Meena Kumari - Poems
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Movie Aquisitions in 2010 - Hindi Cinema
Movie Aquisitions in 2010 - Hindi Cinema CISCA thanks Professor Nirmal Kumar of Sri Venkateshwara Collega and Meghnath Bhattacharya of AKHRA Ranchi for great assistance in bringing the films to Aarhus. For questions regarding these acquisitions please contact CISCA at [email protected] (Listed by title) Aamir Aandhi Directed by Rajkumar Gupta Directed by Gulzar Produced by Ronnie Screwvala Produced by J. Om Prakash, Gulzar 2008 1975 UTV Spotboy Motion Pictures Filmyug PVT Ltd. Aar Paar Chak De India Directed and produced by Guru Dutt Directed by Shimit Amin 1954 Produced by Aditya Chopra/Yash Chopra Guru Dutt Production 2007 Yash Raj Films Amar Akbar Anthony Anwar Directed and produced by Manmohan Desai Directed by Manish Jha 1977 Produced by Rajesh Singh Hirawat Jain and Company 2007 Dayal Creations Pvt. Ltd. Aparajito (The Unvanquished) Awara Directed and produced by Satyajit Raj Produced and directed by Raj Kapoor 1956 1951 Epic Productions R.K. Films Ltd. Black Bobby Directed and produced by Sanjay Leela Bhansali Directed and produced by Raj Kapoor 2005 1973 Yash Raj Films R.K. Films Ltd. Border Charulata (The Lonely Wife) Directed and produced by J.P. Dutta Directed by Satyajit Raj 1997 1964 J.P. Films RDB Productions Chaudhvin ka Chand Dev D Directed by Mohammed Sadiq Directed by Anurag Kashyap Produced by Guru Dutt Produced by UTV Spotboy, Bindass 1960 2009 Guru Dutt Production UTV Motion Pictures, UTV Spot Boy Devdas Devdas Directed and Produced by Bimal Roy Directed and produced by Sanjay Leela Bhansali 1955 2002 Bimal Roy Productions -
Magazine1-4 Final.Qxd (Page 3)
SUNDAY, JULY 19, 2020 (PAGE 4) What we obtain too cheap, BOLLYWOOD-BUZZ we esteem too lightly Unforgettable Bimal Roy V K Singh Inderjeet S. Bhatia "Prince" Devdass (Dilip Kumar) and Paro's (Suchitra Sen). Child music and song " Yeh mera Diwanapan Hai" by mukesh are hood friendship blossoms into love. But Paro is forced to still popular. 'The harder the conflict, the more glorious The 111th birth anniversary of Bimal Roy, the father fig- marry a rich zamindar because Dev Dass's Father (Murad) "Kabuliwala" produced by Bimal Roy and released on the truimph'. These words of Thomas Paine ure of Indian Cinema was held on 12th was against this relationship. This turned Devdass into a 14th Dec,1961 was not a commercial hit but is still remem- written before the American Revolution July. Bimal Roy, lovingly called as depressed alcoholic. Chandramukhi (Vijayanthimala) too bered for power-packed performace of Balraj Sahni in the Bimal Da 1909 to a Bengali Baidya , sought to inspire Americans in their struggle could not provide solace to his bleeding heart. Released on title role of a Pathan called Rahmat whose wife is no more. Dhaka, which was part of Eastern Jan 1 , 1955 film created box office history by collecting He has a little daughter Ameena (Baby Farida) to whom he for freedom against Great Britain. They have Bengal before partition of 1947 (now more 1 crore in those times. Film bagged best actress in a cares like a mother. He also keep saving her from the wrath an evergreen freshness and resonate with the Dhaka division Bangladesh). -
Swakshar Edition 3
SCREENWRITERS ASSOCIATION NEWSLETTER M A R C H 2 0 2 0 E D I T I O N 3 SWA CELEBRATES ITS 'DIAMOND JUBILEE' IN YEAR 2020! S W A A W A R D S , C O N F E R E N C E , P I T C H F E S T , W O R K S H O P S A N D V A R I O U S E V E N T S L I N E D U P Established in 1954, by stalwarts like Ramanand Sagar, Khwaja Ahmad Abbas, Shailendra, Sahir Ludhianvi, Majrooh Sultanpuri and Kamal Amrohi, the Screenwriters Association (SWA; formerly the Film Writers' Association) is the strongest and the most well known trade union of film, TV and digital media writers and lyricists working in India. While the constitution of the Association was adopted in the General Body Meeting held in 1956, Film Writers’ Association, Bombay, got registered