Friday, December 29, 2023

Einstein and God

 GOD

When Einstein gave lectures at U.S. universities, the recurring question that students asked him most was:
- Do you believe in God?
And he always answered:
- I believe in the God of Spinoza.

Baruch de Spinoza was a Dutch philosopher considered one of the great rationalists of 17th century philosophy, along with Descartes.

(Spinoza) : God would say:

Stop praying.
What I want you to do is go out into the world and enjoy your life. I want you to sing, have fun and enjoy everything I've made for you.

Stop going into those dark, cold temples that you built yourself and saying they are my house. My house is in the mountains, in the woods, rivers, lakes, beaches. That's where I live and there I express my love for you.

Stop blaming me for your miserable life; I never told you there was anything wrong with you or that you were a sinner, or that your sexuality was a bad thing. Sex is a gift I have given you and with which you can express your love, your ecstasy, your joy. So don't blame me for everything they made you believe.

Stop reading alleged sacred scriptures that have nothing to do with me. If you can't read me in a sunrise, in a landscape, in the look of your friends, in your son's eyes... ➤ you will find me in no book!
Stop asking me "will you tell me how to do my job?" Stop being so scared of me. I do not judge you or criticize you, nor get angry, or bothered. I am pure love.

Stop asking for forgiveness, there's nothing to forgive. If I made you... I filled you with passions, limitations, pleasures, feelings, needs, inconsistencies... free will. How can I blame you if you respond to something I put in you? How can I punish you for being the way you are, if I'm the one who made you? Do you think I could create a place to burn all my children who behave badly for the rest of eternity? What kind of god would do that?

Respect your peers and don't do what you don't want for yourself. All I ask is that you pay attention in your life, that alertness is your guide.

My beloved, this life is not a test, not a step on the way, not a rehearsal, nor a prelude to paradise. This life is the only thing here and now and it is all you need.

I have set you absolutely free, no prizes or punishments, no sins or virtues, no one carries a marker, no one keeps a record.
You are absolutely free to create in your life. Heaven or hell.

➤ I can't tell you if there's anything after this life but I can give you a tip. Live as if there is not. As if this is your only chance to enjoy, to love, to exist.

So, if there's nothing after, then you will have enjoyed the opportunity I gave you. And if there is, rest assured that I won't ask if you behaved right or wrong, I'll ask. Did you like it? Did you have fun? What did you enjoy the most? What did you learn?...

Stop believing in me; believing is assuming, guessing, imagining. I don't want you to believe in me, I want you to believe in you. I want you to feel me in you when you kiss your beloved, when you tuck in your little girl, when you caress your dog, when you bathe in the sea.

Stop praising me, what kind of egomaniac God do you think I am?

I'm bored being praised. I'm tired of being thanked. Feeling grateful? Prove it by taking care of yourself, your health, your relationships, the world. Express your joy! That's the way to praise me.

Stop complicating things and repeating as a parakeet what you've been taught about me.

What do you need more miracles for? So many explanations?

The only thing for sure is that you are here, that you are alive, that this world is full of wonders.

- Spino

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Testing

 https://youtube.com/shorts/H4de0kAVexw?si=MjivoY7WR2UhJFsB



Sujaee's Birthday - Zoom meeting.

 Sujaee's Birthday - Zoom meeting.

Date: Sun, 3 Dec 2023 at 22:47

Subject: Sujaee's Birthday Zoom : Dec 6th - 9pm Melbourne, 11am Spain, 10am London

From: daya & nalini rodrigo 



Dear Friends, - 6thy December 2023
Its time to celebrate Sujaee's birthday.
Please click on the link below :


Join Zoom Meeting

https://us04web.zoom.us/j/73038484771?pwd=PHrAxCpakp5GmDcj7U9M8yDYg9kx5w.1

Meeting ID: 730 3848 4771
Passcode: 5FcSDa

Monday, December 4, 2023

Top 3 Winners of the 'Dreamstar, contest 2023 sing:-

Dream Star season XI (2023)Derana Dream Star season XI final competition was held at the Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium Colombo, Sri Lanka. Anjali Herath crowned as the Dream Star. Vidusha Rajaguru became first runner-up while Apoorwa Ashawari became second runner-up.


