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Nargis

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Name
  
Fatima Rashid

Full Name
  
Fatima Rashid

Years active
  
1935, 1942–1968

Died
  
May 3, 1981, Mumbai

Occupation
  
Actress

Role
  
Film actress


Ethnicity
  
Punjabi

Other names
  
Nargis Dutt

Religion
  
Spouse
  
Sunil Dutt (m. 1958–1981)

Nargis Nargis Dutt Lesser known facts The Times of India

Born
  
1 June 1929 (
1929-06-01
)

Children
  
Sanjay Dutt, Priya Dutt, Namrata Dutt

Similar People
  

Nargis Dutt (born Fatima Rashid, but known by her screen name Nargis; June 1, 1929 – May 3, 1981), was an Indian film actress. Regarded as one of the greatest actresses in the history of Hindi cinema, she made her screen debut as a child in Talash-E-Haq in 1935, but her acting career began in 1942 with Tamanna (1942). During a career that spanned from the 1940s to the 1960s, Nargis appeared in numerous commercially successful as well as critically appreciated films, many of which featured her alongside actor Raj Kapoor. She was the younger sister of the well-known actor Anwar Hussain.

Contents

Nargis Happy birthday Nargis Newsmobile

One of her best-known roles was that of Radha in the Academy Award-nominated Mother India (1957), a performance that won her Best Actress trophy at the Filmfare Awards. In 1958, Nargis married her Mother India co-star, actor Sunil Dutt, and left the film industry. She would appear infrequently in films during the 1960s. Some of her films of this period include the drama Raat Aur Din (1967), for which she was given the inaugural National Film Award for Best Actress.

Nargis Nargis IMDb

Along with her husband, Nargis formed the Ajanta Arts Cultural Troupe, which roped in several leading actors and singers of the time and held stage shows at border areas. In early 1970s, she became the first patron of The Spastics Society of India, and her subsequent work with the organisation brought her recognition as a social worker, and later a Rajya Sabha nomination in 1980.

Nargis iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMTY1NzE0ODkzNl5BMl5

Nargis died in 1981 of pancreatic cancer, a few days before her son Sanjay Dutt made his debut in Hindi films. In 1982, the Nargis Dutt Memorial Cancer Foundation was established in her memory. The award for Best Feature Film on National Integration in the annual National Film Awards ceremony is called the Nargis Dutt Award in her honour. In 1958, she was honoured with the Padma Shri by the Government of India.

Nargis Nargis Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Early life and background

Nargis Top 10 Films of Indian Actress Nargis Bollywood Film

Nargis was born as Fatima Rashid in Calcutta, Bengal (now Kolkata, West Bengal). Her father Abdul Rashid (born Mohanchand Uttamchand Tyagi alias Mohan Babu), was originally a wealthy Mohyal Brahmin (a Punjabi Hindu), from Rawalpindi, Punjab (now in Pakistan) who had converted to Islam. Her mother was Jaddanbai, a Hindustani classical music singer and one of the early pioneers of Indian cinema. Nargis's family then moved to Allahabad from West Punjab. She introduced Nargis into the movie culture unfolding in India at the time. Nargis' maternal half-brother, Anwar Hussain (1928–1988), also became a film actor.

Career

Nargis Various Photographs of Hindi Movie Actress Nargis 1940

Fatima made her first film appearance in the 1935 film Talashe Haq when she was six years old, credited as "Baby Nargis". Nargis (نرگس [ˈnərɡɪs]) is a Persian word meaning Narcissus, the daffodil flower. She was subsequently credited as Nargis in all of her films.

Nargis appeared in numerous films after her debut; she won lasting fame for her later, adult, roles, starting with at the age of 14, in Mehboob Khan's Taqdeer in 1943 opposite, Motilal. She starred in many popular Hindi films of the late 1940s and 1950s such as Barsaat (1949), Andaz (1949), Awaara (1951), Deedar (1951), Shree 420 (1955), and Chori Chori (1956). She appeared in Mehboob Khan's Oscar-nominated rural drama Mother India in 1957 for which she won the Filmfare Best Actress Award for her performance. Baburao Patel of the film magazine Filmindia (December 1957) described Mother India as "the greatest picture produced in India" and wrote that no other actress would have been able to perform the role as well as Nargis.

After her marriage to Sunil Dutt in 1958, Nargis gave up her film career to settle down with her family, after her last few films were released. She made her last film appearance in the 1967 film Raat Aur Din. The film was well received and Nargis' performance as a woman who suffers from multiple-personality disorder, was critically acclaimed. For this role she won a National Film Award for Best Actress and became the first actress to win in this category. She also received a Filmfare Best Actress Award nomination for this film.

In 2011, Rediff.com listed her as the greatest actress of all time, stating, "An actress with range, style, grace and an incredibly warm screen presence, Nargis is truly a leading lady to celebrate." M.L. Dhawan from The Tribune said, "In almost all her films Nargis created a woman who could be desired and deified. The charisma of Nargis's screen image lay in that it oscillated between the simple and the chic with equal ease."

She was also nominated to the Rajya Sabha (Upper house of Indian Parliament) from 1980–81 but due to cancer she fell ill and died during her tenure.

