In memoriam
Gerson da Cunha 1929-2022
Why
was I sitting in a darkened hall watching Toni Patel rehearse Rajika Puri as Portia in The
Merchant of Venice? I do not remember. But I do remember the doors of the
auditorium opening behind me and Gerson da Cunha
sweeping in, clad in his trademark white chikan kurta, carrying a portfolio of some kind, trailing
busyness. He stopped when he saw me, ÔDear boy,Õ he said. ÔDo you mind if I
ignore you? I am almost late.Õ I looked at my watch. It was a few minutes to
four. ÔGerson,Õ said Rajika.
ÔThe Gerson!Õ He acknowledged this with a bow. He
smiled at Toni Patel. ÔDo you need a minute?Õ she asked. ÔTo gaze upon all of
you, yes,Õ Gerson said. ÔMislike
me not for my hurry.Õ There was a little flurry of laughter and after taking a
turn around the stage and stamping a bit in a corner, he returned, in
character, as Morocco.
ÔMislike
me not for my complexionÉÕ The voice, that voice, rolled out into the dark
theatre. It was a voice that held a knowingness, an
acknowledgement of its own greatness. It was also a voice that acknowledged the
Englishness of the lines for its diction was precise, the pentameter was
treated with delicacy and suddenly, I was back in college, back to being Ôthe
whining schoolboy, with his satchel/and shining morning face, creeping like
snail/unwillingly to school.Õ There were many Gersons
around and this man, the man with the voice and the undeniable stage presence
was only one of them.
I remember meeting him in Imtiaz DharkerÕs flat in London,
decades later. Time had done some damage, so much that I began to admire the
courage it must have taken to get himself on a plane to yet another film
festival; I actually helped him pack his bags. We had a great lunch on that
rainy day in late May and he told some elegant stories. I suggested that he
should write a memoir. He said that he thought that would mean being
self-important. Instead, Imtiaz suggested a series of
essays, and she drew him a graphic, a design for the whole.
She remembers that day too:
ÔIt was a diagram of how he might plot his autobiography, the many pillars of
his life and the web of connections between them. Before Gerson
came we would draw up a list of plays and he went to everything. We all know he
had a voracious appetite for theatre, but on his last visit we discovered that
the Barbican Arts Centre downstairs reserved places for wheelchair users and
then he was unstoppable. It was truly a case of ÒWhere thereÕs a will thereÕs a
wheelchairÓ. When he was home, over breakfast or dinner, he wanted to read and
hear poetry. I will always think of him at this table, reading the lines by
Jackie Kay on my chandelier of poems: ÒThe dead donÕt go till we do, loved ones./ The dead are still here/ holding our handsÓ.Õ
ImtiazÕs drawing – another passion Gerson
and I shared – looked like a grove of trees, a metaphor for the many
lives he had led: as ad man, as dramaturge, as social communicator.
Many years later, I was at
work on a book on the painter Mehlli Gobhai and I thought it would be a good idea to meet one of
his oldest friends. I called Gerson on his landline
because everyone knew that his mobile was with his driver. ÔTalk about Mehlli, dear boy?Õ he said, ÔAny time after twelve.Õ That
was the time he rose from bed, a nocturnal animal if ever there was one. He had
his breakfast and we chatted. He illuminated Mehlli
in a few sentences (ÔHave you ever noticed that he came back from the US after
decades of staying there without a trace of an accent?Õ) and suddenly we were
talking about Gerson. I am used to this but this
time, I had the good sense to come home and make notes.
Gerson told me that his mother had wanted him to be a doctor
and so when he finished school he had joined the science section at St.
XavierÕs College. It was here that he encountered the men and women who would
make up his circle of friends for the next seventy years of his life. It was
also here that he would start acting in earnest. ÔEvery year, the college would
put on a play that was staged on the feast of St Francis Xavier. That year,
there were such a plethora of talent that it was decided that there would be
two one-act plays instead of a full-length one.Õ He told me about Mehlli playing the angel of death and about himself as a
spy with a broken leg, awaiting his death. And then suddenly he was off.
ÔI finished college and
wrote off to the University of Nottingham; I did not want to be a doctor but I
had enjoyed chemistry and thought I might make it as a researcher or something
of that sort. I got a letter back saying that the university was swamped with demobbed soldiers so could I wait a year and then they
would be glad to have me. I was walking in the Fort when I saw a huge signboard
on Alice Buildings for Reuters. John Turner was the head; he and his wife Mavis
were friends of my parents. I had a year to kill and so I went to meet him and
he said that if I had nothing better to do with myself, I should join them. And
so I did.
He worked there a while, he
says and then ÔI got my annual leave from PTI and went off for a Catholic
retreat at St JosephÕs in Bangalore. Jeetu Parekh was
there and he said, ÒOn your way back, drop in at Mahabaleshwar.
