May 18, 2024

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Swami Dada changed Dev Anand. It changed the way he looked at filmmaking

On the 100th birth anniversary (Dev Anand was born on 26 September 1923) of the “original Jawan”, veteran photojournalist NK Sareen pays his tributes to the Guide actor


Picture Talk/By NK Sareen

I met Dev Anand for the first time at a party in 1975, but it would take me seven years to actually sit down and talk to him. I remember one evening we spoke at length about his film Swami Dada and his ambitious plans surrounding the film’s release. It was at the Oberoi, a five-star hotel, at a party hosted by him for the preview of a different film, whose name I do not recall.

But my real meeting with him took place in Bombay (now Mumbai) on the set of Swami Dada. Those days all the photographers working for The Indian Express, Screen, its film weekly, and other publications were on strike, and the newspapers were getting published from Ahmedabad. I was asked by the editor of Screen to take pictures of Dev’s Swami Dada shoot.

Dev Anand as Swamy Dada in the 1982 film.

The pictures of that shoot were published as a double-page centerspread. The pictures really came out nicely and were very different from the usual shoots done by the staffers.

The editor told me that Dev was very happy with the pictures and wanted to meet me. I called Dev one day on the number the editor had given me, which happened to be Dev’s personal number. After pleasantries and thankyous, he invited me to his office on my convenient day after checking with him in the morning about his availability in the office.

I went and met him in his office, and had a long chat with him, basically, he asked about me and my work and at the end asked me if I would be willing and available to accompany his unit for his other film out of Bombay or out of India for a location shoot. The trip was fully paid so I agreed, and Dev felt quite happy promising me to inform me well in advance, of the place and dates of the shoot when finalised. That, alas, never materialised as after a few days I had to return to Delhi for some reason and the shooting schedule of the said movie was still not decided.

Dev Anand with Prem Nath and Hema Malini.

But during my Bombay stay after the Swamy Dada episode Dev had invited me home for some exclusive pictures of him with his son Sunil whom he was going to launch in a film as a hero for his film career.

At his residence, I saw a very old big car parked right in front of the entrance door to his bungalow with flat tyres. On asking him why an old big car with flat tyres was parked so prominently Dev replied that that was his first car, and he had an emotional attachment to it, though it was no longer in use.

Dev Anand directs Padmini Kolhapuri.

There was one great quality in Dev Anand. He was an eternal optimist, and never once did I see him depressed because a film didn’t work out. If a film didn’t perform well at the box office, he would immediately pick up the pieces and start working on his next.

I have never seen a man who could wipe off his slate so easily. But Swami Dada changed Dev Anand. It didn’t change Dev Anand’s eternal optimism, but it did change the way he looked at filmmaking.


In this column, ‘Picture Talk’, veteran photojournalist NK Sareen, a former Photo Editor at Expanse International and a writer, shines a light on some of the pictures of personalities he has clicked over the years, with a touch of nostalgia. The views expressed here are the author’s own and The News Porter bears no responsibility for the same.