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Though they were close friends, Rudyard Kipling and Sir Henry Rider
Haggard wrote about adventure and the exotic in very different
ways. Examined together, their works illuminate each other. The
writings of both authors have been adapted to the screen, stage,
television, and radio numerous times (with varying degrees of
fidelity) and this is a complete guide to those adaptations. In the
main section of the book each original literary work is summarized,
followed by a complete filmography and analysis for each film based
on that story or poem. Separate sections provide information on
adaptations created for radio, stage, and television. Photographs
are included from films ranging from ""The Jungle Book"" (Kipling)
to King Solomon's ""Mines"" (Haggard).
Among the top child stars of the 1930s and 1940s was a former
stable boy from southern India, the only star with a single name -
Sabu. Born Selar Shaik in 1924, he vaulted to stardom in his first
film, a British production entitled Elephant Boy (1937). For the
next decade he either starred or was featured in several finely
crafted adventure films, including the fantasy favorite The Thief
of Bagdad (1940) and the definitive version of Rudyard Kipling's
perennially popular Jungle Book (1942). Adapting to modern western
ways proved remarkably easy due to his above average intelligence
and innate charm. After moving to America, the popular performer
became a U.S. citizen in 1944, and did his bit for the war effort
as a belly gunner, seeing action in the Pacific theater. In the
post-war years Sabu's career began its inevitable decline. Fantasy
and exotic adventure films were not as popular as during the war,
and Hollywood studios found the dark-skinned actor difficult to
cast. In the early 1950s he journeyed to Europe, appearing in a
pair of Italian films and two circuses. Sabu next made a triumphant
return to his homeland where he acted in one film and tested for
another. Returning to America, the still young actor was seen in
some minor films and one final foreign film made in Germany. After
appearing in a Disney film, India's first and most enduring
international movie star passed away suddenly of a heart attack in
December 1963, leaving behind an exceptional legacy of memorable
motion pictures and an image of radiant youthfulness.
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