I did and he announced that Niranjan Jhaveri was there and we were all to go for a night drive
with some young women who were their friends. They were daughters of
industrialists and so they had a car. There we were, Niranjan,
Jeetu and I and these two young industrielles.
We stopped at KayÕs Point and Niru pretended to drive
off the edge of the cliff. The young women squealed in mock horror and he
stopped. One of the young women protested that she was not going to allow such
shenanigans and grabbed the keys. We got out of the car, stretched our legs and
enjoyed the coolness of the night, the stars, the shapes of the hills. We made
our way back to the car. The land was uneven and lit only by the headlamps.
Then the young lady who had the keys said, ÒOh my,Ó in a startled voice and
vanished from sight. She had fallen a thousand feet from KayÕs Point. We called
and shouted but there was no reply. When we started to think rationally, we
realized that the only thing to do was to drive back to town, roust the
citizenry out of their beds, muster up some help from among them and come back.
Only she had the keys so it was decided that the three of us would walk back to
town while one of us would stay behind in case she should call or turn up
miraculously. The others turned to look at me so I agreed to stay. They left
and soon after the carÕs headlights dimmed and went out. The darkness was complete,
encompassing, velvety and still. You must remember that KayÕs Point was also
famous for tiger sightings. They returned hours later and some hardy locals
made the descent using ropes and brought her body up. She had died almost
instantaneously.Õ
He mopped up the last piece
of his fried egg with toast.
ÔI donÕt know if it was the
retreat or that moment when a young life was extinguished so abruptly but when
I came back to PTI, I realized I had stopped learning. I wasnÕt being allowed
to cover the things I wanted to cover, to talk about the real problems. And so
I quit. I was again at a loose end. The chemical dreams had quite faded and one
day, I went to meet Mehlli. We were going out for
lunch and he was already at J. Walter Thompson. He was a star, an art director
who had found his match in Josephine Tuor, the best
copywriter in the business. She was married to the head of Sandoz, hence the Tuor. Do you know how she landed the job?Õ
I confessed ignorance.
ÔMark Robinson worked with
JWT. He had a great voice and he and I and Josephine were doing a show together
for All India Radio. We had rehearsed and were waiting to record the programme. We had a colleague Ananda
De whose girlfriend, Nell, had left for England on the AnchorlineÕs
SS Corfu that day. Michael said, ÒAnd so Ananda
must have been waving as the ship parp-parped on its
way out of the harbour. What line of poetry does that
remind you of?Ó Josephine did not hesitate: ÒElegy to a Country Churchyard,Ó
she said. My jaw dropped. Michael raised his eyebrows. Josephine intoned: ÒThe
Corfu tolls our De of passing Nell.Ó She got a job in copy immediately.Õ
ÔYou must write an
autobiography,Õ I began.
ÔToo self-important,Õ he
said. I thought back to the Imtiaz drawing. ÔI was
thinking of essays about the experiences I have had, not about me,Õ he said.
ÔThat might suit me better.Õ There were plenty of experiences.
Gerson moved to Lintas where he
would create a culture that encouraged creativity, that
favoured people over processes. Shyam
Benegal remembers that when he came to Bombay for the
first time he worked in an ad agency for two or three months and Ôapplied to Lintas when I heard there was a vacancy. I didnÕt expect to
get a job but I did know Alyque Padamsee
through the Theatre Group. I had worked with Alkazi
there; someone told them I could do make up. I donÕt know who it was but I was
doing their faces. Making a horrible job of it, if truth be told, but no one
complained. I just got lucky, I suppose. And when there was a vacancy, someone
suggested I go meet Gerson. He talked to me five
minutes and said, ÔYouÕve got it.Õ I said, ÔThatÕs it?Õ And he said, ÔWell, you
wanted a job? You got the job.Õ But oddly it was he who sat me down a couple of
years later and said, ÔYou could spend the rest of your life here. And I know
you want to make films.Õ He got me into Lintas and
then he encouraged me to leave again and thatÕs how I joined Sylvester da
CunhaÕs ASP (Advertising, Sales, Promotion) and met Dr Verghese
KurienÉÕ
Naveen Kishore, publisher
of Seagull Books, who knows everyone worth knowing, remembers the ad-man: This
was back in the day when I was doing audio-visual presentations and being paid
the glorious sum of 1500 rupees a day for my time. Pretty
good money for the 1970s. I remember being hired by Lipton for my
theatre lighting razzmatazz to help create a special audio-visual for their
soon-to-be launched tea flamboyantly named Top Star! The Lipton account was
handled both by Clarion and Lintas. This was a
Clarion assignment.
ÔI remember and we had a
jingle that was sung by Donald Saigal and Pam Crane.
