Saturday, February 28, 2009

Padmapriya(Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi)

    
   Padmapriya
(Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi)


Born: Delhi, India Flag of India 
Other name(s): Priya 
Years active :2003 - present




Personal

Padmapriya is a Tamil Brahmin, but was born in Delhi and brought up in Punjab. Her father was in the army and thus she has lived all over India. She is an established actress in the South Indian cinema. She loves Reading, Travelling, Classical Music, Cooking, Swimming and Dancing. Padmapriya is a pure vegetarian and loves good food.



Education

MBA finance graduate at Kirloskar Institute of Advanced Management Studies, Bangalore.

PG Diploma in Environmental Law from National Law School

XI and XII from Kendriya Vidyalaya Trimulgherry. Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh.

B.Sc Computer Science and Engineering, Loyola Academy, Alwal, Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh.

Career

Corporate

She was working with GE Capital as a risk consultant in Bangalore and Gurgaon.After GE she was with Symphony in Bangalore.

Classical Dancer

She has grown up to be a vibrant dansuese under the auspices of the famous guru Natya Brahma V.S. Ramamurthy. She performed more than 200 public performances to her credit. Her Krishna Leela Ballet, where she performed the role of Lord Krishna for Hyderabad Doordarshan in 1990 is telecast even today on almost all Krishna Jayanti festivals and was specially chosen for the SAARC exchange program - she also featured in Nritya Rupam, an innovative choreography by Jayalakshmi Eshwar at Delhi, which was also specially telecast by Delhi Doordarshan. She has also won Miss. Andhra Pradesh in 2001[citation needed].

Movies

Her passion for acting and modeling has made her successful in her films. Her first film was in Telugu. She then started acting in malayalam movies, where she acted with all the superstars such as Mammootty, Mohanlal, Suresh Gopi and Jayaram. Her first film in Tamil being Thavamai Thavamirundhu paired with actor/director Cheran, which turned to be a huge hit. Then followed Pattiyal a film directed by Vishnuvardhan in which she paired with Arya.

She is also a trained make-up artist and hair stylist. It was very refreshing to see Padma come up and voluntarily hair dress her competitors Kavya Madhavan and Navya Nair during the Dubai Star show in 2007.

She has also ventured into Hindi cinema and is doing Striker where she is paired opposite Siddharth. The movie is directed by Chandan Arora.

Filmography

  • Bhoomi Malayalam...Fousia
  • Kutty Srank
  • Pokkisham....Nadira
  • My Mothers Laptop (2008)
  • Striker (2008) (Hindi)....Madhu
  • Pazhassi Raja (2008)...Nili
  • Pachamarathanalil(2008)
  • Mirugam
  • TIME ...Susan Thomas
  • Moonu Pengul (2007) ...Kunnipennu
  • Paradesi (2007) ...Usha
  • Satham Podathey (2007) ...Bhanu
  • Veeralipattu (2007) ...Pooja
  • Anchil Oraal Arjunan (2007) ...Pavitra
  • Yes Your Honor (2006)...Maya
  • Karutha Pakshikal (2006)... Poongudi
  • Bhargava Charitram Moonam Kandam (2006)..Sophia
  • Ashwaroodan (2006)...Sitalakshmi
  • Pattiyal (2006) .... Saroja
  • Vadakkum Nathan (2006)...Mira
  • Rajamanikyam (2005) .... Malli
  • Thavamai Thavamirundhu (2005) .... Vasanthi
  • Amrutham (2004) .... Sainaba
  • Kaazhcha (2004) .... Lakshmi
  • Seenu Vasanthi Lakshmi(2003)...Vasanthi

Padma Lakshmi


Padma Lakshmi



Birth name :Padma Parvati Lakshmi Date of birth: September 1, 1970 (1970-09-01) (age 38) Height   :5' 9" Hair color : Black Eye color :Brown




Padma Parvati Lakshmi, (born September 1, 1970) is an Indian American cookbook author, actress, and former model who has described herself as the first well-known model from India.[1] She has been the host of the reality television program Top Chef since season two.



