Pilot Theatre, Madras-How A Pen Became A Theatre!
As an ‘English Movie Buff’, Pilot which was showing English Movies Exclusively was one of my favorite haunts in the ’80s and early ’90s. The following facts however came to my knowledge only Today! :
“The property’s history is most interesting. It begins with Pilot, that popular brand of ink pens that many of us grew up with. The Pilot Pen Co (India) Pvt Limited, founded by Paranjothi Arockiasami Sanjivi, a local entrepreneur, was established in 1952. It manufactured pens in Madras, under license from Pilot Corporation of Japan and hence the name. Legend has it that the first factory for the Pilot Pens when it was more an assembly operation, stood at the site of the Pilot Theatre in Royapettah. But even as early as 1961, the works had shifted to Puzhal, where even now a vast premises goes by the name of Pilot Compound and is rented out by other commercial entities.
Under Sanjivi, Pilot Pens prospered. He then decided to get into cinema screening and put up the Pilot Theatre. Completed in 1968, it was India’s second screening facility with Cinerama technology, the first being Bangalore’s Kapali. This was a short-lived innovation, wherein three projectors simultaneously ran three strips of the film, all of which synchronized on a giant arced screen thereby making for an awesome visual effect. This was however not a success and Wikipedia has it that just two films were ever made using Cinerama. It is not clear whether the same projection could be used for conventional screening but it would appear that Pilot retained the same projection facilities. The first screening was on November 15, 1968, the film being The Ballad of Cable Hogue.
Sadly for Sanjivi, his pen company did not long outlive him. It went into liquidation in 1978. By then, the pens were no longer what they had once been – known to be leak-proof and with excellent steel or gold-tipped nibs. Cheaper plastic had come in and most Pilot pens were known to leave ink stains – on fingers and clothes. The arrival of the ball-point hastened the company’s demise. As for Pilot Theatre, after being a facility where only the best of English films were shown, it slowly settled down to vernacular films and later re-runs. Its vast compound was however a great attraction for film shoots. It was also a popular venue for film festivals.
Inheritance issues had led the successors to seek the assistance of the High Court of Madras and a settlement was reached sometime back. The theatre stopped screenings in 2014 and with that, it was clear that the curtains were coming down.
– Thanks Mr. V. Sriram
Sad endings…