1. Anjali Herath 

Full song  -  https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=anjali+herath+pitcoveraya+mp3+download#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:002864fa,vid:OU7p0w-g6KM,st:0


Meaning of the song - (69) Pitakavare Sanjeew Lonliyes පිටකවරේ අමු සින්දුව | සුපිරිම විචාරයක්. - YouTube


2. Vidusha Rajaguru

5https://youtu.be/3G8DqhQ5c


3. Apoorwa Ashawari

https://www.ube.com/shorts/1RPEzE3wg2s?feature=shareyout

With lyrics - https://youtu.be/EZTLvMM2yhc

 Dance - https://i.ytimg.com/vi/j_feNmhy1mA/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEcCNACELwBSFXyq4qpAw4IARUAAIhCGAFwAcABBg==&rs=AOn4CLBbKZrVpJzafCk0vpwBN7k07cyq5g


Wedi's note on whatsapp ?date

 Hello Nana /. Karu


Jayalath had  Rs 90526/  in the Medical Batch 1960 account at Sampath Bank. Kandy


The Bank was asking us to provide them with the Registration number of the NGO.


We had no such number.


We closed the account . Withdrew cash


Didn't know what to do with it.


I had a charity set up, which was started on behalf of our daughter

.

Jayalath suggested that I take it over and add it on to  the scholarship program for medical students at FM Peradeniya.


I was communicating with the Dean   to start this program donating Rs 500,000/ from our Foundation funds.


I told Jayalath that I could increase the Scholarship value by 100000/   using this money if it suits others.


What are your views on this.


I will try to connect with a few more of our friends.


Thank you


Wedi

The bridge over the river Kwai

            During our last years in school before entering the Medical College, two films which later won international awards, were filmed by British film companies in Ceylon. These two were ‘The Bridge over the river Kwai’ and ‘Elephant walk’. I saw both of them in the cinemas of Ceylon during our medical student days and enjoyed seeing them immensely. The Bridge over the river Kwai was a story, about building a bridge over the river Kwai, by British prisoners of war, during the Second World War. The Japanese army of occupation during the Second World War, wanted this bridge built. It was a story about loyalties, courage and pride in a job done. David Lean directed this film, which was shot partly near the Kithulgala Rest House. A bridge was built by the Ceylon Army Engineers and a narrow gauge Kelani Valley Locomotive and carriages, were driven over the bridge to be blasted away by explosives, placed strategically under the bridge. This realistic scene, was filmed by camera crews, located in safe strategic spots. The chief actor in this film was Alec Guinness who got various awards for his acting and later got a knighthood.

     My friend Somadasa Kongahawita told me, how the sound recordists, working on the above film, wanted the cry of the large egrets, found in plenty on the paddy fields, recorded on tape, to be dubbed onto the film. They offered Rs.25/- for each egret brought to them. The salary of a government clerical servant, was only Rs80/- those days. Quickly a thriving industry of catching egrets from the paddy fields in Kitulgala, overwhelmed the demand for egrets. The cry of these egrets, were duly recorded and dubbed realistically, into the appropriate scenes, in the film.    

     One of the Burgher Engine drivers, hired to drive the locomotive related, how he acquired the heavy number plate, of the blown up locomotive. He had loosened the heavy nuts holding the number plates on the engine, before the destined drive over the bridge. He was instructed to start the engine moving, jump out of it and take cover. The locomotive carried on over the bridge, with dummy engine drivers in place. As soon as the explosion was over and the debris thrown into the air settled down, he was the first man to jump into the swirling waters of the river, to successfully retrieve the number plate of the locomotive. He had it as a souvenir and conversation piece, in his living room in later years.

           

 

 

Friday, December 1, 2023

Piss off by Geri

 


Geri Jayasekara

Fri, Dec 1, 11:11 PM (9 hours ago)
to me
Hi, Philip,


This poem that I wrote is dedicated to our male batch mates who are currently having, or may develop, ‘Prostatism.’ 


                  PISS OFF! 


Oh what a bliss to pee with ease

A free flow of the amber clear

Looking down the pot, with the froth on top

Isn’t it like Pilsner beer?


