Thursday, 27 August 2015

Malavika smiles a la Mona Lisa - "Malavikagnimitram"


Malavika smiles a la Mona Lisa   - ‘Malavikagnimitram’                                


 


        

King Agnimitra had an irresistible desire for Malavika.  Malavika was a maid in the royal palace.  Agnimitra’s obsession for the most beautiful Malavika was an open secret among others including his Queen Dharini.  Malavika participated in a song and dance contest to win the laurel.  When Malavika was performing the dance Agnimitra wanted to see a disarming smile on the face of Malavika - that beautiful smile of Mona Lisa – in the modern world there is no better smile epitomizing than that of Mona Lisa.   Agnimitra wanted that smile to appear on Malavika’s moon face.  The comedian of the royal chamber started with many jokes to evoke a laugh in the royal chamber and finally succeeded that Malavika too smiled at the end.  Agnimitra by sighting Malavika’s smile was overwhelmed with passion and had a love crush on Malavika.

The epic romantic love story by Kalidasa in Sanskrit language about Agnimitra’s love for Malavika is famous.   The forbidden love, an obsession of a King for a court dancer.

Malavikagnimitram is the love story of King Agnimitra and the court dancer Malavika. The tale unfolds through humorous palace interludes, vivid descriptions of fine arts and the cunning machinations of court players. Even in this early work, Kalidasa’s characteristic penchant for romance, art and natural beauty is evident at every delightful turn of the plot. He transforms simple tale of forbidden love into an engrossing court drama filled with beauty, humor and wit.

Malavikagnimitram

 



The first play composed by the great poet Kalidasa is Malavikagnimitram. Often it is called Kalidasa Malavikagnimitram, as an honor to Kalidasa.  This beautiful play of intrigue grips its readers and keeps them glued till the very end.  The plot of the play is cleverly constructed and it revolves around the King's love interest who is a maid in the royal palace.   The construction of love plots and many incidents that make the story move further are commendable and are beautifully described, without deviating from the central theme.    To know more about this beautiful play called Malavikagnimitram, continue to read this insightful blog post on it.


SYNOPSIS

The plot is a comedy that involves romantic relationships between a King and a humble maid.   It is the tale of King Agnimitra's love for Malavika, who is an unheard of maid in the royal palace.   It is said that this lady was proficient in dance and music.   The way situations crop up between them and the way they handle it amidst confusion and jealousy is commendable.   There are many scenes of light hearted comedy, confusion and confrontation that make Malavikagnimitram one of the finest works of Kalidasa.

Thoroughly enjoyable, this play is the first work of Kalidasa.  The skill with which he employs comedy, confusion and romance in a potpourri of romantic drama is truly the work of a genius.   The smooth flow of the events adds to the continuity of the play.   Though the play lapses in some aspect, yet on the whole, it bears the trademark of the workmanship of Kalidasa.   Agnimitra, though passionate is a bit passive and uses the help of his minister to help him win over Malavika and make her his queen.   This play is a must read if you want to enjoy the purity of literature. The play is basically divided into 5 main acts.

Act I:   In the first act two scholars, Ganadas and Hardatt, from the kingdom are shown fighting amongst each other to settle the question of who is more knowledgeable in the field of dance and drama.   To solve this conflict King Agnimitra summons the chambermaid Malavika.   It is made obvious that the king has some desires for her but he did not want to make them public as yet as he is already married to Queen Dharini.   Malavika was a student of Guru Ganadas, one of the best if you will.   He thought of using her in case of any competition.   This little secret was known to Agnimitra’s childhood friend and the court entertainer Gautam.   Gautam also knew about King’s love interest for Malavika.   It was in fact Gautam who sets up a competition between the two gurus so that he gets to see the much talked about Malavika finally.   Side by side, a battle is planned against the King of Vidarbha.   King’s soldiers had captured his cousin Madhavsen.   Madhavsen’s sister escaped the capture.   Kanchuki takes care of the preparations of the dance competition while Minister Amatya Vahtak prepares for the military attack.   The king insists that Madhavsen’s sister, Parivrajika Kaushiki, should be present during the dance competition as an adjudicator and her decision will be the final decision.