as a trade union under the Trade Union Act 1926 with Registration No. 3726 only on May 13th 1960. Thus, 2020 marks the 60th year for SWA from the day of its official functioning. The Executive Committee of SWA has planned a series of events, like SWA Awards (launch year), screenwriting workshops in prominent cities, pitching fest, the 6th edition of the Indian Screenwriters Conference (6ISC) and other events to mark the occasion. Stay tuned to SWA's official website www.swaindia.org and official social media pages for upcoming announcements. An Award for the Writer, By the Writers! A LONG-CHERISHED DREAM OF INDIAN SCREENWRITERS & LYRICISTS COMES TRUE SWA Awards 2020 are the only awards in India dedicated Hon. -
Koel Chatterjee Phd Thesis
Bollywood Shakespeares from Gulzar to Bhardwaj: Adapting, Assimilating and Culturalizing the Bard Koel Chatterjee PhD Thesis 10 October, 2017 I, Koel Chatterjee, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: Date: 10th October, 2017 Acknowledgements This thesis would not have been possible without the patience and guidance of my supervisor Dr Deana Rankin. Without her ability to keep me focused despite my never-ending projects and her continuous support during my many illnesses throughout these last five years, this thesis would still be a work in progress. I would also like to thank Dr. Ewan Fernie who inspired me to work on Shakespeare and Bollywood during my MA at Royal Holloway and Dr. Christie Carson who encouraged me to pursue a PhD after six years of being away from academia, as well as Poonam Trivedi, whose work on Filmi Shakespeares inspired my research. I thank Dr. Varsha Panjwani for mentoring me through the last three years, for the words of encouragement and support every time I doubted myself, and for the stimulating discussions that helped shape this thesis. Last but not the least, I thank my family: my grandfather Dr Somesh Chandra Bhattacharya, who made it possible for me to follow my dreams; my mother Manasi Chatterjee, who taught me to work harder when the going got tough; my sister, Payel Chatterjee, for forcing me to watch countless terrible Bollywood films; and my father, Bidyut Behari Chatterjee, whose impromptu recitations of Shakespeare to underline a thought or an emotion have led me inevitably to becoming a Shakespeare scholar. -
Oberoi (Middle East) Events
OBEROI (MIDDLE EAST) EVENTS AN INSIGHT INTO THE EVENTS THAT MADE HISTORY P.O.Box 21187, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates Tel: + 971 6 5245292 Fax: + 971 6 5688301 E-mail: [email protected] / [email protected] INTRODUCTION OME – Oberoi (ME) Events , rated one of the leading and most reputed Event Management firms in the region – having presented over 52 professionally conceptualized Musical concerts, Theatre events, International Music Awards, Corporate Gala events etc., since 2 decades. We are proud to say that OME has been the pioneer in the UAE/ Gulf in the staging of their event brand “ONE WORLD ONE MUSIC” ( 1W1M ) series musical concerts – presenting the leading and elite singers and musicians from the sub-continent, together on one platform – with a humble and noble mission to spread the message of peace, brotherhood and friendship in the region. The trail blazer of the 1W1M series concerts, featuring the most popular artistes from India & Pakistan, SONU NIGAM AND JUNOON , at the prestigious Nad Al Sheba grounds in October 2000, broke many-a- records: • THE FIRST INDO-PAK CONCERT IN THE UAE/ GULF • THE 2 ND HIGHEST ATTENDANCE IN ANY ASIAN MUSICAL CONCERT IN THE UAE/ GULF (+ 15,000) • THE LONGEST DURATION MUSICAL EVENT IN THE UAE/ GULF (+ 5-1/2 HOURS) • THE 1 ST ASIAN EVENT TO BE ANNOUNCED IN THE BBC MIDDLE EAST WORLD NEWS With the immense success and fan following for the “ONE WORLD ONE MUSIC” concept concerts, witnessed by over 60,000 music lovers of S. Asia in the UAE, we were invited by DSF authorities to present three of the most prestigious 1W1M musical events for the prestigious “Dubai Shopping Festival 2003 and 2004” calendar of events – the same which were acclaimed as one of the most entertaining and successful events in the UAE. -
