Sneha Girap (Editor)

Chapal Bhaduri

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Movies
  
Just Another Love Story

Role
  
Film star


Name
  
Chapal Bhaduri

Years active
  
1955–present

Siblings
  
Ketaki Dutta

Chapal Bhaduri Chapal bhaduriChapal Rani Flickr Photo Sharing

Born
  
1938 (age 76–77)

Parents
  
Prabhadevi, Tara Kumar Bhaduri

People also search for
  
Kaushik Ganguly, Rituparno Ghosh, Ketaki Dutta, Prabhadevi

Chapal Bhaduri Unplugged - Legendary Female Impersonator of Jatra Theatre


Chapal Bhaduri is the last living female imitator in Bengali theatre and perhaps even in Indian theatre. He did female impersonation in Jatra, a form of Bengali folk theatre. In 2010, he starred in a Bengali Film Arekti Premer Golpo which was directed by Kaushik Ganguly and written by Ganguly and Rituparno Ghosh.

Contents

Chapal Bhaduri intersectionsanueduauissue22imageschatterjee

Early life

Chapal Bhaduri The Sunday Tribune Spectrum

He was born at Kolkata's Kali Dutta lane, as the youngest child of Tara Kumar Bhaduri, a theatre actor and Prava Devi, a theatre actress. Later in 1939, his family moved to Badamtala Lane of Goabagan area of Kolkata. He had three brothers and two sisters. Noted actor and singer, Ketaki Dutta is Bhaduri's youngest sister. With the backing of her mother, his acting career started at the age of only seven at Srirangam Theatre [now known as Biswarupa located at Northern Kolkata] where he played the role of Apurba in Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay's Bindur Chele. Later in 1955, he performed in Bengali Theatre named Ali Baba where he played the female character of Marjina.

[ চপল ভাদুরি ] Chapal Bhaduri Biography In Short | Jatra Bengali Actor | Bangla Video By CBJ


Theatre

Chapal Bhaduri The Sunday Tribune Spectrum

His voice is very thin and soft and has a distrinctly female tenor. After performing famale character in Ali Baba he was flooded with the female role in theatre. His performances in Raja Debidas, Chand Bibi, Sultana Razia and Mahiyashi Kaikeyi were big hits at that time and he became the leading lady of Bengal's jatra in the name of Chapalrani or Queen-Chapal. In the 1960s he was the highest paid 'actress' of Bengali Theatre. Chapal Bhaduri joined Natto Company in 1958. In the late sixties when women started to act in the theatre he found himself at a wrong end to cope up with the modern trend and he had to quit. In this time he worked with Kamala Production. Later he started to play Goddess Ma Shitala. His role in the semi-autobiographical Ramanimohan, a play produced in 2006, was his first full-length role as a male character,

Film

He was seen in tele-film Ushnotar Jonne and the film Arekti Premer Golpo. Both of these were directed by Kaushik Ganguly.

Chapal Bhaduri revived into fame after Naveen Kishore of the Seagull Foundation for the Arts had made a 44-minute documentary on the actor in 1999. Performing the Goddess — The Chapal Bhaduri Story focuses light on the man, who challenged financial penury to create a new performance — a monologue of Goddess Shitala. A tele-film Ushnotar Jonne, directed by Kaushik Ganguly also depicts part of his life. In this telefilm he made a cameo appearance. The third one is Arekti Premer Golpo (Just Another Love Story) (Bengali-English), a feature film directed by Kaushik Ganguly in which he narrates his life on camera.

Filmography

Actor
2010
Aarekti Premer Golpo as
Chapal Bhaduri
Self
1999
Performing the Goddess: Chapal Bhaduri's Story (Documentary short) as
Self

References

Chapal Bhaduri Wikipedia