Name Masoumeh Borujerdi Native name مهوش Role Singer Years active 1950-1961 | Birth name Mahvash Akram | |
Also known as Banu Mahvash,Ma'sumeh Azizi Borujerdi,Akram Abgushti Occupation(s) Singer, dancer, stage performer Movies The Sun Shines, Two Brides for Three Brothers |
Mahvash
Mahvash (Persian مهوش) born Masoumeh Azizi Borujerdi (Persian معصومه عزيزى بروجردى) was a singer, dancer, film actress and stage performer. She came from a poor family and was lauded as a singer (performer) of the people in the 1950s.
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Biography
Mahvash was born Masoumeh Azizi Borujerdi in Borujerd, Iran to a poor family, when Mahvash was a teenager the family came to Tehran. At an early age, Mahvash lost her mother and became a prostitute growing up in the brothels of Tehran, Iran. The brothels were her earliest stage; and from there, she went on to perform in Tehran’s cabarets and cafes and drew large support from the working people. She performed risque songs in the cabarets, on the radio and in movies. She gained the admiration of the masses’ by articulating in her songs the problems, difficulties, and frustrations of the common people, struggles which she knew very well. Her most famous songs involved a call and response style singing with her male audience.
She published a book in 1957 which she termed an "autobiography" which was entitled Secrets of Sexual Fulfillment (Persian: Raz-e Kamyabi-ye Jensi). This book was more of a sex manual had pictures of her in a bathing suit and was published and widely distributed despite being prosecuted for the book in June 1960. It seems that Mahvash’s ability to speak to the marginalized majority absolved her of her forays into prostitution and other publicly indecent behavior.
When Mahvash died in a car accident in 1961, her public funeral went down in Iran’s history as the largest of its day, with thousands of Iranians on the streets to mark her passing. Iranian religious authorities were unwilling to accept burying her in a Muslim cemetery because as an entertainer she was considered "unclean" and "unchaste", however when the large amount of mourners celebrated her passing they relented.
She is buried in the Ibn Babawayh Cemetery in Tehran.