Act II: Guatam’s plan turns out to be successful and Guru Ganadas chooses Malavika to represent him in the dance competition.  She performs a graceful and charming Chhalik playact on a quartet written by Sharmishtha.   She looks so beautiful while dancing that the King cannot take his eyes off her.   Even her voice enamors him.   She sings about a beloved craving for her lover.   The King starts feeling like she is calling out to him and he loses himself into her song and dance.   When she finishes, Gautam sees on King’s face that he was dying to see Malavika smiling.    Guatam makes a joke in the court and everyone starts to laugh and Malavika also smiles for a while before leaving.  This makes the king very happy.   He loses all interest in the competition now.   He does not really want to see the other dancers.   Just when the king thought that he could not take any of this dance competition and cannot bear to see anyone else sing or dance, Vaitalik arrives. He announces the commencement of the lunch.

Act III: Queen Kaushiki’s maids Samahitika and Madhukarika discusses the dance performance of Malavika and comes to a mutual consensus that she is going to win the competition hands down.   They are also aware of King’s feelings for her, so is everyone else in the kingdom.   Now Malavika and Bakulavalika is sent to stand underneath the Asjpka tree by the Chief Queen Dharini to perform Dohada. Dohada was a ceremony of dancing which has the capacity of making the buds flower soon.  The Queen does not take part in the ceremony herself as her feet were hurting after a fall from the swing but she promises Malavika that if the tree blossoms then she will grant Malavika a wish of hers.   At this time queen Iravati invites the King to come into the pleasure garden and spend some time with her.   But the King was worried that he might not be able to be himself in front of his Queens now that he had this burning desire for Malavika.  But Gautam suggested him not to leave the side of his Queens and continue being the same with them.   There comes a point where the King, Gautam, Iravati, Bakulvalika and Malavika all come face to face in the pleasure garden.

Act IV:   Queen Dharini gets to know about the King’s feeling for Malavika.   She sends guards to capture Malavika and Bakulavalika and imprison them in the dungeons.  It was ordered to not set them free unless someone produces the seal of her ring Nagmudrika, which would mean that it’s an order by her. It was queen Iravati and her maid Nipinika who informs the chief Queen about the feelings of the King for Malavika.  The King decides to meet the Queen in her chambers where she was getting her feet nursed and burning with anger.   Gautam also assures the King that he will think of a clever idea and help in getting Malavika out of the prison.   He fakes a snake bite and goes to the royal physician. There is chaos and disorder everywhere in the palace and it is spread out that the physician is asking for a talisman with an image of the snake on it to perform a medicinal ritual on Gautam to take the poison out of his body and save his life.   In the disarray, Dharini gives away her ring without making sure where it is going and then the ring is shown to the keepers of the dungeons. Malavika is released.

Act V:   The Ashoka tree is in full bloom after five days and the chief queen is now obliged to fulfill one wish of Malavika.   In the meanwhile, the king of Vidarbha had been defeated and Madhavsen is set free.   He comes back to the kingdom and reveals that Malavika is his sister who has been in hiding all this while.   This makes the chief Queen happy and knowing that her husband has fallen in love, she makes Malavika as one of his Queens.   As Malavika is of royal blood it seemed that now nobody has any problem to accept her as Queen.  King Agnimitra thus won Malavika’s hand in blissful matrimony.
Kalidasa has written plays like Vikramorvashiyam and Abhinjanashankuntalam after Malavikagnimitram.  His  works have been considered in the highest echelons of Sanskrit literature.

The other works of Kalidasa are –



Poem
·         Raghuvamsha
·         Kumarasambhava
·         Ritusamhara

Lyric
·         Meghduta


The best poem of Kalidasa according to me is as given below  -

Look to this day:
For it is life, the very life of life.
In its brief course
Lie all the verities and realities of your existence.
The bliss of growth,
The glory of action,
The splendor of achievement
Are but experiences of time.

