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Mehtab (actress)

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Mehtab
Screen shot from Jhansi Ki Rani
Born
Najma Khan

(1918-04-28)April 28, 1918
DiedApril 10, 1997(1997-04-10) (aged 78)
Resting placeBada Qabrastan, Marine Lines, Mumbai
OccupationActress
Years active1928–1969
Spouse(s)Ashraf Khan (divorced)
Sohrab Modi 1946-1984 (his death)
Children2 Sons

Mehtab (1918–1997) was a popular Indian actress of Hindi/Urdu films who worked from 1928-1969.[1] She was born in Sachin, Gujarat, to a Muslim family and named Najma. Her father, Sedee Abraham Khan, was the Nawab of Sachin, near Surat in the state of Gujarat.[2] Starting her career in the late 1920s with small roles in films like Second Wife (1928), Indira B. A. (1929), and Jayant (1929) she went on to do character roles before acting in the lead opposite Ashraf Khan in Veer Kunal (1932). After almost a decade of doing mainly action-oriented roles, she came into prominence with the Kidar Sharma directed Chitralekha (1941) due to her bathing scene in the film.[3]

She married her early co-star Ashraf Khan with whom she had a son. They divorced later and she married Sohrab Modi in 1946. Modi cast her in the historical drama Jhansi Ki Rani (1953), which in spite of having spectacular scenes and lavish sets was a disaster.[4][5] She stopped acting in films following 1953 except to act in her last role as a character artist in Modi's Samay Bada Balwan (1969). She died in Mumbai on 10 April 1997.[6]

Career

Mehtab acted in her early feature film Kamaal-e-Shamsheer (1930) with W. M. Khan, which was produced by her mother under Excelsior film company.[2] Her other films at this time include Hamara Hindustan (1930) a silent film which starred Ruby Myers, Jal Merchant and Mazhar Khan.[7] She went on to act in several films mainly in action roles produced by the Sharda Film Company under different directors. Finally in 1932, she acted under the banner of Indian Art Productions as the main female lead in Veer Kunal opposite Ashraf Khan, an actor she was to marry and then divorce.[2] She continued to work under different banners including Chandulal Shah for Ranjit Movietone in Bhola Shika (1933) directed by Jayant Desai with E. Billimoria as hero, and Ranchandi directed by Babubhai Jani opposite Navin Chandra. She also acted in a couple of films directed by Jaddanbai like Moti Ka Haar and Jeevan Swapna, both in 1937.[8] However, in spite of working for several banners, none of her films fared well at the box-office.

Following the birth of her son, and subsequent divorce from Ashraf Khan, Mehtab acted in the Film Corporation of India film Qaidi (1940), which had Ramola, Madhuri, Wasti and Nandrekar co-starring along with her. Though not the main role, she was however noticed in the film leading to her being cast by Kidar Sharma for Chitralekha (1941), which had the famous bathing scene with Mehtab in the pool sans clothes. Sharma wanted to cast Mehtab in the title role, who till then had acted mainly in "stunt" films as he thought she was perfect for the role. As Sharma recalls, everyone except K.A. Abbas and a journalist of a magazine called Deen Duniya, published from Delhi panned the scene brutally.[9] Chitralekha was also the debut of actor Bharat Bhushan, though in a small role.[10] Mehtab was cast in Sharda (1942), along with Wasti, Ulhas and Nirmala Devi by A. R. Kardar for his Kardar Productions. The film is famous for the thirteen-year-old Suraiya, who became famous giving playback singing for a much older Mehtab.[11] 1943 saw her acting in two more Kardar directed films; Kanoon with Shahu Modak, Nirmala Devi and Jagirdar and Sanjog a comedy film opposite Noor Mohammed Charlie, Wasti and Ulhas. The same year she did a Wadia Productions film directed by Homi Wadia, Vishwas (1943), which also starred Surendra, and Trilok Kapoor with composer Firoz Nizami debuting as the music director.[12]

In 1944 Sohrab Modi cast Mehtab in the Central Studio production Parakh. Mehtab recalled in an interview that it was while shooting for this film that the two had grown closer.[1] Modi did not act in the film which starred Mehtab with Yakub and Balwant Singh. Parakh had music by Khursheed Anwar and Saraswati Devi.[13] Mehtab acted in films like Ismat (1944), Ek Din Ka Sultan (1945), Saathi (1946) and Shama (1946). In 1953, Modi produced, directed and acted in Jhansi Ki Rani, which starred a now ageing Mehtab as the young Jhansi Ki Rani.[14] The film was a big financial disaster and the last starring role of Mehtab. Mehtab acted in Modi's Samay Bada Balwan (1969) in a character role.