You’re blessed if you start and stop when you want

Not pause with your thingy exposed

And doubly blessed if not spilled inside 

Once away with your trousers closed


Don’t postpone your bladder’s urgent call

And in case you don’t find a loo

A luxurious tree, a pole, or even

A red coloured post box would do


When at the loo of a bar or shop 

If ever the young men do scoff

Pray that you start and stop like them

And boldly tell them, “Piss off!”

Ambuluwawa tower, Mathale, Sri Lanka.

The Ambuluwawe tower off Mathale.

Nearest Town: Gampola

You can travel by train to visit Ambuluwawa Tower. Gampola is the nearest train station. 

It is advisable to hire a tuk-tuk/taxi from Gampola if you are getting there by public transport.

Gates open at 8.30 am.

The distance from the entrance to the mountain peak is about 2.5 -3 km. You can take your car, hire a TUK TUK or walk to the top. 

  https://youtu.be/lflY_l0wZFQ?si=Fo7-pneCu2DOKMhX

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Qye Sera, Sera, by Doris Day.

 One of our all-time favourite songs from the 1950s.



Email from Nana :-

Thank you Philip for sharing the video clip by Doris Day & a copy of the group photo of our last batch get together in 2018.


I hope you & Ramya are keeping well & remain alert & happy.

I also wish our batch mates who are with us will also share any updates - good or bad so that we can still keep in contact.

We cannot stop getting old & we may be unfortunate to lose some of our mental & physical faculties.

That is nature and feeling sad does not stop the natural process

Cheer up & share your kind thoughts & good wishes.

Christmas is round the corner & I wish all our batch mates who are still around, a merry Christmas and a happy New Year 2024.

Please share these thoughts amongst your batchmates if you can.

Nana

C.S. Nanayakkara 


Monday, November 27, 2023

The poison dart frog

Please click on the weblink below 

https://youtu.be/2FeyATwdI4M?si=Rsd8V5ECSV2gG1Yk


PGV

Paddy come back to Ireland.

Lovely composition of lyrics and music. Irish mother recalling her son, to their home country.

Please click on the web-link below


https://youtu.be/bP5n0yflDZo

Warming up the breakfast.

     Youngsters living in a house with stairs leading to the upper floors have a jolly time, sitting astride the banisters of the stairway, and sliding down. The crotch area and anatomically speaking the perineum, can get quite hot due to the friction, at the end of the slide down.

    The mornings can be quite cold in the UK. Quite often the breakfast is served by 'warming up' the leftovers from the previous night's dinner. This ritual is referred to as 'warming up the breakfast'.

    This really remarkable incident was related by Dr. Jansz, our lecturer in Physiology.

    A newly married couple arrived at a two-storeyed guest house, to start their honeymoon. They were the only occupants and they had to do their own cooking. They were exhausted and decided to forego the dinner and breakfast. Both decided, to only have 'love for dinner and have only love for breakfast'.

    After having love for a late dinner, both fell fast asleep. When the rays of the morning sun lit the bedroom, the husband found that his newly married bride was not in the bed nor in the attached bathroom. He quietly slipped out of the room and to his astonishment saw his wife, seated astride the banister and sliding down on it. She was unaware of her husband watching her and when she reached the bottom of the stairs she climbed back and repeated the procedure. The worried husband blurted out saying 'Darling, what are you doing?' The wife was prompt in her reply ' "Darling, can't you see. I am warming up your breakfast".

Address in the UK Parliament re the Gaza hostilities.

Address in the UK Parliament;-

 Please click on the picture below



Ceylon, 100 years ago

Please click on the web-link below:-

 (24) Ceylon 100s Years Ago: Old Sri Lanka #srilanka 🇱🇰📷🕰️ - YouTube

Friday, November 24, 2023

Padmini versus Vaijayanthimala in contest

Contest in Bharatha-Naattiyam between the legendary Padmini and Vaijayantimala.

Please click on the web-link below :- 

https://youtu.be/x2QZeL69DiI


PGV


Aliens and human reproduction, story by Jansz.