For yesterday is but a dream
And tomorrow is only a vision;
And today well-lived, makes
Yesterday a dream of happiness
And every tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look well therefore to this day;
Such is the salutation to the ever-new dawn!

A brief biography of Kalidasa

 






















Kavikulaguru Kalidasa is India’s National Poet.







































Kalidasa,  (flourished 5th century ce, India), Sanskrit poet and dramatist, probably the greatest Indian writer of any epoch. The six works identified as genuine are the dramas Abhijnanashakuntala (“The Recognition of Shakuntala”), Vikramorvashi (“Urvashi Won by Valour”), and Malavikagnimitra (“Malavika and Agnimitra”); the epic poems Raghuvamsha (“Dynasty of Raghu”) and Kumarasambhava (“Birth of the War God”); and the lyric “Meghaduta” (“Cloud Messenger”).




As with most classical Indian authors, little is known about Kalidasa’s person or his historical relationships. His poems suggest but nowhere declare that he was a Brahman (priest), liberal yet committed to the orthodox Hindu worldview. His name, literally “servant of Kali,” presumes that he was a Shaivite (follower of the god Shiva, whose consort was Kali), though occasionally he eulogizes other gods, notably Vishnu.

A Sinhalese tradition says that he died on the island of Sri Lanka during the reign of Kumaradasa, who ascended the throne in 517. A more persistent legend makes Kalidasa one of the “nine gems” at the court of the fabulous king Vikramaditya of Ujjain. Unfortunately, there are several known Vikramadityas (Sun of Valour—a common royal appellation); likewise, the nine distinguished courtiers could not have been contemporaries. It is certain only that the poet lived sometime between the reign of Agnimitra, the second Shunga king (c. 170 bce) and the hero of one of his dramas, and the Aihole inscription of 634 ce, which lauds Kalidasa. He is apparently imitated, though not named, in the Mandasor inscription of 473. No single hypothesis accounts for all the discordant information and conjecture surrounding this date.


An opinion accepted by many—but not all—scholars is that Kalidasa should be associated with Chandra Gupta II (reigned c. 380–c. 415). The most convincing but most conjectural rationale for relating Kalidasa to the brilliant Gupta dynasty is simply the character of his work, which appears as both the perfect reflection and the most thorough statement of the cultural values of that serene and sophisticated aristocracy.

Tradition has associated many works with the poet; criticism identifies six as genuine and one more as likely (“Ritusamhara,” the “Garland of the Seasons,” perhaps a youthful work). Attempts to trace Kalidasa’s poetic and intellectual development through these works are frustrated by the impersonality that is characteristic of classical Sanskrit literature. His works are judged by the Indian tradition as realizations of literary qualities inherent in the Sanskrit language and its supporting culture. Kalidasa has become the archetype for Sanskrit literary composition.

In drama, his Abhijnanashakuntala is the most famous and is usually judged the best Indian literary effort of any period. Taken from an epic legend, the work tells of the seduction of the nymph Shakuntala by King Dushyanta, his rejection of the girl and his child, and their subsequent reunion in heaven. The epic myth is important because of the child, for he is Bharata, eponymous ancestor of the Indian nation (Bharatavarsha, “Subcontinent of Bharata”). Kalidasa remakes the story into a love idyll whose characters represent a pristine aristocratic ideal: the girl, sentimental, selfless, alive to little but the delicacies of nature, and the king, first servant of the dharma (religious and social law and duties), protector of the social order, resolute hero, yet tender and suffering agonies over his lost love. The plot and characters are made believable by a change Kalidasa has wrought in the story: Dushyanta is not responsible for the lovers’ separation; he acts only under a delusion caused by a sage’s curse. As in all of Kalidasa’s works, the beauty of nature is depicted with a precise elegance of metaphor that would be difficult to match in any of the world’s literature.

