Rituparno Ghosh (31 August 1963 – 30 May 2013) was an Indian film director, actor, writer and lyricist.
After pursuing a degree in economics, he started his career as a creative artist at an advertising agency.
He received recognition for his second feature film Unishe April which won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film.
Having won 19 National Awards, along with his contemporaries Aparna Sen and Goutam Ghose, Rituparno heralded contemporary Bengali cinema to greater heights.
Rituparno Ghosh was born in a Bengali family on 31 August 1963 in Kolkata.
His father, Sunil Ghosh, was a documentary film maker and painter.
He completed his schooling at South Point School, and earned a degree in economics from the Jadavpur University, Kolkata.
He also had a master's degree in economics from the same university.
He was one of the few openly LGBT figures in Indian cinema and is considered an icon of the queer community of India.
Before his career in film, Rituparno Ghosh worked at the Response India advertising agency and became known as an especially effective copywriter in Kolkata.
1980
He was particularly noted for composing succinct, appealing one-liners and slogans for ad campaigns in Bengali during the 1980s.
At the time, the trend in Kolkata was to translate all-India advertisement campaigns originally composed in English and Hindi into Bengali.
Ghosh won recognition for his ability to initiate campaigns in Bengali.
Among his noted ad campaigns were Sharad Samman and Bongo Jiboner Ango for the antiseptic ointment, Boroline, and others for Frooti, the largest-selling mango drink in India.
Some commentators noted that his power to appeal to consumers through ad campaigns helped make his films appealing to wider audiences, particularly to middle class Bengalis.
1990
In 1990, Rituparno received his first break in documentary filmmaking when his own agency, Tele-Response, a member of the Response family of companies, was commissioned to make a documentary on Vande Mataram for Doordarshan.
1992
Ghosh made his directorial debut in the feature film Hirer Angti which was released in 1992, a family-friendly film based on a novel written by Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay about inheritance and conjuring tricks, and starring Moon Moon Sen, Basanta Choudhury, and others
1994
His second film, Unishe April, starring Aparna Sen, Debashree Roy, Prosenjit Chatterjee and Dipankar Dey, with a soundtrack composed by Jyotishka Dasgupta, was released in 1994, and won two National Film Awards in 1995, including Best Feature Film.
It portrayed the relationship of an award-winning dancer and her emotionally abandoned daughter, who aspires to be a doctor.
This film received both critical acclaim and commercial success.
1997
His next film, Dahan, released in 1997.
won Ghosh the National Film Award for Best Screenplay Dahan was based on the true story of a woman who was molested on a street in Kolkata, and of another woman, a witness who came forward to bring legal action against the perpetrators, but became frustrated by the callousness of society, including the victim's family.
1999
In the 1999 film Asukh, Ghosh dealt with the relationship between a young film star and her father who must depend unwillingly on his daughter's earnings.
The film won National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali.
2000
Bariwali, released in 2000, starring Kirron Kher, Rupa Ganguly and Chiranjeet Chakraborty, portrayed a lonely and withdrawn middle-aged woman (Kirron Kher) who rents out her large house for film production and fantasises about the charming and very much married director, who flirts with her but, predictably, disappoints her.
Kher won National Film Award for Best Actress.
Ghosh won the National Award for Best Direction for Utsab, released in 2000.
The film dealt with the decadence of a large family whose members now live away from the ancestral home, and meet only during the traditional Durga puja held on the premises.
2002
The 2002 film Titli was another narrative about a mother-daughter relationship—the teenage daughter has a crush on an older film star who, years ago, had an affair with the mother.
2003
The 2003 film Shubho Mahurat, a whodunit based on Agatha Christie's book, The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side, starred the veteran actresses Rakhee and Sharmila Tagore, alongside Nandita Das, in major roles.
The same year, Ghosh released his film Chokher Bali, based on a novel written by Rabindranath Tagore, in which Bollywood actress Aishwarya Rai worked with the director for the first time.
2004
In 2004, Ghosh's first Hindi film, Raincoat, an adaptation of the short story, The Gift of the Magi (1906), by O. Henry was released.
In this film he worked with Aishwarya Rai again.
2013
Ghosh died on 30 May 2013 in Kolkata after a heart attack.
Ghosh was also one of the openly homosexual personalities in Indian cinema.
Ghosh was influenced by the works of Satyajit Ray and was an avid reader of Rabindranath Tagore.
Tagore's works are frequently referenced to in his films.
He also made a documentary titled Jeevan Smriti on the life of Tagore.
In his career spanning almost two decades, he won 12 National and numerous International awards.
2019
His unreleased Bengali movie Sunglass (also known as Taak Jhaank) was honoured and released at the 19th Kolkata International Film Festival.