Navroze Contractor

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Born7 July 1944[1]
Wai, Maharashtra[2]
Died18 June 2023 (aged 79)[3]
Bengaluru, India
AlmamaterFTII, Pune[4]
OccupationsFilmmaker, cinematographer, motorbike enthusiast
Navroze Contractor
Born7 July 1944[1]
Wai, Maharashtra[2]
Died18 June 2023 (aged 79)[3]
Bengaluru, India
Alma materFTII, Pune[4]
OccupationsFilmmaker, cinematographer, motorbike enthusiast
Years activeLate ’60s to 2023
SpouseDeepa Dhanraj (wife)[5]

Navroze Contractor (1944–2023), fondly known as ‘NC’, was an Indian filmmaker, cinematographer, and motorbike enthusiast.[6] He was involved in India's parallel cinema movement and is best known for his work in Duvidha, Devi Ahilya Bai, Percy, Hun Hunshi Hunshilal, and Lalach.[4]He shot more than 50 documentary films, many of them in collaboration with his wife and well-known filmmaker Deepa Dhanraj.[5][7]

He was the only male member of Yugantar, India's first feminist collective founded in 1980 by Deepa, Abha Bhaiya, and Meera Rao.[8]

His photos of jazz musicians are displayed at the Smithsonian Museum. Certain other photos are part of the collection at London's Tate Modern art gallery.[7][9]

The Family of Man, a traveling photography exhibition Navroze saw in 1957 in Ahmedabad, was his main influence in becoming a photographer.[5][10]

Navroze studied painting and photography at the Faculty of Fine Arts, MS University, Vadodara, while simultaneously training in additional still photography under Bhupendra Karia. This was in the early to mid-’60s.[7][3][5]

Navroze studied direction and cinematography at the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, then worked in two feature films and a few documentaries before interning with Laszlo Kovacs in the US.[5][3][7]He also gained experience in video production at the Sony Corporation in Japan.

In the late 1960s, Navroze briefly worked as a still photographer on some Ford Foundation projects in Punjab. During this time, he assisted Mani Kaul in scouting locations for his first film, Uski Roti.[6][5]

In 1972, Kaul engaged Navroze to shoot Duvidha, the director’s third feature and first color film.[5]Duvidha is known for its rich color schemes reminiscent of classical paintings.[11]

Navroze has clicked more than 20,000 still photos over more than six decades, from the 1960s to 2021. These encompass a broad range of subjects (e.g., jazz musicians, ballet artists, wrestlers, laborers, refugees, protesters, ordinary people). The photo collections span several countries: Argentina, China, India, Iran, Mongolia, the Netherlands, and the UK.[1][10][12][6]

Over 160 of these photos were featured in a traveling exhibition titled "Photography Strictly Prohibited," which toured many Indian cities such as Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Delhi, Gurugram, Hyderabad, and Pune during 2024-2025. The exhibition was curated by Anuj Ambalal (photographer), Himanshu Panchal (photographer/filmmaker), and Sanjiv Shah (filmmaker). All three were close friends and collaborators of Navroze.[12][10][13]

Apart from Kaul, Deepa, and Sanjiv, Navroze has worked with the following filmmakers: Chetan Shah, Georges Luneau, Jayoo Patwardhan and Nachiket, Ketan Mehta, Luke Jennings, Martha Stewart, Pattabhi Rama Reddy, Pervez Merwanji, Pierre Hoffman, and Shankar Nag.[14][7]

In 2021, he published his first book Dreams of the Dragon's Children, based on his experiences filming a documentary in China during the mid-1980s. The book is a mix of travelogue, cultural commentary, and film history, offering a vivid portrait of China at a time of rapid transformation.[15]

On 18 June 2023, he died in a motorbike accident in Bengaluru.[16]

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