The second drama, Vikramorvashi (possibly a pun on Vikramaditya), tells a legend as old as the Vedas (earliest Hindu scriptures), though very differently. Its theme is the love of a mortal for a divine maiden; it is well known for the “mad scene” (Act IV) in which the king, grief-stricken, wanders through a lovely forest apostrophizing various flowers and trees as though they were his love. The scene was intended in part to be sung or danced.


The third of Kalidasa’s dramas, Malavikagnimitra, is of a different stamp—a harem intrigue, comical and playful, but not less accomplished for lacking any high purpose. The play (unique in this respect) contains datable references, the historicity of which have been much discussed.

Kalidasa’s efforts in kaavya (strophic poetry) are of uniform quality and show two different subtypes, epic and lyric. Examples of the epic are the two long poems Raghuvamsha and Kumarasambhava. The first recounts the legends of the hero Rama’s forebears and descendants; the second tells the picaresque story of Shiva’s seduction by his consort Parvati, the conflagration of Kama (the god of desire), and the birth of Kumara (Skanda), Shiva’s son. These stories are mere pretext for the poet to enchain stanzas, each metrically and grammatically complete, redounding with complex and reposeful imagery. Kalidasa’s mastery of Sanskrit as a poetic medium is nowhere more marked.

A lyric poem, the “Meghaduta,” contains, interspersed in a message from a lover to his absent beloved, an extraordinary series of unexcelled and knowledgeable vignettes, describing the mountains, rivers, and forests of northern India.





            
The society reflected in Kalidasa’s work is that of a courtly aristocracy sure of its dignity and power. Kalidasa has perhaps done more than any other writer to wed the older, Brahmanic religious tradition, particularly its ritual concern with Sanskrit, to the needs of a new and brilliant secular Hinduism. The fusion, which epitomizes the renaissance of the Gupta period, did not, however, survive its fragile social base; with the disorders following the collapse of the Gupta Empire, Kalidasa became a memory of perfection that neither Sanskrit nor the Indian aristocracy would know again.




       
Kalidas in his teens appeared to be a fool.  There is a story suggesting Kalidasa’s foolhardiness. One really wonders how a person considered to be a fool can write inter woven with pearls of wisdom the Sanskrit epics bestowed in his name.






Kalidasa, the greatest poet of classical Sanskrit, is known only through his writings. Apart from this, there are no clues to his personal life. Even the names of his parents are not known, nor his place of birth. The mystery surrounding him has given rise to incredible legends about him which are current even today. Our script is based on one of these legends. Kalidasa is the author of several great Sanskrit poetical works (or Mahakavyas) and plays for which he is justly famous - Raghuvamsha, Kumarasambhava, Meghaduta, Ritusamhara, Abhijana Shakuntala, Vikramorvashiya and Malavika-Agnimitra. These reveal that Kalidasa was a lover of nature and his descriptions suggest that he must have travelled widely. His poetry has the freshness and beauty of a mountains stream. He portrays women with tenderness. He exhibits a special love for Ujjayini in his writings and he probably knew it well. Scholars are agreed that though all Kalidasa's works have the stamp of genius, his play Abhijana Shakuntala must be rated as his greatest work. Kalidasa today is regarded as one of the immortals of world literature taking his place beside Shakespeare and Goethe.

It was my intent to write a Blog about a Sanskrit scholar whose imagination with serene beauty, art and aristocracy captivated my heart and soul. 

Sunday, 23 August 2015

Catch Up With Me If You Can - Movie Brat - Steven Spielberg



Catch Up  With Me If You Can  -  Movie Brat -  Steven Spielberg


       







     






After 29 great films Steven Spielberg is steadily progressing to do further giant strides in Hollywood film making.  Steven Spielberg's 2002 film Catch Me If You Can inspired me to give the title of this Blog post.  It is literally impossible for anybody to catch up with him at this juncture.  Out of the 29 films many of them were Oscar Award winning films.


Undoubtedly one of the most influential film personalities in the history of film, Steven Spielberg is perhaps Hollywood's best known director and one of the wealthiest filmmakers in the world. Spielberg has a net worth of $ 3.6 billion as per the latest Forbes magazine reports.  Spielberg has countless big-grossing, critically acclaimed credits to his name, as producer, director and writer.


