Mehreen Jabbar
Mehreen Jabbar is a filmmaker who, at a
young age, has an extensive portfolio. After, directing her first play
in 1994 when she was just 23 years old, Mehreen went on to create work
which ranges from short independent art films to commercial serials for television. Her success as a director can be assessed by the
fact that her work has appeared in many film festivals around the world
including The Hong Kong International Film Festival, The San Francisco
Asian-American Film Festival, and The Leeds Film Festival in U. K. to
name a few. At home, in Pakistan, her unconventional style of story telling
has earned her much acclaim and several awards.
Mehreen grew up around Pakistan's show business.
Her father, Javed Jabbar, is a filmmaker himself. He has also been running a highly successful
advertising agency for about 30 years which is where Mehreen got her first
exposure to the television world. After receiving a B.A. from St. Joseph's
college in Karachi, Mehreen went abroad to the United States in order
to study film and completed a two year program at UCLA. She describes
this experience as a crucial part of her training because her teachers
were working professionals from the film industry who were able to provide
real insights on the art and business of filmmaking.
After completing the program at UCLA, Mehreen
Jabbar returned to Pakistan to practice her craft professionally. Her
first play, in 1994, was called “Nivala” (Morsel) which was based on
a short story by Ismat Chugtai, one of the foremost authors in the Urdu
language. It was the first of what was to be a series of plays for television
based on stories by South Asian women writers. Unfortunately, the decision-
makers at the state-run television of that time declined from airing “Nivala”
because it was based on the work of an Indian writer and, subsequently,
the idea for the entire series was cancelled. Though this was a setback,
it did not deter Mehreen from doing what she loves. She continued to make
short films, feature length plays, and drama serials.
Most of Mehreen’s work has been for
the television. Unfortunately, the Pakistani commercial film industry
has experienced a sharp decline in popularity during the past two to three
decades. Due to the low quality of films being produced and the shady
atmosphere at cinema houses, going to a theater is not a viable form of
entertainment for the mainstream public. Thus, television remains by far
the most popular source of family entertainment. So that has been the
industry to which vast majority of writers, producers, directors, as well
as, actors turn who wish to hone their craft and create work with depth
and meaning for the audience.
Much of Mehreen’s work has focused
on the everyday lives of average Pakistani women and the conflicts they
experience from day to day. “I have focused mainly on women, maybe
just because I find that I can relate to [their] stories on a much more
personal level,” says Mehreen when describing her work. While other
directors have created fine plays which are obvious in their attempts
to raise awareness of women's rights, Mehreen enjoys the challenge of
applying subtlety to get her message across. Her viewers often find themselves
immersed in the minds of her characters in order to fully understand the
characters’ motives. Her tele-film, “Putli Ghar”’
(Puppet House), is an example of such work. It is a story of two young
couples living in the same building. The film focuses on the friendship
that develops between the two wives; one, a naïve newlywed, and the
other, who has been married for a while, more set in her ways, and enjoys making
puppets. As the friendship between the two women grows, the bizarre relationship
between the puppet maker and her husband is slowly revealed to the naïve
friend resulting in adverse effects on her own relationship with her husband.
Another tele-film “Farar” (Escape) is about three friends,
a widow, a working woman, and a third woman who is a student of classical
dance. The play shows the struggle of each woman to sort out her life
and find a unique identity for herself.
Television and art film actor, Faisal Rehman,
who has appeared in many of Mehreen's plays describes her directing style
in the following words: "She gives you the floor to play as an actor
and becomes a silent spectator and she will only check you when you cross
the boundaries of her perceived story in the wrong direction." Faisal
feels that, unlike many other directors, Mehreen does not dictate every
move of her actors. She allows them to experiment and improvise as they
act out a scene. This he believes is a "great way of making an actor
feel at home and get the best out of him." As a director Mehreen
is not threatened by an actor's ability to contribute to the story. If
through improvisation an actor is able to add enhancements to the play
keeping it within the boundaries of her preconcieved storyline then, says
Faisal, "[Mehreen] will accept your idea with open mind and heart
without being egotistic about it. That is a sign of a good director anywhere
in the world."
To Mehreen experimenting with a story is
one of the most interesting parts of creating a play. It is something
which she believes is missing in many recent plays airing on television.
She believes that producers are playing it safe and are prone to take
on projects which are based on a proven storyline for success. The result
is that the same basic plot is repeated over and over again in different
plays or films. “For example,” says Mehreen, “[Producers
and directors] think ‘Monsoon Wedding’ was a hit so lets make
‘Pakistani Wedding’, let’s make ‘American Wedding’,
etc. We really don’t see that many quality television plays anymore
like we did back in the Eighties.”
According to Mehreen, she enjoys making
films and plays because she loves telling stories and it is what she has
always wanted to do. She says of herself that while growing up she was
always a "shy and reticent individual". Therefore, taking a written story and
giving it life by turning it into a play or film has been her outlet,
a way of expressing herself. If shyness is what made Mehreen into a filmmaker
than her viewers consider it their good fortune because her contributions
have certainly added a new dimension of creativity to Pakistani television
plays.
Though commercial Pakistani films remain
largely unpopular in the mainstream, several independent filmmakers have
emerged in recent years, such as, Shireen Pasha, Farjad Nabi, Hasan Zaidi,
and Mehreen Jabbar herself, who seem to be breathing a new life into the
Pakistani art film scene.
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