Soha Ali in Harvard University
From Rang De Basanti to Harvard University Updated on: May 10, 2011 prachi 292 Views Soha Ali Khan, daughter of famous Bollywood actress and legend Sharmila Tagore, is now all set for her visit to Harvard University. She is in a state of elation after she was invited to Harvard University to deliver a lecture on Indian Cinema. This session is being titled as "Cinema-Then and Now". Oxford students are excited and looking forward for this session as Sharmila Tagore is also going to make a special appearance. During the session, Soha will also pay tribute to some of the great legends like Madhubala, Meena Kumari, Waheeda Rehman and her mother Sharmila Tagore. According to Soha, she is overwhelmed about her Disclaimer: This PDF is auto-generated based on the information available on Shiksha as on 04-Jun-2020. Harvard visit but tensed too as she has never delivered such lecture session and that too in front of the big fans of Bollywood. She said that she has done a thorough research as what all she'll be covering in the article like whom all contributed to the Indian cinema and major factors that has made has given a shape to the Indian movies. She is also planning to talk about all the big actors and their contribution to the Indian Cinema. Not only this, her creative work in movies like ‘Khoya Khoya Chand', Rang De Basanti', and ‘Antarmahal' will also be screened during the lecture. So, here is a time to learn as well as to share and learn from the experiences of well-renowned Indian actors and actresses. -
Name of the Centre : DAV Bachra No
Name of the Centre : DAV Bachra No. Of Students : 474 SL. No. Roll No. Name of the Student Father's Name Mother's Name 1 19002 AJAY ORAON NIRMAL ORAON PATI DEVI 2 19003 PUJA KUMARI BINOD PARSAD SAHU SUNITA DEVI 3 19004 JYOTSANA KUMARI BINOD KUMAR NAMITA DEVI 4 19005 GAZAL SRIVASTVA BABY SANTOSH KUMAR SRIVASTAVA ASHA SRIVASTVA 5 19006 ANURADHA KUMARI PAPPU KUMAR SAH SANGEETA DEVI 6 19007 SUPRIYA KUMARI DINESH PARSAD GEETA DEVI 7 19008 SUPRIYA KUMARI RANJIT SHINGH KIRAN DEVI 8 19009 JYOTI KUMARI SHANKAR DUBEY RIMA DEVI 9 19010 NIDHI KUMARI PREM KUMAR SAW BABY DEVI 10 19011 SIMA KUMARI PARMOD KUMAR GUPTA SANGEETA DEVI 11 19012 SHREYA SRIVASTAV PRADEEP SHRIVASTAV ANIMA DEVI 12 19013 PIYUSH KUMAR DHANANJAY MEHTA SANGEETA DEVI 13 19014 ANUJ KUMAR UPENDRA VISHWAKARMA SHIMLA DEVI 14 19015 MILAN KUMAR SATYENDRA PRASAD YADAV SHEELA DEVI 15 19016 ABHISHEK KUMAR GUPTA SANT KUMAR GUPTA RINA DEVI 16 19017 PANKAJ KUMAR MUKESH KUMAR SUNITA DEVI 17 19018 AMAN KUMAR LATE. HARISHAKAR SHARMA RINKI KUMARI 18 19019 ATUL RAJ RAJESH KUMAR SATYA RUPA DEVI 19 19020 HARSH KUMAR SHAILENDRA KR. TIWARY SNEHLATA DEVI 20 19021 MUNNA THAKUR HIRA THAKUR BAIJANTI DEVI 21 19022 MD.FARID ANSARI JARAD HUSSAIN ANSARI HUSNE ARA 22 19023 MD. JILANI ANSARI MD.TAUFIQUE ANSARI FARZANA BIBI 23 19024 RISHIKESH KUNAL DAMODAR CHODHARY KAMLA DEVI 24 19025 VISHAL KR. DUBEY RAJEEV KUMAR DUBEY KIRAN DEVI 25 19026 AYUSH RANJAN ANUJ KUMAR DWIVEDI ANJU DWIVEDI 26 19027 AMARTYA PANDEY SATISH KUMAR PANDEY REENA DEVI 27 19028 SHIWANI CHOUHAN JAYPAL SINGH MAMTA DEVI 28 19029 SANDEEP KUMAR MEHTA -
Reel Number 13
Reel Number 13 Gayathri Prabhu and Nikhil Govind (from Shadow Craft: Visual Aesthetics of Black and White Hindi Cinema, Bloomsbury Academic, 2021) Meena Kumari in Abrar Alvi’s Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962) Source: National Film Archive of India The decision to write this book emerged from our artistic and academic trajectories intersecting over the question of how to develop a vocabulary to speak about the visual aesthetics of a cinema that had left an indelible imprint on the infancy of the nation. The same aesthetics made its presence felt in the terrain of our childhoods in the 1980s when these movies and film-makers continued to be celebrated in popular culture via reruns on