Biography

Early life

Padma was born in the South Indian State of Kerala, India, on September 1, 1970, though she grew up in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. However, Padma spent most of her adolescent life in the United States.


Padma Lakshmi at opening night of the Metropolitan Opera, 25 September 2006.

Her parents' only child together, Lakshmi is the daughter of an executive with Pfizer and his first wife, Vijaya,[2] a nurse who currently specializes in suicide prevention.[1] Her parents separated when she was one and divorced a year later. Both parents later remarried[3]

When she was 14 years old, she was involved in a serious automobile accident, causing an injury to her right arm, which required surgery leaving a 7 inch scar,[1] between her elbow and shoulder. The accident happened on a Sunday afternoon on her way back with her parents from a Hindu temple in Malibu. She remembers a loud bang, looking out the windshield and realizing the family's red Mercury Sedan was airborne. Padma describes the event in the April 2001 edition of Vogue as "Flying in a car felt like an exhilarating hallucination, an unbelievable ride that oddly remains one of the most beautiful images in my memory." The car flew 40 feet down an embankment straight into a tree. The tree trunk fell directly on top of the car. She remained conscious, covered in glass, for the 40 minutes it took for the paramedics and firefighters to get through the traffic. They used the "jaws of life" to extract the family from the crumpled car. A helicopter landed in the middle of the highway to air lift her parents away while an ambulance carried Padma to the hospital. Fortunately, everyone survived. Her injuries included a fractured right hip and a shattered upper right arm which resulted in her infamous seven-inch scar.

By a later marriage of her father, Lakshmi has a half-brother and a half-sister, who was an actress and classical dancer but is now pursuing a career with children with special needs.[3] As Lakshmi said in an interview published in The Guardian, "My father had quit his job as an executive at Pfizer to manage her career. That was kind of like rubbing salt in the wound. I didn't understand why he wanted that relationship with her, and not with me."[1]

Education

Lakshmi graduated from William Workman High school in the City of Industry, California. Lakshmi is a 1992 graduate of Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, where she received a B.A. with honors in Theatre Arts.[4]

Lakshmi was brought up as a vegetarian[5] and has admitted that because of this, she sometimes becomes "squeamish" when sampling other cultural delicacies. [6]

Career

Modeling

Lakshmi's career began at age 20, when she was discovered by a modeling agent in Spain while sitting in a café.[1] As she has stated, “I was the first Indian model to have a career in Paris, Milan and New York. I’m the first one to admit that I was a novelty.”[3] Despite Lakshmi's comment about her being a pioneer as a model of Indian descent, her career follows in the footsteps of Persis Khambatta, a former Miss India, who modeled for Revlon.

She has modelled for top designers such as Emanuel Ungaro, Ralph Lauren, and Alberta Ferretti and done ad campaigns for Roberto Cavalli and Versus.[7] She was a favorite model of the photographer Helmut Newton, whose photographs of her often highlighted the large scar on her right arm.

She has appeared on the magazine covers of Cosmopolitan - January 2002,[8] L'Officiel India - October 2004,[9][10] – December 19, 2004,[11] - Spring 2005,[12] - October 2005, Newsweek - March 6, 2006,[13] Asian Woman– May/June 2006,[14] Avenue - July/August 2006, and[15] Industry - February/March 2007.

Movies and television

Lakshmi had a comical supporting role as the lip synching disco singer Sylk in the 2001 American movie Glitter with Mariah Carey. She co-starred with Amitabh Bachchan and Jackie Shroff in the 2003 Hindi action box office failure Boom as Shiela Bardez, one of a trio of super models accused of stealing diamonds.[16][17] Lakshmi was last seen on screen as Geeta with Aishwarya Rai and Dylan McDermott in Paul Mayeda Berges' 2005 film The Mistress of Spices. She will be starring[citation needed] in Deepa Mehta's upcoming 2007 film, Kamagata Maru which was earlier titled Exclusion.