+Story related by the ever hilarious ‘Jansz’

A delegation of humanoid like aliens, landed in France. They got quite friendly with the locals. They did a study of various technologies that the earthlings had mastered, with the guidance of the local inhabitants who were only too glad to show them round. Then they did a cultural study of the customs of the area and the genteel approach to living. Finally, the earthlings were asked how they managed the procreation of the species. The locals who thought that this was off color, requested the aliens to show them how, the aliens did this. The aliens took them to a machine, pressed a few buttons, and out popped a tiny alien, within minutes. Now the locals had to fulfil their promise. They took them to the marital bed-room of a couple and discretely showed them the entire sex act, starting with the small talk, which took a rather long time and ending in a frenzy. At the end of the performance, the aliens said, ‘This is an amazing performance. Where is the new earthling?’ The locals laughed out loud and said ‘You know, you have to wait nine months, by earth time, to see a young earthling’.

            The aliens were flabbergasted and said, ‘If you have to wait nine months for the result, why was there an indecent haste, in the last part of the act?’+

Thursday, November 23, 2023

The impotent husband

             This story was narrated by a colleague who was a physician with a good private practice. One day a middle aged couple who appeared very wealthy, came to consult him. The wife who was bedecked in sparkling jewelry and wearing a very expensive saree, was the first to speak before a dumb-founded husband. She complained bitterly that the husband could not perform in bed as in earlier days, as he did not have a good erection. The husband who was sporting thick gold rings on his fingers and wearing an expensive watch was dressed in nationals and appeared to be a businessman. He seemed unaffected by the wife's out-burst of complaints. My physician friend was thinking of diabetes etc as the cause of the impotence. To be on the safe side, he asked the wife to wait outside, while he did a thorough examination of her husband. As soon as the door closed behind the wife the husband blurted out, ‘Doctor, there is nothing wrong with me. I have a mistress and I do a good job with her. In fact I do it far in excess, so that when I get home, I am not physically fit to do it on my wife.’ That sorted out one problem of diagnosis for my physician friend. The subsequent encounter of the physician with the wife, to explain the husband,s problem, is another story.     

Monday, November 20, 2023

Stories by Dr.Dewadithya, Eye Surgeon.

 Dr. Deva-Aditiya – Consultant Eye Surgeon During our student days we had to do two weeks of ’eye appointment’ at the eye hospital. Dr. Deva-Aditya was one of the eye surgeons and some of us were allocated to him to do the ‘eye appointment”. Dr. Deva-Aditya was close to retirement and was a raconteur of note. These are two of his tales. 

1. A policeman had come to an Eye Surgeon with a condition which necessitated removal of the affected eye-ball. A mistake had occurred in the operating theatre and the wrong eye-ball was removed. The surgeon had felt remorse to say the least. He had offered to pay a ‘handsome’ compensation to the patient. The patient had accepted this amount without signing any documents on the pretext of not embarrassing the surgeon. Once the full payment had been made, he had filed a court case and won another substantial amount as damages, legally, for this grave mistake. The message which Dr. Deva-Aditya gave us was ‘never trust a policeman’.

 2. Just opposite the Kynsey Road entrance to the General Hospital Colombo, is a clock tower commemorating the memory of Dr. Koch, who was a past principal of the then Medical College. He belonged to a long-gone era and is not to be confused with our beloved Professor Koch of Physiology. This clock tower was called Koch’s clock tower from early days. Next to the clock tower, according to Dr. Deva-Aditiya there was in those days a common room for the Medical students. In this common room, hung a huge portrait of the departed Dr. Koch, looking down on the activities of the medical students playing cards, carrom and billiards, with an enigmatic smile. One day, said Dr. Deva-Aditya, the powers that be decided to white-wash the walls of the common room. All the photographs, hanging on the walls were taken down. The last photograph to be taken down with reverence was the huge photograph of Dr. Koch. There was a large audience to witness and help in bringing down this photograph. When the photograph was taken down, lo and behold, a large collection of used condoms fell to the floor in a heap, under the place where the photograph was hanging. It became apparent that generations of medical students, had not only been playing billiards in the common room. The condoms after use had found an immediate safe and undetectable receptacle, behind the photograph of the enigmatic smile of Dr. Koch.

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Forging a signature

    " There was always a problem before the final examination, of submitting the ‘record books’ of students. These record books issued on entry to the Medical Faculty to each student, carried the The Clinical Professors 11 am 52 The Resurrection signatures of people under whom the requisite appointments were done. These had to be completed and submitted to the Dean’s office with the application form for the final MBBS examination. Unfortunately collecting signatures at the last moment was a very tricky thing. The particular consultant may have retired, died, or simply refused to sign up that particular student for low attendance or unsatisfactory work. As in any group, there was a fringe who would take any risk, including forging a signature, which they considered a harmless pastime. 

