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Smita Patil

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Nationality
  
Indian

Died
  
December 13, 1986, Mumbai

Years active
  
1974–1985 (death)

Spouse
  
Raj Babbar (m. ?–1986)

Name
  
Smita Patil

Children
  
Prateik Babbar

Role
  
Actress


Smita Patil Smita Patils life in pics

Born
  
17 October 1955 (
1955-10-17
)
Shirpur, Dist. Dhule, Maharashtra, India(now in Maharashtra)

Cause of death
  
Childbirth complications

Occupation
  
Actress, Television newscaster

Notable work
  
Manthan (1977),Bhumika (1977),Aakrosh (1980),Chakra (1981),Chidambaram (1985),Mirch Masala (1985)

Parent(s)
  
Shivajirao Girdhar PatilVidyatai Patil

Movies
  
Mirch Masala, Bazaar, Manthan, Bhumika, Namak Halaal

Remembering Smita Patil | Tabassum Talkies


Smita Patil (17 October 1955 – 13 December 1986) was an Indian actress of film, television and theatre. Regarded among the finest stage and film actresses of her times, Patil appeared in over 80 Hindi and Marathi films in a career that spanned just over a decade. During her career, she received two National Film Awards and a Filmfare Award. She was the recipient of the Padma Shri, India's fourth-highest civilian honour in 1985.

Contents

Smita Patil Smita Patil wallpaper 1024x768 Indya101com

Patil graduated from the Film and Television Institute of India in Pune and made her film debut with Shyam Benegal's Charandas Chor (1975). She became one of the leading actresses of parallel cinema, a New Wave movement in India cinema, though she also appeared in several mainstream movies throughout her career. Her performances were often acclaimed, and her most notable roles include Manthan (1977), Bhumika (1977), Aakrosh (1980), Chakra (1981), Chidambaram (1985) and Mirch Masala (1985).

Smita Patil Flashback Friday SmitaRaj39s unrequited love story

Apart from acting, Patil was an active feminist and a member of the Women's Centre in Mumbai. She was deeply committed to the advancement of women's issues, and gave her endorsement to films which sought to explore the role of women in traditional Indian society, their sexuality, and the changes facing the middle-class woman in an urban milieu.

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Patil was married to actor Raj Babbar. She died on 13 December 1986 at the age of 31 due to childbirth complications. Over ten of her films were released after her death. Her son Prateik Babbar is a film actor who made his debut in 2008.

Smita Patil Smita Patil The Woman Behind the Image Rediffcom Movies

Early life

Smita Patil was born in Pune into a Kunbi Maratha family to a Maharashtrian politician, Shivajirao Girdhar Patil and social worker mother Vidyatai Patil, from Shirpur town (Village-Bhatpure) of Khandesh province of Maharashtra State. She studied at Renuka Swaroop Memorial high school in Pune.

Her first tryst with the camera was in the early 1970s as a television newsreader on the newly transmitting Mumbai Doordarshan, the Indian government run broadcaster.

Career

Smita Patil belongs to a generation of actresses, including Shabana Azmi and, like her, who are strongly associated with the radically political cinema of the 1970s. Her work includes films with parallel cinema directors like Shyam Benegal, Govind Nihalani, Satyajit Ray (Sadgati, 1981), G. Aravindan (Chidambaram, 1985) and Mrinal Sen as well as forays into the more commercial Hindi film industry cinema of Mumbai. Patil was working as a TV news reader and was also an accomplished photographer when Shyam Benegal discovered her.

She was an alumna of the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune. In 1977, she won the National Award for 'Best Actress' for her performance in the Hindi film Bhumika. In her films, Patil's character often represents an intelligent femininity that stands in relief against the conventional background of male-dominated cinema (films like Bhumika, Umbartha, and Bazaar). Smita Patil was a women's rights activist and became famous for her roles in films that portrayed women as capable and empowered.

"I remained committed to small cinema for about five years ... I refused all commercial offers. Around 1977-78, the small cinema movement started picking up and they needed names. I was unceremoniously dropped from a couple of projects. This was a very subtle thing but it affected me a lot. I told myself that here I am and I have not bothered to make money. I have turned down big, commercial offers because of my commitment to small cinema and what have I got in return? If they want names I'll make a name for myself. So I started and took whatever came my way."

In time she was accepted by commercial filmmakers and from Raj Khosla and Ramesh Sippy to B.R. Chopra, they all agreed that she was "excellent." Her fans, too, grew with her new-found stardom. Patil's glamorous roles in her more commercial films — such as Shakti and Namak Halaal — revealed the permeable boundaries between "serious" cinema and "Hindi cinema" masala in the Hindi film industry. In 1984, she served as a jury member of the Montreal World Film Festival.

Her association with artistic cinema remained strong, however. Her arguably greatest (and unfortunately final) role came when Smita re-teamed with Ketan Mehta to play the feisty and fiery Sonbai in Mirch Masala (1987). Smita won raves for playing a spirited spice-factory worker who stands up against a lecherous petty official. On the centenary of Indian cinema in April 2013, Forbes included her performance in the film on its list, "25 Greatest Acting Performances of Indian Cinema".

During the making of Chakra, Smita Patil used to visit the slums in Bombay. It culminated in another National Award.