Padma Lakshmi made a 2002 guest appearance as alien princess Kaitaama in Precious Cargo, the 37th episode of the science fiction TV series Star Trek: Enterprise. She was also hostess of Domenica In, Italy's top-rated television show.[citation needed] She portrayed Sean Bean's nemesis in the 2004-2005 iTV TV series Sharpe's Challenge. In 2006 Lakshmi appeared in ABC's TV series The Ten Commandments with Dougray Scott, Naveen Andrews, and Omar Sharif. She took over as hostess of the popular TV cooking competition series Top Chef in 2006 during its second season and has continued every season since then to its current fifth season.

Awards

Lakshmi was named number 66 on AskMen.com's "The Top Most Desirable Women of 2008" list.

Cookbooks

Her first cookbook Easy Exotic was awarded Best First Book at the 1999 World Cookbook Awards at Versailles. She was host of the Food Network series, Padma's Passport, which is part of the larger series Melting Pot, in 2001. She has also been a guest host on parts of the British culinary tourism show Planet Food, hosting the segments on India and Spain.[18] Her second cookbook Tangy, Tart, Hot and Sweet was released October 2, 2007.[19]

Personal life

On April 17, 2004, in New York City, Lakshmi married the novelist Salman Rushdie, to whom she was introduced at a party hosted by the journalist and editor Tina Brown.[2] On July 2, 2007 the couple filed for divorce, shortly after Rushdie was granted a knighthood.[20] She is the model for one of the central characters — and love interests — in Rushdie's novel, Fury (a novel dedicated to her as well).

When questioned about Rushdie's age (he is seven years older than her father) and her long estrangement from her father (whom she has described as "the most sexy, manic, in-shape, lean, tall, handsome man I have ever met"), Lakshmi has said that there may be a correlation: “I think that we are attracted to what we feel we need."[21]

Currently, Padma is dating Ted Forstmann.

Selected filmography

1995 Unzipped Documentary (High Fashion) Herself
1997 Linda e il brigadiere
 ep: "Il fratello di Linda"
TV Series (Italian, Comedy) "Indian Lady"
1998 Il Figlio di Sandokan TV Series (Italian, Drama) N/A
1999 Caraibi TV Series (Italian, Adventure) Malinche
2000 Planet Food Documentary (Cooking) Host
2001 Glitter Film (US, Drama) Sylk
2001 Melting Pot: Padma's Passport TV Series (US, Cooking) Host
2002 Star Trek: Enterprise
 ep: Precious Cargo
TV Series (US, Sci-Fi) Kaitaama
2003 Boom Film (Indian, Drama) Shiela Bardez
2005 The Mistress of Spices Film (Indian, Drama) Geeta
2006 The Ten Commandments TV Series (US, Biblical) Princess Bithia
2006 Sharpe
 ep: Sharpe's Challenge
TV Movie (Action/History/War) Madhuvanthi
2006 Top Chef 2 TV Series (US, Reality/Cooking) Host
2007 Top Chef 3 TV Series (US, Reality/Cooking) Host
2008 Top Chef 4 TV Series (US, Reality/Cooking) Host
2008 Top Chef 5 TV Series (US, Reality/Cooking) Host







Padma Khanna


Padma Khanna



Padmini (Now Padmini Ramachandran) (Tamil)


Padmini (Now Padmini 
Ramachandran) (Tamil)




Born
:Padmini
June 12, 1932
Thiruvananthapuram, Travancore, British India
Died:
September 24, 2006 (aged 74)
Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
Other name(s): Natiya Peroli, Pappima Spouse(s) :Ramachandran



Padmini (June 12, 1932 - September 24, 2006) was an Indian actress and trained Bharathanatyam dancer who acted in over 250 Indian movies.

Apart from Hindi she also acted in films in other Indian regional languages viz. Tamil and Malayalam. She was fluent in all of the four mentioned languages, and was able to use her own voice to dub the films between these languages. She became the most popular actress and dancer of the Tamil film industry and most of her movies are shot in Tamil.