Spielberg is a contemporary of filmmakers George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, John Milius, and Brian De Palma, collectively known as “MOVIE BRATS”.


Spielberg won the Academy Award for Best Director for Schindler's List (1993) and Saving Private Ryan (1998). Three of Spielberg's films—Jaws (1975), E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), and Jurassic Park (1993)—achieved box office records, originated and came to epitomize the blockbuster movie.


I would like to present here some of his movie titles which made huge impact on the audience.

















Academy Award-winning filmmaker, director and producer Steven Spielberg's films include Jaws, Catch me if you Can, The Color Purple, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Munich and Schindler's List.  Many Indians have acted in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom like Amrish Puri and Roshan Seth.

His films can boast of greater contents, spectacular visuals combined with special effects and good cinematic experience with the genius director wielding the megaphone.

He is the most commercially successful film-maker too.   The living legend continues to churn out block-busters, the 2012 Lincoln was critically acclaimed one too.  His upcoming 2015 release is the “Bridge of Spies”.

If you say he is known as the Jurassic Park film Director, it will be demeaning his other successful and established ventures.  However, it suits a layman who knows him only with the internationally acclaimed Jurassic Park movies when the Dinosaurs slowly moving and filling up giant movie screens.

Born on December 18, 1946, in Cincinnati, Ohio, Steven Allan Spielberg was an amateur filmmaker as a child.  He went to California State University Long Beach, but dropped out to pursue his entertainment career.  He went on to become the enormously successful and Academy Award-winning director of such films as Schindler’s List, The Color Purple, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial and Saving Private Ryan. In 1994, he co-founded the studio DreamWorks SKG, which was purchased by Paramount Pictures in 2005.

An amateur filmmaker as a child, Steven Spielberg moved several times growing up and spent part of his youth in Arizona. He became one of the youngest television directors for Universal in the late 1960s. A highly praised television film, Duel, 1946, brought him the opportunity to direct for the cinema, and a string of hits have made him the most commercially successful director of all time.
His films have explored primeval fears, as in Jaws (1975).  This classic shark attack tale started the tradition of the summer blockbuster or, at least, he was credited with starting the tradition. He expressed childlike wonder at the marvels of this world and beyond, as in Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).  Spielberg produced and directed two films in 1982. The first was Poltergeist (1982), but the highest-grossing movie of all time up to that point was the alien story E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). Spielberg has also tackled literary adaptations, such as The Color Purple (1985) and Empire of the Sun (1987). As director, Spielberg took on the book The Color Purple, with Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey, with great success.  And audiences around the world were riveted by the continuing adventures of his daredevil hero, Indiana Jones, in such films as Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984). 
The late 1980s found Spielberg's projects at the center of pop-culture yet again. In 1988, he produced the landmark animation live-action film Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988). The next year proved to be another big one for Spielberg, as he produced and directed Always (1989) as well as Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), and Back to the Future Part II (1989). All three of the films were box-office and critical successes. Imaginative fantasy is dominant in his version of Peter Pan, Hook (1991), Jurassic Park (1993), and its sequel The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997).
Spielberg has also had an affinity for animation and has been a strong voice in animation in the 1990s.  Aside from producing the landmark "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", he produced the animated series Tiny Toon Adventures (1990), Animaniacs (1993), Pinky and the Brain (1995), Freakazoid! (1995), Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain (1998), Family Dog (1993) and Toonsylvania (1998). Spielberg also produced other cartoons such as The Land Before Time (1988), We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993), Casper (1995) (the live action version) as well as the live-action version of The Flintstones (1994), where he was credited as "Steven Spielrock". Spielberg also produced many Roger Rabbit short cartoons, and many Pinky and the Brain, Animaniacs and Tiny Toons specials.
Spielberg is also known for his impressive historical films. He produced and directed Schindler's List (1993), a stirring film about the Holocaust. The Holocaust drama Schindler’s List  starring Liam Neeson as a businessman who helps save Jews won seven Academy Awards, including Spielberg’s first win as Best Director.  
In 1993, Spielberg directed Jurassic Park (1993), which for a short time held the record as the highest grossing movie of all time, but did not have the universal appeal of his previous efforts. Big box-office spectacles were not his only concern, though. He won best director at the Oscars, and also got Best Picture. In the mid-90s, he helped found the production company DreamWorks, which was responsible for many box-office successes.
In 1998, he revisited World War II, this time from the perspective of American soldiers in Europe in Saving Private Ryan (1998), which earned him another Academy Award for Best Director. His first film company, Amblin Entertainment, which was founded in 1982, produced several other successful films, notably Back to the Future (1985) and its two sequels, and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

