'It was wonderful being a woman on Doordarshan'
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'It
was wonderful being a woman on Doordarshan' Luku Sanyal, an English professor and one of the earliest faces on Doordarshan, has witnessed the birth of television journalism in India. There is scarcely a field of media that Sanyal has not ventured into. Newsreader with Bombay Doordarshan for eight years, anchor, speaker and writer of numerous award-winning newsreels and documentaries, she has the rare distinction of being placed in the A plus category by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. A walk down memory lane with Luku SanyalÂ…
When in college, Satyajit Ray (my father's associate and friend) had seen me at a wedding and asked my father if I would act in Devi, which he was casting for. I declined, giving priority to my studies. A wrong decision? Maybe. Teaching
career Some years ago, I also did a lot of stage and even went abroad with a Bengali play. As
a voice artiste My first audition at Films Division was rejected. Thereafter, I was taken on their voice panel in the B category. I soon started writing my own scripts and was promoted to the A category as both speaker and writer. In addition, I was a regular translator from Hindi to English. For the award-winning documentary Anand Bhavan, I did the script while Partap Sharma did the voiceover. The
break on TV I was nervous as hell and still recall the cameraman Ajit Naik's advice to me - "Remember that people who love you are watching you. Speak like you're speaking with them." My first TV appearance was on February 5, '74 and my father died on February 10. A few months and several TV programmes later, TP Jain and Kunwar Sinha, my friends from Doordarshan, told me about the daily English news to be telecast from Bombay. They coaxed me to apply and the auditions were held in May-June '74. I remember the huge crowds that had queued up to audition. During my turn, I read longer than the others and the choice of the selection panel was unanimous. Then our rehearsals began where we would record our own voices and replay them. Then on July 3, '74, the English news bulletin was telecast from Bombay for the first time. The opening panel consisted of Gerson DaCunha, Partap Sharma, Nirmala Matthan and me. Dolly Thakore joined us later. Those
years on TV Unlike in Films Division, where I would often be overlooked. Even when I wrote the script, a man would be asked to read it. A funny bias that worked against me was my bass voice. I lost out on a lot of commercial work because of the tenor of my voice, something that worked perfectly for the news. I read the news when Indira Gandhi was arrested, when SD Burman died, when Begum Akhtar breathed her last. The bulletins during the Emergency were a challenge. Stories were killed at the last minute. On December 31, '81, when I anchored the Marathi New Year's Eve programme on Doordarshan in the regional language, I received an astonishing amount of fan mail. And then on August 14, '82, I anchored the last Saturday news from Bombay Doordarshan. We bid adieu. It was a poignant occasion and I had a huge lump in my throat. After we wound up in Bombay, some years later, when I was in Delhi, I did an audition but was rejected on absurd grounds. The person-in-charge did not watch the recording! So I didn't pursue it anymore. Anyway, I am very busy with my other work. As
a mediaperson, then and now Among the better newscasters today is Vikram Chandra of NDTV. New
horizons I live in Bombay with my two daughters and cat. Almost all areas of education and communications interest me. |