24 May,2025 08:05 AM IST | Mumbai | Upala KBR
(From left) Co-stars Simi Garewal and Sharmila Tagore ahead of Aranyer Din Ratri’s screening; (right) (From left) Wes Anderson with Sharmila Tagore at Cannes. Pics/Getty Images, AFP, Wikimedia Commons, Instagram
The thunderous applause, the standing ovation, and the pride she felt to be at the receiving end of it all. It's a precious memory that Sharmila Tagore will keep close to her heart for a long time. "There was a standing ovation for a few minutes. People just clapped and clapped and clapped. We were getting tired of standing," laughs Tagore, who returned only a few days ago from the special screening of Aranyer Din Ratri (1970) at the 78th Cannes Film Festival.
On May 20, a restored 4K version of late Satyajit Ray's masterpiece was screened as part of the Cannes Classics section. Tagore and Simi Garewal, who had featured in the gem alongside late Soumitra Chatterjee, attended the event with noted American filmmaker Wes Anderson. Mention Anderson, who led Aranyer Din Ratri's restoration and presented it at the film gala, and Tagore heaps praise on him. "He was so respectful about Satyajit Ray, interested in and well-informed about his films. He was curious to know what Soumitra and Ray were like. I felt silly because I was not as well-informed [about his latest movies] as he was about ours. I have seen The Grand Budapest Hotel [2014], but not Asteroid City [2023], or I would have asked him about it."
The veteran actor is no stranger to the Cannes Film Festival. After all, her 1960 movie Devi, directed by Ray, was in contention for the Palme d'Or at the 1962 edition of the prestigious film gala; in 2009, she was part of the festival's jury. She is not surprised that this time too, it is Ray's creation that has taken her back to the French Riviera. Remembering the auteur who launched her in the movies, she says, "Sometime in the 1980s, I had interviewed Manik da [Ray] for Eyewitness [TV show]. When I asked him his favourite movies, he mentioned the Apu Trilogy, Charulata [1964], and Aranyer Din Ratri. Aranyer⦠was his first foray into contemporary cinema after his period films."
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It's a privilege to have worked with Ray. Tagore knows she is among those fortunate few who had the privilege many times over. How was the legend at work? It's a question, we're sure, many asked her. "I remember the scene in Aranyer⦠where my character shares that her mother had died in a forest. Before filming, Manik da came very close to me and read out that scene once. So, I did whatever he told me to do. As a director, he would read out the scene and then leave it to the actor to perform. If there was something he didn't like in your performance, he would come very close to you and say, âCan you do it differently, please?' We always got a lot of confidence seeing him behind the camera, looking at us. We knew he wouldn't let us perform badly."
Talking about Ray without mentioning Chatterjee is almost impossible. Tagore, who starred alongside the late Bengali actor in several films, must have missed him in Cannes. "Yes, and Rabi da [Rabi Ghosh, actor] too! I miss Soumitra continuously. He was one of my dearest friends, and he was not just a good actor; he could sing, write, and paint. He was truly a Renaissance man."
With Cannes behind her, Tagore now hopes that Aranyer Din Ratri's restored version is released in India. In fact, the veteran actor urges that the classics of Indian cinema be restored. "If films are not restored, they will disappear. By restoring them, the new generation can see these films. I will request Shivendra Singh Dungarpur to make sure that Aranyer⦠is released in theatres across India."
1962
Sharmila Tagore's Devi was in contention for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival
2009
The veteran actor was part of the film festival's jury