    One of the scenes I remember is a ‘forger’ seated comfortably on a table with a blank sheet of paper and pen with the correct color of ink and shape of nib, for those were the days we used ink pots and ’G’ nibs on nib-holders, for official work. There was a chap with a blotting paper standing by, to blot out the excess ink on the signature. The forger had a specimen signature of the particular consultant in front of him and started to imitate it on the blank paper, repetitively. As the imitation approached perfection, he would shout “now” and the record book would be put in front of him, to place the signature there at the appropriate place. The blotting paper was applied and now the record book was ready for submission. I do not recall any one having got caught and many of these miscreants are now pillars of society, in the medical Profession."

(Extract from "Remembered Vignettes")

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Mercy killing, Sardinia, historical.

Agabbadòra Hammer (worldhistoryandevents.blogspot.com)

Please click on the weblink  below :- 

 https://worldhistoryandevents.blogspot.com/2023/11/agabbadora-hammer.html?m=1.

I came across a similar story authored by Jack London, long ago.It relates how an old and infirm, old man, is left to die in the frozen north, by his Eskimo tribe. He would have been a severe handicap in the annual migrations of his clan. He is left with some provisions in a constructed shelter. His son lingers a few moments to take a final farewell from his father, to join the clan in their migrations. As he leaves, he sees the wolves waiting in the distance.

Philip G V

Monday, November 13, 2023

Prof. A.C.E. Koch - Physiology

"Professor Koch’s early lectures were frequently peppered with the name of 'Claude Bernard'. Even this simple name was taken down incorrectly in our notes by some and at a subsequent fortnightly quiz, it was written as 'Lord Bernard Claude' by a colleague.  This error was commented on by Professor Koch in a subsequent lecture. In the hematology lectures he drilled into us the need to 'cross match' the blood samples and to 'double check' the results to avoid mistakes with incompatible blood transfusions. One of the students described this scenario as - 'to cross and double-cross'- the blood, before transfusing it to a patient.

Professor Koch had his collection of jokes which he repeated during the lectures. Needless to say, we found them as incomprehensible as his lectures and we were unable to grasp their meaning. Professor Koch would pause after relating each joke and say 'AHEM', to indicate to the class that he had cracked a joke. Then the whole class would erupt into simulated laughter and scraping of feet. Some would even provide a realistic imitation of 'rolling in laughter', much to the amusement of their colleagues.

            The white coat and horn-rimmed glasses of Professor Koch are still a vivid memory. He was kind to us at the exams and never pushed us too hard. He had done his post graduate work on high altitude physiology and 'oxygen debt' which was his favorite topic. Deep sea diving and the appearance of 'bends' during rapid ascent was another of his favorite topics.

            Tissa Kappagoda recalled his memories of Professor Koch’s lectures in this way.  “Professor Koch's lectures were exactly as you described them.   Their significance dawned on me 10 years later when I started doing research in Leeds and I spent the best part of thirty years chasing Claude Bernard and his internal environment!  Things went the full circle for me a few years back, when I was invited by the Physiologists in Colombo to deliver his memorial lecture.  Professor Basnayake was in the audience and he came up to me before the lecture and asked me if I remembered him!  How could one forget these people?”

Our batch-mates, Ooyirlankumaran and Asoka Dissanayake were among the last batch of lecturers recruited by Professor Koch just a few months before he retired.  Asoka remembers him as a portly figure always dressed in a white twill suit as was the custom then. “His name was pronounced as "cock" but I was told much later by my friend Carlo Fonseka that the “ch” should have been softer as in “couch”.  I believe he drove a grey Austin 50 car. He had trained in the Respiratory Physiology Laboratory at Oxford possibly with A.P. Douglas of “Douglas bag” fame. He used to boast that Roger Bannister (the first person to run the mile under 4 minutes and later, a famous neurologist) was a medical student at Oxford at the time and was tested on the treadmill there. Professor Koch used to take the Reproductive Physiology lectures and used to pun on the term "Castrated Cock".  Being forewarned by our seniors we were
expected to bring the roof down, by stamping on the wooden floor of the
Physiology Lecture Theatre at this bon mot.  Sadly, he was dead of a liver disease within a year after his retirement.”