Biography

Born and raised in Thiruvananthapuram(Trivandrum) in what was then the princely state of Travancore (now the Indian state of Kerala), Padmini was the second daughter of Thankappan Pillai and Saraswathi Amma. Her sisters, Lalitha and Ragini, were also renowned film actresses. Together, the threesome were known as the Travancore sisters. Actress Sukumari is a first cousin of the Lalitha, Padmini and Ragini (their mothers are sisters).

Padmini and her sisters were disciples of the noted Indian dancer Guru Gopinath . They learnt Keral natanam style of dancing from him. A Film director, Subrahmaniam, noticed her talents while she was presenting 'Parijatha Pushpapaharanam 'in Trivandrum

At the age of 17, Padmini was cast as the heroine in Kalpana (1950), launching her film career. She acted in films for nearly 30 years.

Padmini was renowned for her linguistic ability, and dubbed her own voice onto versions of her movies destined for the Tamil, Hindi and Malayalam markets. This cross-cultural linguistic ability made her a very significant figure in the history of 20th-century moviemaking in India.

Padmini co-starred with several of the most well-known actors in Indian film, including Sivaji Ganesan, M.G. Ramachandran, Raj Kapoor, Prem Nazir, Rajkumar and Gemini Ganesan.She acted with Sivaji Ganesan in almost 60 films.

She acted in almost 400 Tamil films. Ezhai padum paadu was her first film in Tamil. Her association with Nadigar Thilagam Sivaji Ganesan starts ith the film Panam in 1952. Some of her noted Tamil films include AnbuThankapadumaiThillana MohanambalViyatnam veedu,Ethir ParathadhuMankayar thilakam , Poove Poo chooda vaa.

Some of her popular Malayalam films include Prasanna, Snehaseema, Vivaahitha, Adhyaapika, Kumaarasambhavam, Nokkethadoorath Kannumnatt, Vasthuhara, Dolar, and many others.

In two of her popular Bollywood films - Mera Naam Joker and Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hai - she was paired against the legendary Bollywood star, Raj Kapoor. Her other Bollywood films included Payal (1957), Babubhai Mistry's Mahabharat (1965), etc.

Her most famous film was Thillana Mohanambal, a Tamil film where she plays a dancer competing against a musician to see whose skills are better. She dances and he plays the trumpet.

After her marriage in 1961 Padmini semi-retired from films and focused on married life and refining her classical dance. She settled in the United States and in 1977 opened her classical dance school in New Jersey, The 'Padmini School of Fine Arts'. Her school is today one of the largest Indian Classical Dance institutions in America.[citation needed]

Padmini passed away from a heart attack in the Chennai Apollo Hospital on September 24, 2006.

Awards

Best actress award from Film Fans Association in 1954, 1959,1961 and 1966
The Kalaimamani Award from Tamil Nadu Government in 1958
The Best Classical Dancer Award from Moscow Youth Festival in 1957.
Filmfare Best Actress for her performance in Fazil's Poove Poochudava in 1985

Filmography

  • Vanjikottai valiban
  • Panam
  • Raja rani
  • Chithi
  • Vietnam Veedu
  • Iru malargal
  • Pardesi (1957)
  • Poove Poochudava
  • Gurudakshinai
  • Punar Janmam
  • Amara Deepam
  • Thaikku oru thaalattu
  • Mannadhi mannan
  • Thillana Mohanambal (1968)
  • Saraswathi Sabatham (1966)
  • Paaladai
  • Pesum deivam
  • Kuzhandaikkaga
  • Rickshawkaran
  • Kan kanda deivam
  • Deiva piravi
  • Kulama gunama
  • Thiruvarut Chelvar (1967)
  • Madurai Veeran





Padmini Kolhapure(Hindi)


Padmini Kolhapure(Hindi)



Born November 1, 1965
Maharashtra Nationality Indian Flag of India Occupation Actor


Padmini Kolhapure (born 1 November 1965) a famous Hindi actress during the 1980s.




