Utpal Dutt,
born on 29 March 1929, Barisal, Bengal [now in Bangladesh] was an Indian actor,
director, and writer who was a radical figure in Bengali theatre and cinema for
more than 40 years.
Dutt was educated in Calcutta, where he founded the
Calcutta Little Theatre Group in 1947. He twice toured with the Shakespearean
International Theatre Company (1947–49; 1953–54) and was acclaimed for his
passionate portrayal of Othello. From 1954 he wrote and directed
controversial Bengali political plays, notably Angar (1959).
He was perhaps best known for such political dramas, which he often produced on
open-air stages in rural Bengal, as well as for his commitment to communist ideology.
He was arrested in 1965 and detained for several months because the ruling Congress
Party feared that his play Kallol was
provoking antigovernment protests in West Bengal. During the 1970s three
of his plays drew crowds despite being officially banned.
Dutt
appeared in some 200 films, beginning with Michael
Madhusudan (1950), and had considerable success as a
director, particularly for Megh (1961), Jhar (1978), and Mother (1984). An intense, dramatic actor, he did some of his
best work with the directors Satyajit Ray (Jana Aranya; Agantuk), Mrinal Sen (Bhuban
Som; Chorus), and James Ivory (Shakespeare
Wallah; The Guru). He also published books on Shakespeare and the
revolutionary theatre.
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