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Flashback: Flury's glorious days

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  • Flashback: Flury's glorious days

    Gautaman Bhaskaran, Hindustan Times
    Author Chennai
    March 25, 2010
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    Flashback: Flury's glorious daysStephen Court on Calcutta's famed Park
    Street that turned into a towering inferno last Tuesday has been a
    historic symbol, and the tea-room, Flury's, that adorned the
    99-year-old heritage building, was even more iconic. Stephen Court,
    built by penniless Armenian refugee-turned-millionaire Stephen
    Arathoon, was among the innumerable stately mansions that along with
    magnificent churches and expansive garden houses made up the Calcutta
    (as it was then called) of the 1960s and 1970s.

    On the one hand, the city was a picture of languidness. Tramcars
    rambled along what seemed like cobbled streets, the driver shooing
    away men and animals from the tracks with his foot-bell. Weather-worn
    buildings stared down at hand-pulled rickshaws as they struggled to
    move through smoke-belching motorised traffic. Calcutta's football
    fanatics gorged on spongy `rosogulla' and triangular `singada' after
    they had argued silly over their Mohan Bagan and East Bengal heroes,
    while the babus of the Writers' Building, the State Secretariat,
    debated American atrocities in Vietnam over small mud cups of syrupy
    tea.

    Away from this cacophony of babus culture and streetcars lay another
    Calcutta, the swinging city, whose focal point was the posh Park
    Street. Its ritzy night spots like Moulin Rouge, Macomb, Blue Fox and
    Trances offered live music and sizzling cabaret. Pam Crain crooned,
    and so did a 20-something silk sari-clad Tam Bram, Usha Uthup, who
    became a rage at Trincas with her sexy voice and sensational songs. A
    few yards from Trincas across Park Street lay Flury's, Calcutta's only
    tea-room. Founded by J. Flurys and his wife in 1927, it served
    traditional European confection. It soon became the rendezvous of the
    young and the old, who savoured its exotic cakes, creamy pastries,
    rich puddings and the world's finest chocolates. Its tastefully
    enriched interior recalled the romance of the Raj, and this sense of
    timelessness lingered when I began frequenting Flury's in the early
    1970s.

    Gautaman Bhaskaran

    The haunt of girls and boys from the nearby Loreto and St. Xavier's
    colleges, Flury's played the perfect Cupid to longing love and racing
    hearts, perhaps scandalizing the morals of the institutions. For
    decades, when St. Xavier's refused to turn co-educational, the Loreto
    girls remained the Xavierians' most important link with the opposite
    sex. Over Flury's aromatic beverages and tea-cakes many love stories
    were written - and erased.

    The tea-house was also the den for Calcutta's artistic brigade.
    Satyajit Ray made a rare appearance for his piece of pastry there,
    when he chose to miss his regular `adda' at The Coffee House in
    Central Calcutta. Professors from Xavier's, like Lal and Vishwanathan,
    discussed the finer nuances of the English language in the decorous
    ambiance of Flury's, and, perhaps, looked the other way when they saw
    courtship between the two rigidly missionary institutions. There was
    then Mrinal Sen, the media-made rival of Ray. Sen's garrulousness
    rattled the tea-cups all right.

    Stephen Arathoon's daughter herself must have stepped into Flury's for
    her cup of coffee. She lived in one of the flats in Stephen Court till
    her ripe old age as a witness to the bond her father first established
    with a street that got its name from a deer park which was once stood
    there.

    The fire perhaps burnt down the lingering traces of that link.
    (Gautaman Bhaskaran grew up in Calcutta's halcyon days)
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