Early life

Padmini was born to a middle-class Maharashtrian Konkani family. Her father is a Classical Singer whose family was from Kolhapur and Goa and her mother held a job working for the Airlines, whose family hailed from Mangalore. Her father's first cousins are singers Lata Mangeshkar and Asha Bhosle,

Career

As a child was in the chorus for some of their songs like yadoon ki baraat,Kitab,Dushman Dost along with her sister Shivangi (married to Shakti Kapoor).Padmini also later sang for her own films like Vidhaata (Saat Saheliyan),Hum intezaar Karenge,Sadak chaap (with late Kishore Kumar).She also released an album with Bhappi lahri called "Music Lovers".also had the honour of performing for the GLC (Greater London council) at the Royal Albert hall London with Baapi Lahiri and his troupe in 1986.

It was Asha Bhosle who suggested Padmini's name to Dev Anand who then cast the talented girl in Ishq Ishq Ishq (1975). This led to other films, such as Dreamgirl (1978), Zingagi, Saajan Bina Suhagan (1978), etc. etc

Her mother quit her airlines job to be a full-time chaperone as Padmini picked up more roles. Her most famous child role was playing Zeenat Aman as a child in Raj Kapoor's film Satyam Shivam Sundaram (1977). The memorable song "yashomati maiye se" was picturized on her, with playback singing done by none other than her aunt Lata Mangeshkar. The success of that song led to her most controversial role in Insaaf Ka Tarazu (1980), remake of Lipstick (film) (1976), where she played the rape victim that was originally played by Mariel Hemingway. She became a household name and earned the Filmfare Best Supporting Actress Award. She also graduated to heroine roles at a tender age of 15 in Nasir Hussain's Zamane Ko Dikhana Hai opposite Rishi Kapoor. The film flopped, but she reunited with Rishi Kapoor for his father Raj Kapoor's film Prem Rog (1982). The film earned her a Filmfare Best Actress Award. She also earned a special acting award for Ahista Ahista (1982 film).

Padmini was known for her professionalism and diligence. She even worked when she had fever on Do Dilon ki Dastaan. She had more box office hits, such as Vidhaata (1982) and Souten (1983). She had a huge hit with Pyar Jhukta Nahin (1985) with Mithun Chakraborty, and they were paired together in several more films. She agreed to work with Anil Kapoor when he was a new comer, in his first film Woh Saat Din (1983). The movie was a hit and helped cement his name in the Indian film industry - Anil Kapoor attributes his eventual success in the film industry to her 'luck factor' [1].

She fell in love with producer Pradeep Sharma alias Tutu Sharma after he cast her in Aisa Pyar Kahan. They married and she retired from films at the tender age of 21 (where girls today enter at that age).She has a son named Priyank.[2]. After her son grew up, she returned to acting in 2004, such as for the Marathi film Manthan and Chimnee Pakhra which was a huge hit and earned her a Screen award in the Best actress category (marathi). She has also acted in new films such as Eight (film).[3].

She was back in controversy (after the much controversial peck on the cheek to Prince Charles during his first visit to India in 1979) ... to play the role of Tulsi Virani in Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi which was much in the news after Smriti Irani left but then the role was offered to Gautami Kapoor. She is currently working on "Mera Bachpan" with Helen "Daughter" with Ayub Khan.(2008) She has also acted on stage her debuted being "Kaash" followed by "Abhi to mein jawan hoon",and currently working on "Aasman se gire khajoor pe atke" with her Brother in law Shakti Kapoor.

Padmini's younger sister Tejaswini Kohlapure is also an actress.[4]

Padmini also has another sister Shivangi Kapoor (nee Kohlapure), who is married to Indian actor Shakti Kapoor.[5]

Personal life

She is married and lives in Mumbai.