television and cassettes played on VHS (Video Home Systems). Kamal Amrohi, Madhubala, Meena Kumari, Ashok Kumar, Raj Kapoor, Bimal Roy, Guru Dutt, Nargis, Nutan and Abrar Alvi, came to represent a wistfully exhumed cinematic footprint. More recently, the iconic black-white- grey images from that time, stark to our colour-biased internet-weary eyes, reminded us that perhaps we had not given sufficient thought to what those assertive visual articulations represented to a collective consciousness that had shaped several decades of artists and viewers in India. The irony of this preoccupation with visual form, at a time when our engagement with the format was as far removed as possible from the original format of the cinema (35 mm), was not lost on us. Even though neither of us was born at the time of the films’ first theatrical release, our viewings were from television telecasts and cassettes played at home—for me it was the highlight of summer vacations in Mangalore (with gratitude to that archaic institution called the video rental library) and for Nikhil Govind these were viewings during school years in Burma (he wonders if the films were smuggled/pirated). -
Nahiiin! Face Gallery the Nahiiin! Face Gallery Celebrating the finest Histrionic Achievements in Indian Cinema, One Actor at a Time
The Nahiiin! Face Gallery The Nahiiin! Face Gallery Celebrating the finest histrionic achievements in Indian cinema, one actor at a time. Celebrating the finest histrionic achievements in Indian cinema, one actor at a time. http://memsaabstory.wordpress.com http://memsaabstory.wordpress.com Ajit Amjad Khan Amrish Puri A. Nageswara Rao Anil Kapoor Bindu Biswajeet Brownie Moti Heeralal Pannalal Mooga Manasulu Hare Kanch Ki Teri Meherbaniyan Yaarana (1981) Kasam Paide Karne Bandie (1978) Trishna (1978) (1977) Wale Ki (1984) (1963 - Telugu) Beta (1992) Mastan Dada (1977) Chooriyan (1967) (1985) Anwar Hussein Aruna Irani Asha Parekh Chandramohan Chandrima Bhaduri Chiranjeevi Chiranjeevi Chitra Zindagi Aur Maut Kirathakudu SP Parasuram Trip to Moon (1967) Gaddar (1973) Doodh Ka Karz Shikar (1968) Chirag (1969) Shaheed (1948) Zimbo (1958) (1990) (1965) (1986 - Telugu) (1994 - Telugu) Asha Parekh Ashoo Deepti Naval Dev Kumar Dharmendra Mere Hamdum Mere Kati Patang (1970) Samadhi (1974) Rani Aur Lalpari Kab? Kyon? Aur Yeh Ishq Nahin Yalgaar (1992) Jeevan Mrityu (1971) (1975) Kahaan? (1972) Dhund (1973) Aasaan (1982) Alibaba (1977) Dost (1968) Babita Baby Rani Bindu Dharmendra Dilip Kumar Haseena Maan Jayegi Kab? Kyon? Aur Nanha Farishta Rani Aur Lalpari Ab Kya Hoga Yaadon Ki Baarat Kahani Kismat Ki Badle Ki Aag (1982) Shaheed (1948) Aadmi (1968) (1968) Kahaan? (1972) (1969) (1975) (1977) (1972) (1973) All content on this page is for informational purposes only, and has been compiled from movies and other sources in my possession. If any copyright has been All content on this page is for informational purposes only, and has been compiled from movies and other sources in my possession. -
Tawåyaf the Most Potent Visual Image Conjured up by This Word Is Undoubtedly the Tragic Character Played by the Actress Meena K
Tawåyaf The most potent visual image conjured up by this word is undoubtedly the tragic character played by the actress Meena Kumari in the 1972 film Pakeezah. Passionate and suffering, the courtesan Sahibjaan at last finds happiness outside of the world of the nautch when she can marry the man she loves. The great literary courtesan Umrao Jan Ada (in the 1905 book by Mirza Ruswa) bemoans her fate which caused her to be kidnapped from her middle-class home at the age of twelve, and sold into the sex-trade. Although the 1981 film Umrao Jaan takes some liberties with Ruswa’s novel and adds further dramatic complications, neither the literary Umrao Jan nor the screen Umrao Jaan (played by the actress Rekha) find the happiness and societal acceptance they crave. Happy ending or not (and the success of the film Pakeezah was greatly enhanced if not solely established by the tragic