Young Achievers

Young Achievers

FTII award winners

F
our talented students of the Film
and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune were conferred top honours at the 53rd National Film Awards of the Union information and broadcasting ministry at a gala event staged in New Delhi on August 7.

Ganesh Gaikwad, a final year film direction student, won the national award for best direction and was conferred the swarna kamal (gold medal) and a cash prize of Rs.20,000 for his 24 minute documentary Voices Across the Ocean. Shot in London, it features the India link of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

"I’m thrilled this documentary, which I have dedicated to my father Shankar, a retired military officer and an avid BBC radio fan who introduced me to the BBC in my childhood, won a national award. My docu-drama tells the nostalgic story of my father’s life long link with the BBC," says Gaikwad.

Another FTII student Paramvir Singh, who graduated this year, bagged the award for best cinematography to win a rajat kamal (silver medal) and a cash prize of Rs.10,000. He was in-charge of the camera crew of Parsiwada, Tarapore Present Day, a 22 minute documentary which profiles Mumbai’s Parsi Community. "The award has been given for its visually poetic depiction of the Parsi community, with imaginative use of lighting and compositions," says the award citation.

A rajat kamal and cash prize of Rs.10,000 was also awarded to Anmol Bhave for audiography in the 32 minute Closer. And to make the 53rd National Film Awards function a memorable evening for FTII, Vibhu Puri won a special mention (direction) for his 27 minute feature film Pocket Watch.

The rain of awards won by FTII students is a sign that the institute (estb.1960) which went through a long period of troubled times and experienced prolonged student agitations during the past few years, has recovered its momentum. Following the resignation of its controversial director Mohan Agashe in 2002, under the leadership of Tripurari Sharan (IAS), this pioneer film institute is back on track. In addition to restoring its three-year integrated film and cinema study programme which had been scrapped by the Agashe administration, FTII has introduced new postgrad diploma programmes in animation, computer graphics and screenplay writing. "The several prestigious awards which our students have won shows that when there’s an environment conducive to learning and experimentation, a lot can be achieved," says Sharan.

Which is good news because the brain dead badshahs who rule Bollywood — the world’s largest (in terms of number of feature films produced annually) feature films factory —need all the help they can get.

Michael Gonsalves (Pune)

Sarika Sehrawat

S
arika Sehrawat (28), acclaimed as India’s most famous woman car racer and rallying enthusiast, is poised to make a comeback on the racing/ rallying circuit after a break of nearly two years due to a freak accident. Now happily married to Arush Vohra, an automobile engineer with whom she has promoted a car modification and performance enhancing company, Sehrawat is all set to participate in the Great Desert Rally scheduled to be flagged off next February.

Sehrawat made a spectacular entry into the male dominated world of motor racing and car rallying in 2001, by winning the women’s title in the Raid de Himalaya and Great Desert Rally twice consecutively. "Right from my school days at Manav Sthali School in Delhi where I was into horse riding and skating, the thrill of speed pushed me to cycles, motorbikes and finally motor sport," says Sehrawat. A business graduate of Delhi’s Fore School of Management, she quit several corporate jobs to concentrate on motorsports. But lack of corporate sponsorship has prevented her from realising her dream of driving in international events.

"Organised motorsports is neglected in north India as there are no practice tracks. Besides the only major sponsor of motorsports, the Chennai-based MRF Ltd has concentrated its events in the south. I was briefly sponsored by JK Tyres and was a member of its motor racing team. But JK Tyres suddenly withdrew from motorsports in 2004," says Sehrawat.

Having survived the school of hard knocks, the young rally driver has acquired considerable knowledge and insights about this esoteric sport. According to her though motorsports is unsupported right now, its status is set to transform for the better as mindsets change in the new more prosperous world. But she cautions aspirants this is a capital intensive vocation and without corporate and institutional support it’s an expensive proposition.

That’s the advice Sehrawat is practicing instead of merely preaching, as she readies to re-enter the sport — now her vocation — with a bang.

Autar Nehru (Delhi)