Personal life

When she became romantically involved with actor Raj Babbar, Patil drew severe criticism from her fans and the media, clouding her personal life and throwing her into the eye of a media storm. Raj Babbar left his wife Nadira Babbar to marry Patil.

Death and legacy

Smita died from childbirth complications on 13 December 1986, age 31, barely two weeks after having given birth to her son, Prateik Babbar.

Nearly two decades later, one of India's greatest film directors, Mrinal Sen alleged that Smita Patil had died due to gross medical negligence.

In 2011, Rediff.com listed her as the second-greatest actress of all time, behind Nargis. According to Suresh Kohli from Deccan Herald, "Smita Patil was, perhaps, the most accomplished actress of Hindi cinema. Her oeuvre is outstanding, investing almost every portrayal with a powerhouse realistic performance."

In 2012, the Smita Patil Documentary and Short Film Festival was initiated in her honor.

Government recognition

On the occasion of 100 years of the Indian cinema, a postage stamp bearing her face was released by India Post to honour her on 3 May 2013.

Filmography

Actress
1989
Galiyon Ka Badshah as
Tulsi
1989
Oonch Neech Beech as
Sumita
1988
Akarshan as
Special Appearance
1988
Waaris as
Paramjit 'Paaro'
1988
Hum Farishte Nahin as
Roma
1987
Sher Shivaji
1987
Aaj as
Kavita
1987
Thikana as
Shashi Goel
1987
Avam as
Dr. Shabnam
1987
Ahsaan
1987
Raahee as
Rano / Sandhya
1987
Dance Dance as
Radha
1987
Debshishu as
Seeta
1987
Nazrana as
Mukta
1987
Insaniyat Ke Dushman as
Laxmi
1986
Angaaray as
Arti Varma
1986
Mere Saath Chal as
Geeta
1986
Dahleez as
Sukhbir Kaur
1986
Anokha Rishta as
Dr. Miss Padma Kapoor
1986
Teesra Kinara
1986
Amrit as
Kamla Srivastav
1986
Mirch Masala as
Sonbai
1986
Aap Ke Saath as
Ganga
1986
Dilwaala as
Sumitra Devi
1986
Kaanch Ki Deewar as
Nisha
1986
Sutradhar as
Prerna (as Late Smita Patil)
1985
Aakhir Kyon? as
Nisha
1985
Meraa Ghar Mere Bachche as
Geeta
1985
Ghulami as
Sumitra Sultan Singh
1985
Jawaab as
Rajni / Radha Gupta / Fredi Martis / ...
1985
Chidambaram as
Shivagami
1984
Anand Aur Anand as
Kiran
1984
Giddh: The Vulture as
Hanumi
1984
Kanoon Meri Mutthi Mein
1984
Meraa Dost Meraa Dushman as
Lali
1984
Shapath as
Shanti
1984
Tarang as
Janki
1984
Kasam Paida Karne Wale Ki as
Aarti
1984
Pet Pyaar Aur Paap
1984
Raavan as
Ganga
1984
Aaj Ki Awaz as
Rajni
1984
Hum Do Hamare Do
1984
Sharaabi as
Guest Appearance in Song "Jahan Char Yaar Mil Jaye"
1984
Farishta as
Kashibai
1983
Anveshane as
Revati
1983
Haadsaa as
Asha
1983
Mandi as
Zeenat
1983
Ardh Satya as
Jyotsna Gokhale
1983
Qayamat as
Shashi
1983
Ghungroo as
Kesarbai
1983
Chatpati as
Chatpatee
1982
Bheegi Palkein as
Shanti
1982
Dard Ka Rishta
1982
Sitam as
Meenakshi
1982
Umbartha as
Sulabha S. Mahajan
1982
Arth as
Kavita Sanyal
1982
Shakti as
Roma
1982
Dil-E-Nadaan as
Asha
1982
Badle Ki Aag as
Bijli
1982
Bazaar as
Najma
1982
Namak Halaal as
Poonam
1981
Deliverance (TV Movie) as
Jhuria
1981
Tajurba as
Pinki
1981
Chakra as
Amma
1981
Bhavni Bhavai as
Ujam
1980
Aakrosh as
Nagi
1980
Albert Pinto Ko Gussa Kyon Ata Hai as
Joan
1980
Sapne Apne Apne
1980
The Naxalites as
Ajitha
1980
Sarvasakshi as
Sujatha
1978
Anugraham
1978
Gaman as
Khairun
1978
Kondura (The Sage from the Sea) as
Parvati
1977
Jait Re Jait as
Chindhi
1977
Saal Solvan Chadya as
Pinky (as Smita)
1977
Bhumika as
Usha
1976
Manthan as
Bindu
1975
Charandas Chor as
Princess
1975
Nishant as
Rukmani (as Smita)
1975
Samna as
Kamley
1974
Raja Shiv Chhatrapati as
Saibai
Music Department
1984
Raavan (playback singer)
Thanks
1988
Rihaee (film dedicated to - as Smita)
1987
Thikana (film dedicated to - as Smita)
1987
Nazrana (film dedicated to)
Self
1982
Satyajit Ray (Documentary) as
Self
1982
Bombays neue Sterne - Das indische Hollywood und sein alternatives Kino (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1981
In Search of Famine as
Self

References

Smita Patil Wikipedia