Filmfare awards and nominations

  • 1980 Filmfare Best Supporting Actress Award for Insaaf Ka Tarazu
  • 1982 Filmfare Best Actress Award for Prem Rog
  • 1983 Filmfare Nomination as Best Supporting Actress for Souten
  • 1985 Filmfare Nomination as Best Actress for Pyar Jhukta Nahin[6]

Other awards and nominations

  • 2003 Kalakar Award--Achiever Award[7]
  • 2004 Screen Best Actress Award for Chimnee Pakhre Marathi


Pandari Bai (Kannada, Tamil)


    Pandari Bai 
(Kannada, Tamil)


Pandari Bai (1930 - 2003) was a prominent heroine of South Indian languages films during the 1950s and 60s. She has the distinction of having acted as both heroine and mother to stalwarts such as Sivaji Ganesan and Dr. Rajkumar. She was the heroine in Sivaji's debut movie Parasakthi and also the heroine of Rajkumar's debut movie Bedara Kannappa.

She had acted in a thousand five hundred films in several languages like Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Hindi and enjoyed a long career span of nearly half a century. She had played lead roles in many movies with success and then switched over to character roles. Besides being attractive, she had a glowing inner beauty and a distinctive affectionate air about her which made her an ideal screen mother. Her soft looks and dialogue delivery also added luster and depth to such roles.

Interestingly, and perhaps ironically, in her later career she played the mother of stars older than she and with most of whom she had played the lead in her earlier years! [1]

Pandari Bai also acted in a couple of Kannada serials Amma and Manethana (1998-2000). Both of them were produced by her sister Mynavathy's company Yantra Media.


Filmography

  • Parasakthi (1952)
  • Thirumbi Paar (1953)
  • Andha Naal (1954)
  • Abba aaa Hudugi (1959)
  • Kula Deivam (1956)
  • Bhabhi (1957)
  • Belli Moda (1967)
  • Avalum Penn Dhaney (1974)
  • Bahar (1949)


Parminder Nagra


Parminder Nagra


Born:
Parminder Kaur Nagra
October 5, 1975 (age 33)
Leicester, England
Other name(s): Spouse(s): James Stenson (2009 - present)



Parminder Kaur Nagra (Punjabi: ਪਰਮਿੰਦਰ ਕੌਰ ਨਾਗਰਾ; born October 5, 1975 in Leicester, England) is an English actress of Indian descent. She came to international prominence in 2003 after starring in Bend It Like Beckham. She currently stars in Emmy Award-winning American medical drama series ER.



Biography



Early life

Nagra was born in Leicester England, the daughter of working class Sikh parents who emigrated to the UK from the Punjab region of northern India in the late 1960s. Her father, Sukha, was a factory worker who is believed to have separated from her mother, Nashuter, when Parminder was a child or as some close family friends say when Parminder was due to be born although the true story is not know her father has died in late December 2008.[citation needed] Parminder, her two younger brothers, and her younger sister were raised in a small terraced house in the Belgrave district of Leicester by her mother and stepfather, who worked as a bookkeeper at a cousin's transport company.

At the age of seven, Nagra suffered a burn while preparing a meal on the gas stove when her trousers caught fire. She was taken into the bathroom by an uncle who immersed her in cold water. When the burned fabric was later removed, her skin attached to it and left a resulting scar on her right leg. The story was included into the film Bend It Like Beckham; however, the details were changed such that her character was burned while making beans on toast.

Nagra attended Northfield House Primary School in Leicester. At her comprehensive school, Soar Valley College she played viola in the youth orchestra and also appeared in her first theatrical productions.

"Falling into acting"

Not long after leaving school, and only a few months after sitting her A-levels, Nagra was approached by Jez Simons, her former drama instructor, about becoming part of Hathi Productions, a leading Leicester-based British Indian theatre company, for which he served as the artistic director. She accepted and was cast as a chorus member in the 1994 musical Nimai presented at the Leicester Haymarket. Only a week into rehearsals, she was plucked from the chorus to take the place of the lead actress who had dropped out. Simons recalls that Nagra, while a good singer and actress, had an intangible quality that raised her above other actresses and that led him to select her as the new lead. Nagra sometimes describes herself as having "fallen into"[citation needed] acting due to this unexpected turn of events which occurred in India.