Personal life

Nargis had a long-time relationship with actor Raj Kapoor, who was her co-star in the films Awara and Shree 420. Raj Kapoor was married and had children. After he refused to divorce his wife, Nargis ended their year-long relationship.

Nargis married actor Sunil Dutt (a Mohyal from Jhelum, British India) on March 11, 1958. Reportedly, Dutt had saved her life from a fire on the sets of Mother India. She converted to Hinduism and changed her legal name to "Nirmala Dutt" after they married on 11 March 1958. Three children were born from their union: Sanjay, Namrata, and Priya.

Sanjay went on to become a successful film actor. Namrata married actor Kumar Gaurav, son of veteran actor Rajendra Kumar who had appeared alongside Nargis and Sunil Dutt in Mother India. Priya became a politician and a Member of Parliament (Lok Sabha).

With her husband, Nargis formed the Ajanta Arts Cultural Troupe, which involved several leading actors and singers of the time, and performed at remote frontiers to entertain the Indian soldiers at border. It was the first troupe to perform in Dhaka, after the liberation war of Bangladesh in 1971. Later, Nargis worked for the cause of spastic children. She became the first patron of The Spastics Society of India. Her charitable work for the organisation got her recognition as a social worker.

Death

Nargis was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and underwent treatment for the disease at Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Upon her return to India, her condition deteriorated, and she was admitted to Breach Candy Hospital in Bombay. She went into a coma on 2 May 1981 and died the next day. Less than a week after her death, on 7 May 1981, at the premiere of her son's debut film Rocky, one seat was kept vacant for her.

Nargis was buried at Badakabarastan in Marine Lines, Bombay. A street in Bandra, Mumbai was renamed Nargis Dutt Road in her memory.

Awards and recognitions

  • 1957 – Filmfare Best Actress Award for Mother India
  • 1958 – She was the first film actress to conferred by the Government of India with the Padma Shri title, the fourth highest civilian award.
  • 1968 – National Film Award for Best Actress for Raat Aur Din.
  • 1969 – Nominated, Filmfare Best Actress Award for Raat Aur Din
  • 2001 – "Best Artists of the Millennium" award by Hero Honda and film magazine Stardust along with actor Amitabh Bachchan.
  • The National Film Awards honoured Dutt by instituting the Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration upon her achievement in Hindi Cinema.

    Filmography

    Actress
    2011
    Thakur 420
    2010
    Number Darni
    1968
    So Many Dreams on the Streets
    1967
    Deva Tuzhi Sonyachi Jejuri
    1967
    Raat Aur Din as
    Varuna
    1964
    Yaadein as
    Priya's silhouette
    1960
    Kala Bazar as
    Nargis
    1958
    Adalat as
    Nirmala
    1958
    Ghar Sansar as
    Uma
    1958
    Lajwanti as
    Kavita
    1957
    Miss India as
    Rama
    1957
    Pardesi as
    Champa
    1957
    Mother India as
    Radha
    1956
    Chori Chori as
    Kammo
    1956
    Stay Alert as
    Temple singer (uncredited)
    1955
    Shree 420 as
    Vidya
    1954
    Angarey as
    Simshi
    1953
    Dhoon
    1953
    Papi as
    Lachhi
    1953
    Aah as
    Neelu / Chandra / Reshma Rai
    1953
    Paheli Shaadi
    1952
    Amber as
    Rajkumari Amber
    1952
    Ashiana as
    Gaura
    1952
    Bewafa as
    Roopa
    1952
    Sheesha
    1952
    Anhonee as
    Roop H. Singh / Mohinibai
    1951
    Deedar as
    Mala
    1951
    Hulchul as
    Asha
    1951
    Pyar Ki Baten as
    Princess Nadira
    1951
    Saagar
    1951
    Awaara as
    Rita
    1950
    Birha Ki Raat
    1950
    Chhoti Bhabbi
    1950
    Father's House as
    Bela
    1950
    Jan Pahchan as
    Asha
    1950
    Jogan as
    Surabhi / Meeradevi
    1950
    Khel
    1950
    Meena Bazaar
    1950
    Pyar
    1950
    Aadhi Raat
    1949
    Andaz as
    Neena
    1949
    Lahore as
    Lilo
    1949
    Roomal
    1949
    Barsaat as
    Reshma
    1949
    Darogaji as
    Raju
    1948
    Anjuman
    1948
    Anokha Pyar as
    Geeta
    1948
    Mela as
    Manju
    1948
    Aag as
    Nimmi
    1947
    Mehandi
    1947
    Nargis
    1947
    Romeo and Juliet
    1945
    Bisvi Sadi
    1945
    Humayun as
    Hamida Bano
    1944
    Ismat
    1943
    Taqdeer as
    Shyama
    1937
    Moti Ka Haar
    1936
    Hriday Manthan
    1936
    Madam Fashion
    1935
    Shadi Ki Raat
    1935
    Sher Dil Aurat
    1935
    Talashe Haq as
    Razia (as Baby Rani)
    Archive Footage
    1987
    Raj Kapoor as
    Self

    References

    Nargis Wikipedia