(Extract from 'Remembered Vignettes")

Sunday, November 12, 2023

'One day', A song for unity.

Please click on the weblink words below:-

 

 

Yellow flowers fallen on the Kynsey road.

 

    I recall coming to work one bright morning after it had rained all night.  We were then in the 2nd MB. I used to travel from Wellawatte by bus to the ‘As-vaattu-handiya’ by bus. We used to enter the hospital from Ward Place at the entrance to the old Eye hospital and walked through the corridors of the General hospital, making our exit at the Kynsey Road entrance near the Koch’s Clock Tower. We were marked as 'Block students' by the bones we carried. They were usually long bones or the base of the skull.

            There was a tall tree on the opposite side of Koch’s clock tower, near the main hospital entrance gate. It provided shelter on hot sunny days, to the visitors waiting for the gates to open at 12 Noon. This huge tree used to bloom annually, with lovely yellow flowers. On this particular day the yellow blooms, had fallen en masse with the drizzle in the night and lay carpeting the road. In those days for most of the hospital minor staff, clerks, the majority of medical students and at least one senior lecturer, commuted to work by bicycle. The traffic on Kynsey Road began to build up and the first bicycle skidded on this carpet of flowers made mushy by the drizzle, around 7 a.m. The bicycle traffic increased by the minute as did the number of people skidding and falling off their bicycles. Some helpful souls tried to stop the cyclists before they reached the dangerous slippery patch, by clapping and gesticulating to them from the roadside. These efforts though meant kindly, only added to the confusion.  Very soon a large crowd gathered to witness the mayhem. Eventually the police arrived and blocked off the road to traffic from either side. The indignant bicyclists were forced to dismount and roll their machines along the pavement. When order was restored finally on that memorable day in 1961, there was little to show other than bent handle-bars, a few torn dresses and some bruised egos. That tree has long been felled.

            The students who had bicycles   parked them in the shed near the Medical Students Union Common Room. It was rumoured that after the final results were announced, quite a few newly minted doctors abandoned their bicycles in the shed, as they felt that it was infra dig for an MBBS to ride a push cycle.  Often these bicycles were appropriated by 'Marker' of MSU Common Room fame, who later sold them. Now one could count the number of medical students, riding to the faculty on bicycles, on one’s fingers. A large number of present day medical students own cars. The authorities at the faculty have covered the drain that ran along the Norris Canal Road by the Physiology Block with concrete slabs and have created a road-side car park, for the medical students.  A few brave souls still ride motor powered two-wheelers, but this is a high-risk proposition, because of the mayhem, that is Colombo traffic.

By rule of thumb.

  There is an English 'idiom' - "By rule of thumb". This was presumably sanctioned by the English Church. It allowed a husband to chastise his wife, with a stick with a thickness, no bigger than that of the husband's thumb.


Comment by Geri,

Hi Philip. I think it is ascribed to ‘English Law’ but not particularly linked to a Church.

FROM GOOGLE 

1. The idiom conjures an image of someone being squashed under a gigantic thumb, as a bug may be squashed. The idiom to be under someone's thumb first appeared in the early eighteenth century, though why the thumb is the anatomy that is used in this phrase is unknown.


2.Rule of thumb

Meaning

A means of estimation made according to a rough and ready practical rule, not based on science or exact measurement.

Origin

This has been said to derive from the belief that English law allowed a man to beat his wife with a stick so long as it is was no thicker than his thumb. In 1782 Judge Sir Francis Buller is reported as having made this legal ruling. That same year James Gillray published a satirical cartoon attacking Buller and caricaturing him as 'Judge Thumb'.

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Films seen during our medical student days, 1960 to 1965.

 

Entertainment was limited to the radio (for music) and films.  Television had not reached Ceylon then and the ‘Internet’ was not even a figment of anyone’s imagination.  Cinema formed our major source of entertainment during our medical student days. I would like to recall some of the most memorable English films released at the time.

