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Published 27 May, 2005 12:00am

Ismail Merchant ‘defined independence’

LONDON: Ismail Merchant, the Indian-born film producer who died on Wednesday, made such acclaimed period films, in partnership with Merchant Ivory, as Howards End, A Room With A View and Remains of the Day. Merchant Ivory won six Oscars since the pair’s famous partnership began in 1961 with German-born screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala.

Their films, particularly the adaptations of EM Forster’s A Room With a View and Howard’s End, helped revive audiences’ taste for period dramas. Fellow film producer Lord Puttnam said he was an ‘extraordinary talent’.

“What’s gone is a major character and a unique film producer - someone who completely defined independence in the film industry,” he said. Sanjeev Bhaskar, who interviewed Merchant on the BBC’s Kumars at Number 42, said he had a great sense of humour.

“A great creative light in the world has gone out,” said Mr Bhaskar, who starred in Merchant Ivory’s the Mystic Masseur.

Long partnership: Merchant produced almost 50 films for the company and also turned his hand to directing on a handful of occasions. He was born in Mumbai in Dec 1936 and educated in New York.

His first film was a short feature called The Creation of Woman, which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1961. Shortly afterwards, he met Ivory James in New York and they formed Merchant Ivory Productions.

The pair agreed that the company would produce English-language films in India for the international market. The collaboration went on to earn them a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for the longest partnership in independent cinema.

Their work was praised for being intelligent and literary, but made little money until the mid-1980s when A Room with a View became an international success. It was awarded three Oscars, including best screenplay, and was nominated for five others.

Merchant said in an interview with the Associated Press last year that their films worked because they told good stories. “It should capture something wonderful with some great characters whether it’s set in the past or in the future,” he said.

He did not like such films being referred to merely as costume dramas.

“People misunderstand,” he once commented. “If you wear costume and you’re in a stately home, yes, it’s a costume drama. But people don’t say that it’s also a good story.” Merchant also had a passion for food and wrote several books about cookery - including a collaboration with celebrity chef Madhur Jaffrey.

The film-maker also enjoyed cooking for his cast and crew on film sets. He died at a London hospital on Wednesday, surrounded by family and friends. – Courtesy BBC

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