fonts for the English script â Ray Roman, Ray Bizarre, Daphnis
(1/5) pic.twitter.com/U06QtAOH0uâ Arth â A Culture Fest (@arth_live) July 7, 2020
In 1977, Satyajit directed the Hindi feature film titled âShatranj Ke Khilariâ which was also released in the English language with the title ââThe Chess Players.â The film was based on Munshi Premchand âs short story of the same name.
Satyajit Ray (right) with Sir Richard Attenborough on the sets of Shatranj Ke Khiladi (1977)
In 1982, he wrote an autobiography about his childhood years titled âJakhan Choto Chilamâ and in 1992, he published his memoir titled âMy Years with Apuâ which was all about his experiences of making âThe Apu Trilogyâ (1955-1959).
The book written by Satyajit Ray titled âMy Years with Apuâ (1992)
Satyajit Rayâs books have also been translated into English, German, Polish, French, Spanish, Italian and other Indian regional languages.
Satyajit Ray designed book covers for many famous books like Jibanananda Dasâs âBanalata Senâ and âRupasi Bangla,â Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyayâs âChander Pahar,â Jim Corbettâs âManeaters of Kumaon,â and Jawaharlal Nehru âs âDiscovery of India.â
Satyajit Ray had designed many famous book covers like Jim Corbett's Man-Eaters of Kumaon(translated version) and Jawahar Lal Nehru's Discovery of India!
He painted canvases in his own style.#SatyajitRayBirthCentenary #SatyajitRay pic.twitter.com/LLBhBlinBg
â Vision History (@VisionHistory) May 2, 2020
While shooting for his Bengali romantic drama film titled âGhare Baireâ (1984), Satyajit Ray suffered from 2 heart attacks due to which the shoot had to be stopped midway; however, later Satyajitâs son Sandip Ray shot the remaining film on his fatherâs instructions.
The poster of the Bengali film titled âGhare Baireâ (1984)
In 1987, Satyajit Ray directed a short documentary named after his father, Sukumar Ray. The documentary was made for the West Bengal government and was released on the occasion of Sukumar Rayâs 100th birth anniversary.
Documentary titled âSukumar Rayâ (1987) directed by Satyajit Ray
In 1990, Ray used the Gregorian Chant and the German orchestras of Bach and Beethoven in his Bengali film titled âShakha Proshakha.â
On 29 January 1992, Satyajit Ray complained about having breathing problems. He was then admitted to the Belle Vue Hospital in Kolkata. He stayed in the hospital for 87 days before passing away in April 1992.
He was voted seventh on the Sight & Sound Criticsâ poll of âTop 10 Directorsâ in 1992, making him the highest-ranking Asian filmmaker in the poll.
The Satyajit Ray Film and Study Collection was founded in 1993 by the University of California, Santa Cruz, and it holds Rayâs works in 35mm and videocassette formats. The collection includes his publications, artwork, writings, and still images.
In 2000, the Commonwealth of Dominica Post produced two stamps with a value of 1.65 dollars. Satyajit Rayâs picture was included on one stamp to celebrate the director and his work.
Stamps of the Commonwealth of Dominica Post
Ray, alongside Indian actress Madhabi Mukherjee, was the first Indian film personality to appear on a foreign stamp (Dominica).
In 2004, he was ranked 13th on the BBC poll of âGreatest Bengali of all Time.â
Ray was named one of the â100 Greatest Film Directors Everâ by Total Film Magazine in 2007.
In 2015, Bijoya Ray wrote an autobiography on Satyajit Rayâs life titled âAmader Kothaâ which was published before Bijoyaâs death in 2015.
Autobiography of Satyajit Ray titled âAmader Kothaâ (2015) written by Bijoya Ray
Satyajit held a record for the most Golden Bear nominations.
Satyajit Ray used to smoke cigarettes often on the film sets.
Satyajit Ray smoking during a BBC interview
Satyajit Ray was also a screenplay writer who wrote screenplays for many English documentaries including âA Perfect Dayâ (1948), âOur Children Will Know Each Other Betterâ (1960), âThe Tidal Boreâ (1960), âThe Story of Tata Steelâ (1961), and âThe Brave Do Not Dieâ (1978).
Satyajit was voted 22nd on the Sight & Sound Criticsâ and Directorsâ poll of all-time greatest directors in 2002, making him the fourth-highest-ranking Asian filmmaker.
He was also a music composer and had started composing the music for his own films. He composed music for many English and Bengali films like âShakespeare Wallahâ (1965), âGlimpses of West Bengalâ (1967), âHouse that Never Diesâ (1969), âBaksa Badalâ (1970), and âGangasagar Melaâ (1970).
Satyajit sang a few lines in his last directional âAgantukâ (1991).
Many Indian and international shows were based on Satyajitâs life and his career and some of the shows include âSouth Bank Show: Satyajit Rayâ (Melvyn Bragg for London Weekend Television, UK- 1978), âThe Music of Satyajit Rayâ (Utpalendu Chakravarti for NFDC, India- 1983), and âSatyajit Rayâ (Shyam Benegal for Films Division, India- 1984).
Satyajit Ray in a still from the âSouth Bank Show- Satyajit Rayâ (1978)
During his days in the advertising industry, Satyajit Ray was also inclined towards Bengali and English typographies and he was behind the production of many advertising campaigns.
When Satyajit was shooting for his debut film titled  âPather Panchaliâ (1955), he fell into a financial constraint due to which he had to sell his life insurance policy and also mortgaged his wifeâs jewellery to fulfil the shoot expenses.
Initially, Satyajit wanted to be an artist and make commercial artwork; however, one of his fatherâs friends advised him to study finance so that he could work for his own magazine house.
The American film director John Ford was Satyajitâs biggest inspiration in filmmaking.
Satyajit was the man who launched the careers of the Indian actresses Soumitra Chattopadhyay and Sharmila Tagore .
Satyajit Ray (left) with Indian actress Soumitra Chattopadhyay
On Satyajit Rayâs 100th birthday in 2021, the Directorate of Film Festivals honoured the late filmmaker with a âSpecial Retrospectiveâ during Indiaâs 52nd International Film Festival.
In 2021, Prakash Javadekar, the then-Union Minister of Information and Broadcasting, said that the Indian federal government would create an award in Satyajit Rayâs honour. The honour will be on par with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award.
In the same year, at the 52nd edition of the International Film Festival of India (IFFI), and in honour of Satyajit Rayâs birth centenary, the Directorate of Film Festivals renamed âThe IFFI Lifetime Achievement Awardâ to âIFFI â Satyajit Ray Lifetime Achievement Award.â
In 2022, the Sydney Film Festival screened ten Satyajit Ray films as a memorial to the late filmmaker.
In the same year, BFI Southbank began its programme with a thorough retrospective of Satyajit Rayâs earlier directorial work.
The Academy Film Archive has saved many of Satyajit Rayâs films, including âTeen Kanyaâ (1996), âPather Panchaliâ (1996), âMahapurushâ (2005), âNayakâ (2004), and âShatranj Ke Khilariâ (2010).
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