| In Merica
Our
roving reporter on events and places in Indian America.
The Ambassador Gets Some
Respect
For anyone who’s grown up in India, the topography
of the squat Ambassador car is as familiar as the
lap of a beloved old grandma. After all, for decades
and decades, it was the way modern India got around,
and was the ultimate dream of every burgeoning middle
class household.
Yes, a lot of life in India has been lived in the
Ambassador; it’s almost a part of the family. It was
private car and taxi, pride and possession. The seats
were tough, the handles hard, but oh, the places it
could take you!
First manufactured by Hindustan Motors in 1957, the
boxy exterior of the Ambassador still echoes the shape
of the 1950’s British Morris sedan. As family car
and political vehicle, air-conditioned limousine and
rattling taxi, it’s been a silent (sometimes noisy)
part of contemporary India, a ubiquitous presence
at weddings and funerals, on city streets and in the
bazaar. And it got its share of ridicule.
But now, the Ambassador is getting some respect! It’s
the star attraction at an exhibition at the Sackler
Gallery of the prestigious Smithsonian Museum.
And who better to document the Ambassador for posterity
than the late great photographer Raghubir Singh?
The Ambassador is the star of Singh’s last big project
before his death in 1999 and the result is A Way into
India (Phaidon), a wonderful book of images shot by
him across India. In Auto*Focus, the Sackler Gallery
(through August 10) not only shows 48 of these vivid
images, but actually gives visitors a chance to sit
in an Ambassador and watch footage of the ‘Amby’ and
Bollywood film clips.
“Throughout this series of photographs,” says curator
Debra Diamond, “Singh used the Ambassador car to see,
scale and order the world around him. The car plays
a role in everyday narratives — an altercation in
traffic, the transporting of chickens, a visit to
the Red Fort in Delhi, a family outing, a driver’s
nap — Singh not only uses the car as subject, but
also uses the car as a camera, a box with windows
and mirrors that offer opportunities for framing and
reflecting and transforming the landscape.”
Indeed, Singh’s images capture the frenetic rhythms
of Indian life through the Ambassador, and his affection
for his subject comes through in every frame. Perhaps
his own words, in the book, describe the Ambassador
best: “It is an organic part of bird shit-and cow
dung-coated India. It is the good and bad of India.
It is a solid part of that India that moves on, even
as it falls apart, or lags behind. In its imperfection
it is truly an Indian automobile.”
— Lavina Melwani
Mr and Mrs Iyer
You don’t need ten songs, dozens of costume changes
and scores of foreign locales to tell a beautiful
love story. From noted actress and director Aparna
Sen comes Mr. and Mrs. Iyer — a poignant, lyrical
film about romance amongst the ruins, in the middle
of riots.
Sen, who has directed memorable films like Sati, Paroma,
Picnic and Yugant, made her directorial debut with
an English language film, 36 Chowringhee Lane, winner
of the Grand Prix at the Manila International Film
Festival and the National Award for the Best Direction
in India. With Mr. and Mrs. Iyer she shows that she
has not lost her deft touch.
The story is about how ordinary lives intersect and
how even a chance encounter can transform a life.
Meenakshi Iyer, born and brought up in an orthodox
Brahmin family, is traveling alone with her infant
son, returning to her husband after a visit to her
parents. On the bus, she encounters Raja Chowdhary,
a wildlife photographer.
The calm and tedium of the journey is broken by an
angry mob of Hindu extremists, seeking to avenge the
burning of a Hindu village, are out on a rampage,
looking for Muslims.
Raja is a Muslim. Hardly knowing him, Meenakshi impulsively
saves him from the mob by pretending that they are
a married Hindu couple, Mr. and Mrs. Iyer. The film
follows their slow transformation, as they have to
rethink and re-evaluate their prejudices and their
entrenched beliefs. And somewhere along the way, as
they complete the journey, love blooms.
Mr. and Mrs. Iyer, which won two awards at the Locarno
Film Festival in Switzerland, was shown at the South
Asia Human Rights Film Festival at the Asia Society
in New York. The film has remarkable, nuanced performances
from Rahul Bose and Konkona Sensharma, who is Sen’s
daughter, in the lead roles. And the wonderful music
by Zakir Hussain makes every frame come alive, etched
in the memory.
“I wanted to make a very simple film, without any
cinematic gimmickry, about a man and a woman from
two different religious communities, who fall in love
despite religious differences,” says Aparna Sen.
“And I wanted to celebrate that love.”
--Lavina Melwani
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