ending of Meena Kumari’s life from alcoholism just a few weeks after the film was released), the image of the courtesan tends to be steeped in a mixture of decadence and debauchery. Home of the courtesan, Lucknow’s legendary etiquette and culture were mixed with its ambivalent attitude towards music and dance. The tawayaf is a woman who escapes the restricting four-walls of the life of the wife and mother and who has access to education and travel, yet is doomed to live outside of the boundaries of respectability and bourgeois acceptance. In the 2002 remake of the film Devdas, courtesan Madhuri Dixit touches the feet of her lover’s wife, played by Aishwarya Rai, saying she will always look up to the woman who is her moral superior. -
Understanding the Cultural Significance of Tawa'if and Rudali Through the Language of the Body in South Asian Cinema" (2011)
Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 1-1-2011 Performing Marginal Identities: Understanding the Cultural Significance of awaT 'if and Rudali Through the Language of the Body in South Asian Cinema Lise Danielle Hurlstone Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Hurlstone, Lise Danielle, "Performing Marginal Identities: Understanding the Cultural Significance of Tawa'if and Rudali Through the Language of the Body in South Asian Cinema" (2011). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 154. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.154 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. Performing Marginal Identities: Understanding the Cultural Significance of Tawa‟if and Rudali Through the Language of the Body in South Asian Cinema by Lise Danielle Hurlstone A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Communication Thesis Committee: Priya Kapoor, Chair Charlotte Schell Clare Wilkinson-Weber Portland State University ©2011 Abstract This thesis examines the representation of the lives and performances of tawa‟if and rudali in South Asian cinema to understand their marginalization as performers, and their significance in the collective consciousness of the producers and consumers of Indian cultural artifacts. The critical textual analysis of six South Asian films reveals these women as caste-amorphous within the system of social stratification in India, and therefore captivating in the potential they present to achieve a complex and multi-faceted definition of culture. -
21 Aug Page 07.Qxd
SWAPNIL SANSAR, ENGLISH WEEKLY,LUCKNOW, 28,MARCH, (07) Tragedy Queen of Indian Cinema Contd.From Page no.06 the film's music and lyrics were by Roshan and Sahir to August, Meena Kumari was in the hands of Dr. Sheila Sherlock.Upon Ludhianvi and noted for songs such as "Sansaar Se Bhaage Phirte Ho" and recovery, Meena Kumari returned to India in September 1968 and on the fifth "Mann Re Tu Kaahe". Ghazal directed by Ved-Madan, starring Meena Kumari day after her arrival, Meena Kumari, contrary to doctors' instructionsAAfter their and Sunil Dutt, was a Muslim social film about the right of the young generation marriage, Kamal Amrohi allowed Meena Kumari to continue her actiresumed to the marriage of their choice. It had music by Madan Mohan with lyrics by work. Suffering from cirrhosis of the liver, although Meena Kumari temporarily Sahir Ludhianvi, featuring notable filmi-ghazals such as "Rang Aur Noor Ki recovered but was now much weak and thin. She eventually shifted her focus Baraat", performed by Mohammed Rafi and "Naghma O Sher Ki Saugaat" on more 'acting oriented' or character roles. Out of her last six releases namely performed by Lata Mangeshkar. Main Bhi Ladki Hoon was directed by A. C. Jawab, Saat Phere, Mere Apne, Dushman, Pakeezah & Gomti Ke Kinare, she Tirulokchandar. The film stars Meena Kumari with newcomer Dharmendra. only had a lead role in Pakeezah. In Mere Apne and Gomti Ke Kinare, although Critical acclaim (1962) Sahib Bibi Aur she didn't play a typical heroine role, but her character was actually the central Ghulam (1962) character of the story.