Ram Gabale Explained

Ram Gabale
Birth Name:Ram Narayan Gabale
Birth Date:1924
Death Date:January 9, 2009
Death Place:Pune, India
Nationality:Indian
Spouse:Meera Gabale
Children:2
Occupation:Filmmaker
Known For:Social documentaries

Ram Gabale (died January 9, 2009) was an Indian filmmaker.[1] He is well known for a number of cinematic works including social documentaries, children's films, and television serials.[2] He started directing films in 1947. Gabale worked with critically acclaimed artists including film director V. Shantaram, Marathi writer P.L. Deshpande, and British actor and filmmaker Richard Attenborough. Gabale, originally from Kolhapur, moved to Mumbai and worked with the Rajkamal Studios. He soon obtained a break as a director at the Prabhat Studios in Pune. At Prabhat Studios, he directed his first movie Vande Mataram (1948) starring P.L. Deshpande and his wife Sunita, when he was 24 years old.

Prior to that, Gabale worked as an assistant director to well-known directors including Master Vinayak and V. Shantaram. His works included films like Mothi Manse, Dev Pavla, Dev Bappa, Chota Jawan, and Dharti-Akash. He also assisted the late P.L. Deshpande as a director on the popular television serial Batatyachi Chaal.

Gabale was a creative director who explored social themes that were hitherto unexplored during his time including one on working women called Postatil Mulgi as well a number of social documentaries exploring the socioeconomic spectrum of post-colonial India. Many of his films went on to win awards at the national and international level including a Mahrashtra state award for a documentary on Maharshi Karve, the Prime Minister's gold medal for children's film Phool aur Kaliyan, the Leipzig International Film Festival for Kale-Gore, and the Venice Film Festival for Jaldeep. Gabale also was the recipient of a special recognition from India Gandhi for his film Shatayu Kesari.

He held positions at prominent Indian cinematic institutions including the vice-principal at the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) as well as Film City in Goregaon and Films Division in Mumbai.

Filmography

Director

Assistant director

Notes and References

  1. News: Express News Service. Veteran filmmaker Gabale is no more. 13 December 2013. indianexpress.com. 10 January 2009.
  2. News: Film director Ram Gabale passes away. https://web.archive.org/web/20120927050826/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2009-01-10/pune/28015047_1_films-division-film-city-television-institute. dead. 27 September 2012. 13 December 2013. The Times of India. 10 January 2009.