The audio-visual was at the Taj Coromandel which was
supposed to be by way of a treat for the marketing guys. I had six elaborate
projection screens set up with the help of Western Outdoors who were the only
ones who had Kodak projectors at the time. I remember using a battery of 32
slide projectors! And so the slides lit up, the packaging which was all silver
foil and magenta was unveiled in a burst of stage smoke and moving beams of
light, and then a spotlight caught the stadium where the marketing manager was
standing and he began his spiel. And so forth. It all went off smoothly and
afterwards, I was relaxing backstage with the crew I had brought down from
Calcutta and the legend walked in. Gerson himself.
ÒWho was responsible for putting this together?Ó he asked. I knew who he was of
course, one of the big guys at Lintas, so I put up a
finger like a coy schoolboy. He said, ÒJolly good show, young man. And if it
hadnÕt been for that reversed slide in the thirty-sixth minute on the left
screen, it could have been a Lintas showÓ.Õ
Demolished! ÔHe was right of course. There was a reversed slide but in the
hundreds of slides we had on all those screens, I thought I was the only one
who noticed it. And that it would slip by. And it almost did. No one else
caught it. Except The Gerson.Õ
Everyone had a Gerson story. Roger Pereira was a boy of twelve when Gerson (at the age of 22) came to his school to judge a
competition. ÔHe was the exact fit for a role model for me, for anyone in the
world of communications.Õ Bachi Karkaria
remembers that when she needed someone to balance off her telling of the Nanavaty case which had been played as ÔUpright Parsi Naval Officer is cuckolded by Sindhi PlayboyÕ, Gerson came to the rescue, telling her of how Prem Ahuja was actually a very
nice guy. ÔThere were these stories about how Ahuja
would feed women some yellow powder that would make them susceptible to him,Õ Karkaria said, over the phone. ÔBut when I told Gerson about them, he laughed and said, ÒAhuja had no need of potions and powders. He had charm
enoughÓ.Õ
Takes one to know one.
If anyone knows all the Gersons, it would be Uma da Cunha, who should in her own
right be better known as one of those who has worked relentlessly, espousing
the cause of Indian cinema abroad. They were married for ÔFifty three years,
not counting the time that he kept me waiting. It took a stupendous push to get
him to walk down that aisle, I have to tell you. My father finally had to
administer that push. ÒDonÕt hurt my daughter,Ó he said and Gerson,
poor fellow, walked down that aisle to what he saw as a loss of freedom,Õ she
said.
It wasnÕt. Gerson once told me a story about himself walking down a
boulevard in Paris. ÔRather enjoying the sight of myself as a flaneur, really. And in a window, I spotted a face, such an
interesting face, I thought immediately, ÒUma should like to have that face on
record,Ó and I turned around to say something and it was Uma!Õ She was almost
as surprised. ÒWhat are you doing here?Ó she asked but when the surprise died
down, we went and had une demi-tasse
together.Õ
ÔHe
was a flamboyant man when I met him, a typical ad-man,Õ says Uma. And here it
is important to remember that in those days, the admen were larger than life.
ÔIf you had to be somebody in those days, you had to be in advertising,Õ says Bachi Karkaria. ÔAnd theatre.Õ
Uma agrees. ÔHe was used to the spotlight, he revelled
in it. And I found that a little difficult to take. But then he went to Brazil
and came back a different person. He was more thoughtful, more introspective.
And the humanitarian streak he had in him had broadened and deepened. He turned
outwards from himself and that was when I fell in love with him again.Õ
*
That stint in Brazil marks
the beginning of a Gerson who connected with the city
in a way that few others did. He was always available for a cause, he would
always show up. When he died suddenly, a shocked friend from Bandra reported, ÔHe was expected to come to a meeting in Bandra tomorrow.Õ A pause and then, ÔHe was the only SoBo chap who would make it all the way out here.Õ
I couldnÕt believe that Gerson was gone. I had received an email from AGNI (Action
for Governance and Networking in India) signed by Gerson
– just one of the many hats he wore through decades of social service
– detailing all the monies received, from the three-figure donations to
the large chunks of change that his friends had made over to the organization
with which Gerson hoped he might enthuse the youth to
take a greater role in the democratic functioning of the state.
ÔHe was a little
disillusioned towards the end,Õ said his long-time friend, the writer Saker Mistry. ÔBut that didnÕt
stop him from doing what he could. We would go to those evenings at his home
and often we were told that Gerson was off to some
meeting somewhere in the North of the city and was on his way home by train, or
something like that.Õ
For Mistry,
those evenings harked back to the salons of Paris, the at-homes of the
Bloomsbury Group. ÔA motley crowd,Õ Mistry remembers.