As a producer, he was very active in the late 90s, responsible for such films as The Mask of Zorro (1998), Men in Black (1997) and Deep Impact (1998). However, it was on the directing front that Spielberg was in top form. He directed and produced the epic Amistad (1997), a spectacular film that was shorted at the Oscars and in release due to the fact that its release date was moved around so much in late 1997. The next year, however, produced what many believe was one of the best films of his career: Saving Private Ryan (1998), a film about World War Two that is spectacular in almost every respect. It was stiffed at the Oscars, losing best picture to Shakespeare in Love (1998).


Spielberg produced a series of films, including Evolution (2001), The Haunting (1999) and Shrek (2001). He also produced two sequels to Jurassic Park (1993), which were financially but not particularly critical successes. In 2001, he produced a mini-series about World War Two that definitely *was* a financial and critical success: Band of Brothers (2001), a tale of an infantry company from its parachuting into France during the invasion to the Battle of the Bulge. Also in that year, Spielberg was back in the director's chair for A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001), a movie with a message and a huge budget. It did reasonably at the box office and garnered varied reviews from critics.
Spielberg has been extremely active in films there are many other things he has done as well. He produced the short-lived TV series Sea Quest 2032 (1993), an anthology series entitled Amazing Stories (1985), created the video-game series "Medal of Honor" set during World War Two, and was a starting producer of ER (1994). Spielberg, if you haven't noticed, has a great interest in World War Two. He and Tom Hanks collaborated on Shooting War (2000), a documentary about World War II combat photographers, and he produced a documentary about the Holocaust called Eyes of the Holocaust (2000). With all of this to Spielberg's credit, it's no wonder that he's looked at as one of the greatest ever figures in entertainment.
In 2001 he completed the science fiction film AI: Artificial Intelligence, a project begun by Stanley Kubrick. Later films include the Academy Award-nominated Munich (2005). He also served as producer for the Clint Eastwood-directed World War II films, Flags of our Fathers (2006) and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006).
Spielberg's fast-paced crime adventure Catch Me If You Can (2002) adapted the real life exploits of legendary con artist Frank Abagnale, Jr. to the big screen to the delight of audiences hungering for an entertaining and lightweight holiday release. By the age of 19 years Frank Abnagale Jr. was a Professor, Doctor and a Pilot. Frank Abnagale Jr. was a forger of documents such as checks and always one step ahead of the anti-forgery squad led by Tom Hanks.  Finally, he was recommended for a Government job to check and stop forgery and was lived a fruitful life in that assignment.
Spielberg cinematically visited his Jewish heritage for the first time since Schindler's List with 2005's critically acclaimed Munich. Beginning with the 1972 Munich Olympics at which 11 Israeli athletes were kidnapped and later murdered by the Palestinian terrorist group Black September, the film follows the small group of Mossad agents recruited to track down and assassinate those responsible. Praised for its sensitive and painful portrayal of ordinary men grappling with their new lives as killers, Munich earned Spielberg a Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination, reminding audiences and critics alike of the filmmaker's ability to go far beyond the realm of adventure and fantasy.
Spielberg reunited with George Lucas for the latest installment of the Indiana Jones saga in 2008. Spielberg directed the film, which featured Harrison Ford reprising his role as the famed adventurer in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. He also helmed 2011's animated action film The Adventures of Tintin, based on the popular comic series by Hergé. It was his film version of War Horse (2011) that won him his most recent critical acclaim, however. The movie received six Academy Award nominations.
In November 2012, Spielberg kick-started another legendary film project Lincoln. He directed Daniel Day-Lewis in the biopic of President Abraham Lincoln. Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays Lincoln's son Robert and Sally Fields plays his wife Mary Todd Lincoln in this much-anticipated drama. In addition to directing, Spielberg has instrumental in numerous projects as an executive producer. He has helped bring such television shows as Terra Nova, Smash and Falling Skies to the small screen.