1.      General  

a.      The Grass is Greener – A beautifully filmed story, of a lost romance and its aftermath.

b.      Holiday in Paris – This was billed as a parody of the antics of an heir to the British Crown.

c.       The Ten Commandments – Cecille B de Mille’s story of Moses and the exodus of the Israelites from bondage in Egypt of the Pharoahs. It took a lot of money to produce and was filmed in 70mm to be projected on a very big screen with audio of 32 channels if I recall correctly.

d.      Ben Hur – was in the same mould as the Ten Commandments but not as successful.

2.      Comedy  

a.      Laurel and Hardy – The ‘fat and lean men’ of American comedy, had a series of slap-stick jokes.

b.      Norman Wisdom – Much more serious comedy than the Americans. We would not miss a single Norman Wisdom show in town.

c.     Paris Holiday – Starring Bob Hope and Fernandel –. This was one of the best color films of that period. Bob Hope was the top American comedian and Fernandel was his French counterpart. This story revolved around tracing a manuscript of a play that had been lost in France. It was superb with a lot of laughs.

d.      School for Scoundrels - an English comedy on ‘one-upmanship’ containing typical subtle British humour.

e.       The ‘Carry On’ series which included such classics as Carry on Doctor and Carry on Nurse  were big draws in the cinemas.

3.      Horror   

a.      Alfred Hitchcock – A series of films directed by Hitchcock drew a dedicated crowd. It was said that Hitchcock himself appeared in a scene in each of the films he produced. It was a challenge to us to spot him in each new release by him.  

b.      The Curse of the Demon. A story of a demon let loose in an English countryside, with many thrills.

4.      Musicals  

a.      South Pacific – A lovely musical about the American forces in the Pacific, during the Second World War starring Rossano Brazzi and Mitzi Gaynor.

b.      The Sound of Music - A lovely musical starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. We used to sing quite a few of these songs at our parties. During my stay in the UK in 1982, I was told by a nurse working in Aylesbury, that confessing to being an admirer of this musical in conversation, immediately consigned one to the lower classes of English society. The reverse was the case with ‘My fair Lady’. Such little acts draw social lines in the UK.

c.       My Fair Lady – A musical based on George.Bernard.Shaw’s play ‘Pygmallion’. Again it had a lot of songs which we sang in parties.

d. The King and I - The story of an English teacher’s experience in the Thai Royal household. (One of our innocent friends at Bloemfontein loudly read the advertisement for the picture as, ‘The King and One’ and brought the house down!).

A pronouncement of the King of Siam (Yul Brynner), in the film,


" A girl is like a blossom, with honey for just one man,

And the man must be like the honeybee and gather all he can,

To fly from blossom to blossom, the honeybee must be free,

But the blossom must not ever fly, from bee to bee to bee".


Such were the sentiments expressed from Hollywood in the late 1950s.

5.      War films  

a.      The Longest Day – Darrell Zanuck’s story of the landing in Normandy during Second World War.

b.      A Bridge Too Far – The story of the failed attempt to seize a strategic bridge in Europe, during the Second World War.

c.       Colditz – The story of a German Prisoner of War camp in Germany.

d.      Tora, Tora, Tora – The story of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

e.       The Bridge Over the River Kwai. – David Lean’s film, about the construction of a bridge by British prisoners of war.

6.      Westerns   

a.      High Noon and Shane – classics of their genre.

b.      The Magnificent Seven with Yul Brynner .    

7.      Movies with titillating sex scenes  

a.      The Light Across the Street which starred Brigitte Bardot - The story of the young wife of a French bowser driver. The husband meets with an accident and suffers head injury and is advised off sex. It gave the director Roger Vadim a lot of latitude to build a story around Brigitte Bardot’s role.

b.      And God Created Woman – Also directed by Roger Vadim and starred Brigitte Bardot had a few suggestive scenes but was not much of a film.

Most of these films were in black and white. There were no zoom lenses those days on cameras and you can see the effect on the films, when we see the replays now. Violence and explicit sex scenes were very few. The current Hollywood films have too much violence. I watch French films which are really superb on TV5, on my satellite TV now. Sex is always an underlying theme in the French films, but it is handled with refinement and finesse unlike in present day Hollywood films. I also watch Korean Tele-Dramas, which have no violence and are really wonderful, on Ari-rang Satellite TV. They have an unending array of themes, which are an eye opener to other film producers.

Nagulesparan and Geri

  Nagulesparan's daughter's wedding at Galle Face Hotel