Personal life

Mehtab a Muslim, married Sohrab Modi, a Parsi, on 28 April 1946, her birthday.[15] According to Mehtab, the marriage was not approved of by Modi's family.[1] This was Mehtab's second marriage and she had an eight-year-old son Ismail, from the previous marriage to her first co-star Ashraf Khan. Her condition for marrying Modi was that her son, Ismail, stay with them. Modi talked the situation over with her ex-husband, regarding Ismail, who then lived with Mehtab and Modi following their marriage. Modi was twenty years older at 46 years and had just finished his relationship with Naseem Banu.[16] Mehtab and Modi had one child together called Mehelli who they brought up as a Parsi. Sohrab Modi died on 28 January 1984, at the age of 85 years. Mehtab died on 10 April 1997 in Mumbai, Maharashtra and was buried at the Bada Qabrastan, Marine Lines, Mumbai.[2][6]

Awards

Mehtab received the Best Actress award in a Hindi film for Parakh at the 8th Annual BFJA Awards.[17]

Filmography

  • Second Wife (1928)
  • Jayant (1929)
  • Indira B. A. (1929)
  • Kamaal-e-Shamsheer (1930)
  • Hamara Hindustan (1930)
  • Prithviraj (1931)
  • Virni Vibhuti (1931)
  • Diwano (1931)
  • Husn Pari (1931)
  • Shooro Sainik (1931)
  • Jange Davlat (1931)
  • Shaliwahan (1931)
  • Khubsoorat Khawasan (1932)
  • Veer Kunal (1932)
  • Bhola Shikar (1933)
  • Krishna Sudama (1933)
  • Miss 1933 (1933)
  • Pardesi Preetam (1933)
  • Ranchandi (1933)
  • Cinema Queen (1934)
  • Prem Pariksha (1934)
  • Veer Pujan (1934)
  • Laheri Jawan (1935)
  • Magic Horse (1935)
  • Stree Dharma (1935)
  • Taqdeer (1935)
  • Bholi Bhikharan (1936)
  • Moti Ka Haar (1937)
  • Jeevan Swapna (1937)
  • Devbala (1938)
  • Baghi (1939)
  • Leatherface (1939)
  • Ek Hi Bhool (1940)
  • Qaidi (1940)
  • Chitralekha (1941)
  • Masoom (1941)
  • Bhakta Kabir (1942)
  • Chaurangee (1942)
  • Sharda (1942)
  • Kanoon (1943)
  • Sanjog (1943)
  • Vishwas (1943)
  • Bahar (1944)
  • Jeevan (1944)
  • Ismat (1944)
  • Parakh (1944)
  • Ek Din Ka Sultan (1945)
  • Behram Khan (1946)
  • Sathi (1946)
  • Shama (1946)
  • Jhansi Ki Rani (1953)
  • Samay Bada Balwan (1969)

References

  1. ^ a b c "Yesteryear actress Mehtab remembers her husband Sohrab Modi". cineplot.com. Cineplot.com. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d "Mehtab-biography". cinegems.in. Cinegems.in. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  3. ^ Kidar Sharma (2002). The one and lonely Kidar Sharma, (an anecdotal autobiography). Bluejay Books. p. 178. ISBN 978-81-87075-96-7. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  4. ^ B D Garga (1 December 2005). Art Of Cinema. Penguin Books Limited. pp. 57–. ISBN 978-81-8475-431-5. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  5. ^ Renu Saran (25 February 2014). Encyclopedia of Bollywood–Film Actors. Diamond Pocket Books Pvt Ltd. pp. 108–. ISBN 978-93-5083-690-3. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  6. ^ a b "People-Mehtab". muvyz.com. Muvyz, Inc. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  7. ^ "Hamara Hindustan". Chiloka.com. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  8. ^ "Person Detail-Mehtab". citwf.com. Alan Goble. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  9. ^ The one and lonely Kidar Sharma, (an anecdotal autobiography).
  10. ^ Raheja, Dinesh. "Bharat Bhushan, the tragic hero". rediff.com. Rediff.com. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  11. ^ Ashish Rajadhyaksha; Paul Willemen; Professor of Critical Studies Paul Willemen (10 July 2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. Routledge. pp. 224–. ISBN 978-1-135-94318-9. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  12. ^ "Lyrics of Vishwas (1943)". Hindilyrics.net. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  13. ^ "Parakh". Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  14. ^ Gangar, Amrit (2008). Sohrab Modi The Great Mughal of Historicals. New Delhi, India: Wisdom Tree. p. 111. ISBN 9788183281089.
  15. ^ "Founders-Sohrab Modi". Film and TV Guild India. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  16. ^ D. P. Mishra; India. Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. Publications Division (1 September 2006). Great masters of Indian cinema: the Dadasaheb Phalke Award winners. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India. ISBN 978-81-230-1361-9. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  17. ^ "BFJA Award winners 1945". bfjaaward.com. Bengal Film Journalists' Association. Retrieved 27 December 2014.