As for future projects, the famed filmmaker is rumored to be revisiting some old favorites in the coming years. There is talk of a new Jurassic Park film and even possibly a fifth Indiana Jones movie.
Along with his three Academy Award wins, Spielberg has received many other honors during his distinguished career. He received the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1986. In 2004 Spielberg received the Directors Guild of America Lifetime Achievement Award and the French Legion of Honor in recognition of his work. He was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2005.

Filmography

Amateur releases

Year
Film
Other
Notes
1959
The Last Gun
Yes
No
No
Yes
1961
Fighter Squad
Yes
No
Yes
No

Escape to Nowhere
Yes
No
Yes
No

1964
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

Theatrical releases

Year
Film
Other
Notes
1968
Yes
No
Yes
No
1971
Yes
No
No
No

1974
Yes
No
Yes
No

1975
Yes
No
No
No

1977
Yes
No
Yes
No

1978
No
No
No
Yes
1979
Yes
No
No
No

1980
No
No
No
Yes
Cook County Assessor's Office Clerk
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1981
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
No
No
No

1982
Yes
Yes
No
No

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Co-director
1983
Yes
Yes
No
No
Segment: "Kick the Can"
1984
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Himself
1985
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
Yes
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1986
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1987
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1988
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1989
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1990
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1991
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1993
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

1994
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1995
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1996
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1997
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

1998
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
1999
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Video game, original concept
2000
Shooting War
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
2001
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
No
No
No
Yes
Guest at David Aames' Party
2002
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
Yes
Yes
No
No

2003
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
2004
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
Yes
Yes
No
No

2005
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
Yes
No
No

Yes
Yes
No
No

2006
No
Yes
No
No

No
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
2007
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
2008
Yes
No
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
2009
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
2010
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
2011
No
No
No
Yes
Himself
No
Yes
No
No

No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

Yes
Yes
No
No

2012
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

2014
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
No
Yes
No
No

2015
No
No
Yes
No
Remake of the 1982 film
No
No
No
Yes
Executive producer
Yes
Yes
No
No

2016
Yes
Yes
No
No

2017
Yes
Yes
No
No

 

Music video

Year
Film
Other
Notes
1985
No
Yes
No
actor
During the filming Steven Spielberg sustained an ankle injury that caused him to limp during the video

Television

(Lengths include commercials)
  • Night Gallery (1969, 1971)
    • pilot movie segment B "Eyes" [aired November 8, 1969] (30 min)
    • ep4 segment A "Make Me Laugh" [aired January 6, 1971] (30 min)
  • Marcus Welby, M.D. (1970) ep 1–27 "The Daredevil Gesture" (60 min) [aired March 17, 1970]
  • The Name of the Game (1971) ep 3–16 "L.A. 2017" (90 min) [aired January 15, 1971]
  • The Psychiatrist (1971)
    • ep. 1–2 "The Private World of Martin Dalton" (60 min) [aired February 10, 1971]
    • ep. 1–6 "Par for the Course" (60 min) [aired March 10, 1971]
(This was released on a VHS named The Visionary after the other episode included)
·         Halo (2015) (TV) (executive)

 

Uncredited production credits

Spielberg has worked as a producer or executive producer on ten separate films, where he was not credited.
Year
Title
Notes
1987

1998


1999

2001


2002

2005

2007

2014

In 2002, Spielberg was one of eight flagbearers who carried the Olympic Flag into Rice-Eccles Stadium at the Opening Ceremonies of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City. In 2006, Premiere listed him as the most powerful and influential figure in the motion picture industry. Time listed him as one of the 100 Most Important People of the Century. At the end of the 20th century, Life named him the most influential person of his generation. In 2009, Boston University presented him an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree.











