Cherd Songsri
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Cherd Songsri (Thai: เชิด ทรงศรี, died May 20, 2006) was a Thai film director, screenwriter and film producer. A maker of period films that sought to introduce international audiences to his vision of Thai culture, his best-known work is the 1977 romance film Plae Chow (The Scar), which earned more box-office receipts than any Thai film before it. It won a prize at the 1981 Three Continents Festival in Nantes, France.
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[edit] Biography
Cherd was born in Nakhon Si Thammarat Province. He was trained as a maker of nang talung shadow puppets, which were fashioned out of animal skins. He was also a school teacher in Uttaradit Province and then became an editor of publications for the Express Transportation Organization of Thailand. From there, he became an editor of the Movie and TV Weekly magazine of Lak Muang Daily newspaper. He wrote articles and short stories, as well as scripts for radio and television programs.
Norah in 1966 was his first film. He handled all aspects of its production, from script writing, to securing financing and shooting the picture. It was a method of work that he retained throughout his entire career. Another film was the comedy, Poh-pla-lai, starring Sombat Metanee. Both were the most successful Thai films of the 16-mm era.
Cherd studied filmmaking in the late 1960s at the University of California Los Angeles, and trained under director Walter Doniger at Burbank Studios.
His stay in the United States made him reflect on Thai culture and upon his return to Thailand, he established his own production company, Cherdchai, and set about making films that would present his concept of "Thainess" – idealized Thai values and culture of bygone years – to international audiences, making him the first Thai director to make films with international audiences in mind.
Films from this period include Khwam Rak (1973) and Pho Kai Chae (1975) and his most ambitious film, Plae Chow (The Old Scar) in 1977, starring Sorapong Chatree and Nantana Ngaograjang.
The story of a tragic romance between two peasants in rural Thailand, the Plae Chow was the biggest box-office hit up until that time in Thailand. It shared the Golden Montgolfiere at the Nantes Three Continents Festival with Eles Não Usam Black-Tie by Brazilian director Leon Hirszman. It was also voted as one of the world's 360 classic movies by the Museum of the Moving Image in London, Sight and Sound magazine and film directors and critics worldwide in 1998. The Old Scar was remade in 2002 as Kwan-Riam.
Some Thai critics said Cherd was promoting a stereotypical image of Thailand.
"When I produced Plae Chow, I used the slogan 'We must show Thai traditional style to the world'," Cherd told the Thai website Movieseer. "This produced a great deal of negative sentiment towards the picture, because some people believe that this is not a topic to be shown on film. I am a stubborn person though, and once I set my mind to including this in my films, well it's been in every film I have ever made. The press is always asking me when I will make a contemporary film, but now, no one is asking."
Cherd directed and produced a total of 18 films. His last film, Khang Lang Phap (Behind the Painting) in 2001 was based on the classic Thai novel by Kulap Saipradit. It was a remake of a 1970s film by another veteran Thai director, Piak Poster.
Among projects that he had hoped to make were a biographical film of Thai statesman Pridi Phanomyong as well as a movie that "tells the truth" about King Mongkut and Anna Leonowens of The King and I and Anna and the King fame, films that are banned in Thailand because of their portrayal of the king.
He battled cancer the last four years of his life, writing the book, Bantuek Kab Kwam-tai (A Diary of Death). He died at Ramathibodi Hospital in Bangkok.
Cherd was secretive about his age, saying he had stopped counting his birthdays at age 28. But in an obituary, The Nation reported his age was 75.
[edit] Partial filmography
- Norah (1966)
- Lampoo (1970)
- Poh-pla-lai (A Light in the Dark) (1971)
- Khwam Rak (1973)
- The Love (1974)
- Pho Kai Chae (1975)
- Plae chow (The Scar) (1977)
- The Two Worlds (1990)
- The Tree of Life (1992)
- Southern Winds (1993)
- Amdaeng Muen kab nai Rid (Muen and Rid) (1994)
- Khang lang phap (Behind the Painting) (2001)
[edit] References
- Veteran film director Cherd dies, Bangkok Post, May 21, 2006.
- "Legendary film-master Cherd Songsri succumbs to cancer at 75", The Nation, May 21, 2006.
- Director profile, Movieseer.com.
[edit] External links
- Cherd Songsri at the Internet Movie Database
- Cherd Songsri at the Thai Film Database