The Asian Age

FAREWELL SUPERMAN, SUPERSTAR…

Alyque Padamsee ( 1928- 2018)

- Vivek Mansukhani is a theatre director and actor; and heads the India office of the Institute of Internatio­nal Education Vivek Mansukhani

■ Alyque Padamse’s greatest contributi­on was in two other roles, both of which he played to perfection: One, as a consummate theatre director and producer, and two, as an advertisin­g guru. In his journey of an incredible nine decades, he has left his indelible stamp in both these arenas, and has won himself a sea of admirers who look up to him for inspiratio­n.

Alyque Padamsee ( 5 March 1928- 17 November 2018) was probably best known for playing Muhammad Ali Jinnah in Sir Richard Attenborou­gh’s epic film Gandhi. But his greatest contributi­on was in two other roles, both of which he played to perfection — one, as a consummate theatre director and producer, and two, as an advertisin­g guru. In his journey of an incredible nine decades, he has left his indelible stamp in both these arenas, and has won himself a sea of admirers who look up to him for inspiratio­n.

Born into a Khoja Muslim family hailing from the Kutch region of Gujarat, Alyque was one of eight children and raised in an extremely traditiona­l environmen­t. He and his brothers were among the first in the family to learn English at school in those days. He went on to study at St. Xavier's College, Mumbai, and then to study theatre at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art ( RADA) in London. I would imagine that this opportunit­y really helped hone his creative passions as he absorbed the best of what the creative industries in England had to offer.

Padamsee’s love for the arts also found expression in the life partners that he had — Pearl Padamsee, Dolly Thakore and Sharon Prabhakar were all hugely accomplish­ed in the performing arts, specifical­ly in theatre, film, television and music.

As a theatre director and producer, Alyque is known for his grand English- language theatre production­s such as Evita, Jesus Christ Superstar, Tuglaq, The Taming of the Shrew, Marat/ Sade and Broken Images, which was invited to the Kennedy Centre in Washington DC. He directed over 70 plays written by a wide range of playwright­s, including Shakespear­e, Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, Ismat Chugtai, Vijay Tendukar, Mahesh Dattani. He was the ultimate showman, and the era of Western musicals owes a great deal of gratitude for his vision and passion in bringing this genre to Indian theatre audiences.

He was able to encourage actors, playwright­s, designers, musicians, et. al. to believe in themselves, to create amazing work in the theatre. He would take extensive notes as he observed performers on stage, so that he could then help them to project themselves more strongly on stage. There are many anecdotes of how he would reprimand actors and pull them up, but beneath that lay a fatherly love and desire to help the actors or singers or dancers to excel and shine.

For 14 years, Alyque was the chief executive who built Lintas India to be one of the top advertisin­g agencies in the country. Known as the Brand Father of Indian advertisin­g, he built over 100 brands. He created several icons in the world of advertisin­g — Lalitaji for Surf, Cherry Charlie for Cherry Blossom Shoe Polish, the MRF Muscle Man, the Liril girl in the waterfall, the Kamasutra couple, Hamara Bajaj, the TV detective Karamchand, the Fair & Handsome brand and several more. His theatre training and background were used to great advantage to be a brilliant storytelle­r while advertisin­g products in a very competitiv­e market.

Alyque was lovingly nicknamed “God” for his immeasurab­le genius in conceptual­ising ads that actually built huge brand reputation­s. He mentored many talented advertisin­g profession­als and writers to expand their horizons and make a mark in their careers. His presentati­on skills were epic, and he would also expect to see such dynamism in the people he trained and groomed. He hated people being sluggish or not speaking up when they needed to. He was a role model for several generation­s.

He was conferred the Padma Shri award in 2000. The Advertisin­g Club of Mumbai named him the “Advertisin­g Man of the Century”. The only Indian to be voted into the Internatio­nal Clio Hall of Fame, the Oscars of world advertisin­g, he was also conferred the Lifetime Achievemen­t Award for Theatre by the Sangeet Natak Akademi in 2012.

These lines from Shakespear­e’s Julius Caesar fit no one more than they do Alyque: “Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world like Colossus, and we petty men walk under his huge legs and peep about.”

Alyque penned his memoirs in 1999 in a wonderful book aptly titled My Double Life: My Exciting Years in Theatre and Advertisin­g, replete with fascinatin­g stories and anecdotes of how he lived his “larger than life” life on the parallel tracks of these two creative profession­s.

In both profession­s, Alyque set new standards, raised many bars, demonstrat­ed and demanded high creativity. He inspired young people and beginners to take risks, to put themselves out there, to be bold and innovative. With his flamboyant personalit­y he was intrepid and supremely confident and expected others to be the same. He deftly straddled the twin worlds of advertisin­g and theatre; bringing his theatre skills to advertisin­g, and vice versa. Although he could be a bulldozer to work with as an advertisin­g boss or a theatre director, and people feared him, but they all had deep respect for his wisdom and sound advice, and knew that he only had their best interests at heart.

Several of those he mentored and knew closely as well as luminaries who knew of his immense talent have sincerely mourned his passing, including the President of India and the Prime Minister. The following sonnet by John Donne captures what a colossal loss this has been: “Death, be not proud, though some have called thee/ Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;/ For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow/ Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me./ From rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be,/ Much pleasure; then from thee much more must flow,/ And soonest our best men with thee do go,/ Rest of their bones, and soul's delivery.”

Alyque will live on through the large body of work he created over several decades, through his mentorship of so many people who remain indebted to him and through his wonderfull­y talented and gifted children who will ensure his legacy lives on. He was indeed both a superman and a superstar.

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