ÔPeople we knew, of course, and extraordinary people whom one would ask in
oneÕs snobbish way, ÒWho on earth is that?Ó only to discover that Gerson had found someone else who interested him and who he
had invited over. Because there was a largesse about him, thatÕs the only word
I can think of.Õ
The largeness of Gerson, his barrel chest, his episcopal personalityÉ
ÔDid you know he was called
the Bishop?Õ Mehlli asked me once. ÔNo,Õ I said.
ÔSomething to do with Jean Valjean?Õ
Something
to do with Charles Correa actually.
It is said that Charles Correa saw Monica at a party and later asked Gerson to take him over to see her. The lady was busy but
her maid went in and told her that there were two very handsome men waiting,
one was very tall and the other looked like a bishop. No wonder then that the
sculptor Fredda Brilliant used him as her model for
the youth of India standing by Ram Manohar Lohia on his way into Goa. Those were the glory days for this
small band of golden boys and girls. This Gerson da
Cunha probably saw his city as a Paris of the East, just as his maternal
grand-uncle J. Gerard Da Cunha had. He lamented its death in Seminar:
ÔHow does the Bombay of the
Thapars, the world class city of mathematician and
physicist Homi Bhabha,
economist and journalist Sachin Chowdhury,
architect and urban planner Charles Correa (his great but doomed Twin City
across the harbour!), painters Husain and Raza, thinkers and constant visitors Vikram
Sarabhai and D.D. Kosambi, industrialist J.R.D. Tata
and the less-known folk who manned the vital support systems of the more famous
names, how does such a city become a provincial backwater which is what Mumbai
is today? How does a physically magnificent city by the sea become a decaying,
slum-ridden megalopolis shambling towards destruction?Õ
(https://www.india-seminar.com/1999/481/481%20de%20cuhna.htm)
The 1950s were indeed a
beautiful time but only if you were a part of the beautiful people. This was
not something the tribe saw or accepted. There were families scrabbling to make
a living, refugees scratching at the rockface of the
city, there were shortages and millworkers were doing twelve-hour shifts.
ÔNostalgia did not get in
his way,Õ says Padmini Mirchandani,
long-time associate with whom he and Bal Mundkur would put together Ad Katha, a ÔbookÕ the
story of their lives in advertising. ÔHis memory of what the city had been like
powered his determination to improve it.Õ
But although we knew him
from Bombay First and from AGNI, Gerson thought of
himself differently. At another meeting, just after the Brazilian government
had honoured him with the Order of Rio Branco, he seemed mildly pleased. ÔYou know, of all this,
the only thing that matters to me is that I managed to reduce the mortality
rate of infants in Brazil?Õ
I nodded. Surely there
should have been more about it in the papers? ÔIf he sought out the spotlight
in his youth,Õ said Uma da Cunha, Ôtowards the end, he developed an aversion to
it. After the award, when people wanted to feature him or interview him, he
would ask me to fob them off.Õ
Much later I heard that Pooja Vir, the hospitality
consultant, was working with Gerson and I heaved a
sigh of relief. That was another story someone was saving. When the fell news
came, that Gerson took ill in the morning and was
gone by noon, I called Pooja who was distraught. We
talked the next day and she said sadly that it had been an idea that she should
work with Gerson on Ôwhat we would never call his
autobiography. Instead, we called it his scrapbook. He was supposed to talk to
me and I was supposed to make notes but we found quite soon that it would not
work. He needed to be doing this on his own, he said, and so we called it off.Õ
VirÕs was a family connection (her mother is Padmini Mirchandani), a village
connection, the little village of Old Bombay clinging to the fringe of the Oval
Maidan. When the Oval was Ôcleaned upÕ, Gerson was delighted. When I pointed out that it could
hardly be considered a public space when it had been fenced in, gates locked at
night, he was unimpressed. I pointed him to Why Loiter by my friends Shilpa Phadke, Shilpa Ranade and Sameera Khan, about how women feel much safer in a park
with no barriers around it, but he argued that it was about the park. I said a
public park could not be a public park if the public could not use it. He
maintained that all use is mediated by some agency or the other. But we agreed
to disagree on that.
We disagreed about many
things but not about sectarianism and the city, not about the cacophony of
raised voices and thinning skins, not about the collapse of a way of life that
had been cherished before 1992, the annus horribilis of the city by the sea. He wrote a book of
poetry and I approached it gingerly, wondering whether it would be embarrassing
and found instead that he had written poems, on the death by depression of a
friend, on chickoos and these startling lines:
Absolution may lie here at
last,/atop this throat of land between/bolts of silken
water smoothed out among islets. It is here they lurk/flat in concealment, the
lessons I must learn. The cure of quiet distancing.
Never owning more/than I could lose as daylight lets the sun go with punctual
grace. /Here is pardon without penance,/the forgiveness
in understanding /that I must accept or never leave.
(Pardon without Penance)
Jerry Pinto
poet, novelist, short story writer,
translator,
and journalist, Mumbai
* This piece first appeared in
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