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Meena Kumari
However, her studied reserve, chaste diction and -- most of all -- extraordinary voice, that struck the right balance between the erotic and the pathetic, ensured her place in the hearts of the Indian movie-going public. One reason for this popularity was her private life, which at times rivaled the plot of any movie. She married Kamal Amrohi who directed some of her best films. However, her strong independent spirit would not be subordinated by her husband's genius and they eventually separated in 1964. She was also a poet in her own right, and was able to lend to the characters she played a certain poetic tenderness and intensity. A collection of her poems in Urdu under the pen name Naaz was published after her death. S ahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (Master, Mistress and Servant 1962) became in more than a symbolic way the crossroads of her life. Like the heroine of the film, she increasingly took to drink and embarked on the road to gradual 'ruin'. Her screen image of a tormented, self-mortifying woman became an extension of her own personality. Pakeezah (1971), jointly conceived with her husband, was completed shortly before her tragic death in 1972 and was her last great performance. The image of her limpid eyes and tremulous voice remains to epitomize the tragic heroine of the Hindi film. Sources Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul. Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. London: British Film Institute; New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994 Mahmood, Hameeduddin. The Kaleidoscope of Indian Cinema. NewDelhi: East West Press, 1974 Brief Filmography Baiju Bawra(1952) Daera, Do Bigha Zameen, Parineeta (1953) Bandish (1956) Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1963) Pakeezah (1972) Back to Cinema [Dance] [Architecture] [Art] [Music] [Cinema] [Cuisine] [Festivals] [Literature] [Street Life] |