Apart from the movies themselves, film publicity introduced Indian audiences to the modern look too. Among the publicity designers of the 30s, J. Mistri was the most forward-looking, churning out both glamorous images with a Hollywood feel and less conventional explorations. In my book The Art of Bollywood (2010), I hazarded the guess he was Jagmohan Mistri, a publicity artist working at Sagar Movietone in 1938. Since then, I have discovered evidence of him running his own art studio out of the Bombay suburb of Santa Cruz in 1933. In an advertisement issued that year, Mistri described himself as a highly experienced ‘Business Architect with the training of an Artist’, explaining that just as an architect uses his expertise to build homes, a designer, too, applies his training to develop businesses—a task which must be done ‘more thoroughly than building a house’.