                 

   
        Hollywood Walk of Fame                                                                 Pentagon Guard of Honor

According to Forbes' Most Influential Celebrities 2014 list, Spielberg was listed as the most influential celebrity in America. The annual list is conducted by E-Poll Market Research and it gave more than 6,600 celebrities on 46 different personality attributes a score representing "how that person is perceived as influencing the public, their peers, or both." Spielberg received a score of 47, meaning 47% of the US believes he is influential. Gerry Philpott, president of E-Poll Market Research, supported Spielberg's score by stating, "If anyone doubts that Steven Spielberg has greatly influenced the public, think about how many will think for a second before going into the water this summer.
Spielberg has won three Academy Awards. He has been nominated for seven Academy Awards for the category of Best Director, winning two of them (Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan), and nine of the films he directed were up for the Best Picture Oscar (Schindler's List won). In 1987 he was awarded the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award for his work as a creative producer.
Steven Spielberg received the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1995.
In 2001, he was honored as an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II.
In 2004 he was admitted as knight of the Légion d'honneur by president Jacques Chirac. On July 15, 2006, Spielberg was also awarded the Gold Hugo Lifetime Achievement Award at the Summer Gala of the Chicago International Film Festival, and also was awarded a Kennedy Center honour on December 3. The tribute to Spielberg featured a short, filmed biography narrated by Tom Hanks and included thank-yous from World War II veterans for Saving Private Ryan, as well as a performance of the finale to Leonard Bernstein's Candide, conducted by John Williams (Spielberg's frequent composer).
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame inducted Spielberg in 2005, the first year it considered non-literary contributors. In November 2007, he was chosen for a Lifetime Achievement Award to be presented at the sixth annual Visual Effects Society Awards in February 2009. He was set to be honored with the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the January 2008 Golden Globes; however, the new, watered-down format of the ceremony resulting from conflicts in the 2007–08 writers strike, the HFPA postponed his honor to the 2009 ceremony. In 2008, Spielberg was awarded the Légion d'honneur.
In June 2008, Spielberg received Arizona State University's Hugh Downs Award for Communication Excellence.
Spielberg received an honorary degree at Boston University's 136th Annual Commencement on May 17, 2009. In October 2009 Steven Spielberg received the Philadelphia Liberty Medal; presenting him with the medal was former US president and Liberty Medal recipient Bill Clinton. Special guests included Whoopi Goldberg, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter.
On October 22, 2011 he was admitted as a Commander of the Belgian Order of the Crown. He was given the badge on a red neck ribbon by the Belgian Federal Minister of Finance Didier Reynders. The Commander is the third highest rank of the Order of the Crown. He was the president of the jury for the 2013 Cannes Film Festival.










       
 Addresses the Pentagon

On November 19, 2013, Spielberg was honored by the National Archives and Records Administration with its Records of Achievement Award. Spielberg was given two facsimiles of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution, one passed but not ratified in 1861, as well as a facsimile of the actual 1865 amendment signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln. The amendment and the process of passing it were the subject of his film Lincoln.
Married twice, Steven Spielberg has a son from his first marriage to actress Amy Irving. He has five children and two stepchildren with current wife Kate Capsha.

His latest offering “Bridge of Spies” being readied for 2015 release is believed to be a strong contender for an Oscar.

Steven Allan Spielberg undoubtedly is one of the most influential celebrities in the world.

The Godfather of Hollywood ‘Steven Spielberg’ with more than 50 years experience in film making  continue to win global attention and ovation for his cinematic and other notable works.  The world fraternity wishes continued success to the veteran film maker and await many more praiseworthy offerings from him.

This BLOG post finds the genius filmmaker Steven Spielberg in good stead and hale and hearty to further enrich the world with his invaluable contributions.