Questions

Textual Question[2M][Flamingo-Prose]

Take a timed test

18 questions · self-marked practice — reveal the answer and mark yourself.

Question 22 Marks
How does the writer describe the make-up room of the Gemini Studios?
Answer
The make-up room of the Gemini Studios had incandescent lights. It also had lights at all angles around large mirrors. Those subjected to make-up had to face bright light and a lot of heat there. It was on the upper floor of the building that was believed to have been Robert Clive’s stables.
View full question & answer
Question 32 Marks
Bring out the humour in the job of the make-up men.
Answer
The make-up men came from all corners of the country and could transform any decent-looking person into a repulsive crimson coloured fiend and made people look uglier than they were in real life. They used truck loads of pancakes and locally manufactured potions and lotions to transform the looks of the actors.
View full question & answer
Question 42 Marks
How was the make-up room a fine example of national integration?
Answer
Transcending all the barriers of regions, religions and castes, people from all over India came to Gemini Studios for jobs. The make-up department was headed by a Bengali, succeeded by a Maharashtrian, assisted by a Dharwar Kannadiga, an Andhra, a Madrasi, Christian and an Anglo Burmese and the usual local Tamils. Hence, the writer finds in the make-up department a perfect example of national integration.
View full question & answer
Question 52 Marks
Why did the author appear to do nothing in the studio?
Answer
The author’s job in the studio was to cut newspaper clippings of all the relevant news items and articles that appeared in different newspapers and maintain a record of the same. This tearing of newspaper gave an impression that he was free and simply whiling away his time. People used to barge in his cubicle and lectured him.
View full question & answer
Question 62 Marks
Why was the office boy frustrated? Who did he show his anger on and how?
Answer
The office boy had joined the studio years back. He aspired to be a top film star, or top screen writer, lyricist or director. He felt frustrated on not being able to realise his dreams and had been given a job much below his calibre and dignity. He blamed Kothamangalam Subbu for all his woes, ignominy and neglect. He often gave vent to his frustrations in the narrator’s cubicle. The narrator yearned for relief from the never-ending babble of the office boy.
View full question & answer
Question 72 Marks
Subbu is described as a many-sided genius. Justify.
Answer
Kothamangalam Subbu may not have had much formal education but, by virtue of his being born as a Brahmin, he had had exposure to many affluent situations and people. He had the ability to look cheerful at all times, even after a setback. He was always full of creative ideas. Above all, he was a charitable and extravagant man and hospitable to his relations. His loyalty had put him close to his boss. But he seemed to others a sycophant and a flatterer and, probably, that was the reason he had enemies.
View full question & answer
Question 82 Marks
How did the lawyer unwittingly bring an end to a brief and brilliant career of a young actress?
Answer
A talented but very temperamental actress lost her cool on the sets. The lawyer recorded her outburst and played it back, much to her embarrassment. The actress from the countryside was so terrorstruck that she retreated and never got back to films. In this way, his mischief making brought an abrupt end to the brilliant actress’ career.
View full question & answer
Question 92 Marks
Why did the magazine, ‘The Encounter’, ring a bell in the writer’s mind?
Answer
The writer wanted to participate in a short story writing contest organized by ‘The Encounter’, a British publication. Before sending his entry, he waited, confirm the authenticity of the periodical, so he visited the British Council Library. When the author read the editor’s name, a bell rang in his mind. It was Stephen Spender, the poet who had visited the Gemini Studios.
View full question & answer
Question 102 Marks
What was significant about the book which the author took from roadside?
Answer
‘The God That failed’ was the name of the book which caught the attention of the author. It contained the essays of six eminent men, who described their journey into communism and their return from it after being disillusioned. It suddenly assumed great significance for the author as he discovered that one of the essays had been written by Stephen Spender, the poet, who had visited the studio. He now understood the reason for his having been invited.
View full question & answer
Question 112 Marks
What do you understand about the author’s literary inclinations from the account?
Answer
The author was very knowledgeable young man whose job required him to pour over the newspaper all day long. His interest in creative writing and participating in story writing contests indicates his interest in literature. This interest was so keen that he read books on varied subjects and went about buying them even when he was short of money.
View full question & answer
Question 122 Marks
What kind of people, according to the author, are meant for prose writing?
Answer
According to the author, prose writing is not the pursuit of a genius. It is for the patient, persistent and persevering drudge whose heart can take rejections and whose spirit to keep trying does not get killed so easily.
View full question & answer
Question 132 Marks
Why was Gemini Studios a favourite haunt of poets?
Answer
Gemini Studios was a favourite haunt of poets as it had an excellent mess which supplied good coffee at all times of the day and for most part of the night. Meeting there was a satisfying entertainment. Moreover, Mr. Vasan was a great admirer of scholarly people.
View full question & answer
Question 142 Marks
‘Prose writing is not and cannot be the true pursuit of a genius’, says the author. Explain the statement.
Answer
In this statement, the author says that prose writing can’t be the true pursuit of a genius because it is always rejected. A genius is not that is accepted everywhere. The author states all this with criticism that prose writing is actually meant for rejection. Prose writers are patient, persistent and persevering drudges. They can’t be down played by rejection slips. Everytime he gets a rejection slip for his manuscript, he starts making a fresh copy and sends it to another publisher with return postage.
View full question & answer
Question 152 Marks
‘Suddenly the book assumed tremendous significance.’ Explain the statement.
Answer
The author bought one copy of the book ‘The God That Failed’ from the footpath. Six eminent men of letters in six separate essays describe their journey into communism and their disillusioned return. Among them one was Stephen Spender. The author at once recollected that Stephen Spender had visited Gemini Studios. He knew about the mystery of his visit now. So, the book assumed tremendous significance for him.
View full question & answer
Question 162 Marks
Explain the appropriateness of the title ‘Poets and Pancakes’?
Answer
The chapter describes Gemini Studios and its functioning very clearly. Its employees are little unrecognized poets. Though they work in a film studio, the focus is on the author’s station in the Studios as a make-up boy using pancakes on crowd players, and how he failed as a poet. So, the title is appropriate.
View full question & answer
Question 172 Marks
How humorously does the author describe Frank Buchman’s Moral Re-Armament Army?
Answer
The author humorously calls the Moral Re-Armament Army after someone as ‘an international circus’. Then he states that they were not very good on the trapeze. Their acquaintance with animals should have been much as animals play tricks in a circus. “But the group ate animals”, says the author their acquaintance with animals was only at the dining table.
View full question & answer
Question 182 Marks
What was thought of a communist by the studios people?
Answer
According to these people, a communist was a godless man. He had no filial or conjugal love. He had compunction about killing his own parents and children. He was always out to cause and spread unrest and violence among the innocent and ignorant people.
View full question & answer