The London years

Before she turned twenty, Nagra left Leicester for London, forgoing university to pursue a theatrical career and her childhood dreams of becoming an actress. After selling her prized viola[citation needed], she found herself living alone in Peckham, south London, employed in a stocktaking job and struggling to find theatrical work.

Nagra's first London theatrical job came in 1994[citation needed] when she was cast as the Princess in Sleeping Beauty, a Christmas-time pantomime production at the Theatre Royal Stratford East. Although most critics[who?] seemed rather unimpressed with the show, Nagra's performance is notable in that she was a woman of colour portraying a traditionally white character.[citation needed]

After Sleeping Beauty, Nagra worked with small Indian theatre companies such as Tara Arts and Tamasha. The roles marked the first of many early career opportunities in theatre that led eventually to the radio and television appearances that also defined her career throughout most of the 1990s.

In 1996, Nagra took a small part in Fair Ladies at a Game of Poem Cards, written by Chikamatsu Monzaemon and performed at Cottesloe, Royal National Theatre. It was there that she met Irish actor Kieran Creggan, with whom she later moved into a flat in Kennington, south London. Their relationship continued for five years.[citation needed]

Although lacking formal theatrical training, Nagra signed with veteran London-based agent Joan Brown, after which she began to land her first television roles — a bit part on the British medical drama Casualty, where she played a girl attacked with a broken bottle, and a small role in the television movie King Girl in which Nagra portrayed an abusive member of a girls' gang.

In 1997, Nagra appeared in the three-part drama Turning World, starring Roshan Seth. The following year she appeared on Casualty for the second time.

The year 1999 saw her playing the part of a convenience store clerk in the television movie Donovan Quick, starring Colin Firth. Also of note are appearances on the British comedy shows Goodness Gracious Me and The Kumars at No. 42.

While slowly building a reputation on British television, Nagra also dabbled in radio, with parts in, among others, radio plays written by noted author and playwright Tanika Gupta. In 1998, Nagra was part of Dancing Girls of Lahore, a radio play co-written by her future Bend It Like Beckham co-star, Shaheen Khan. In 2001, Nagra provided the voice of a Muslim girl in Arena: The Veil, a docu-drama about women who choose to wear the Muslim head scarf.

Although Nagra had cut her teeth in television and, to a lesser extent, in radio, her stage performances are perhaps the most noteworthy element in her corpus of work during her London years. Not long after Fair Ladies at a Game of Poem Cards, Nagra was cast in 1997's Oh Sweet Sita, an adaptation of Indian mythology about Rama and his dutiful wife Sita.

Starring in the title role of Sita, Nagra caught the attention of director Gurinder Chadha, who would later write the script for Bend It Like Beckham with Nagra in mind for the lead role. Although Chadha was charmed by Nagra[citation needed], it would be five more years before the spectacular results of their collaboration would materialize.

Nagra's other notable stage roles during this period are many and include appearances in Skeleton (1997), with critical acclaim for her "bright-eyed vivacity"[citation needed] as the village girl; A Tainted Dawn (1997), playing a Hindu boy accidentally left in Pakistan and raised by a Muslim couple; Fourteen Songs, Two Weddings & A Funeral (1998), showing her skills as a romantic comedienne, also to critical acclaim; Krishna's Lila — A Play of the Asian World (1999), as part of a five-person cast in a controversially titled piece; The Square Circle (1999), tackling the demanding role of an illiterate peasant girl who becomes a rape victim; and in River on Fire (2000), as Kiran, in a retelling of Sophocles' Antigone.

Although she was fast becoming a star on the stages of London, it was 2002's surprise blockbuster Bend It Like Beckham, Nagra's first film, that turned her into an international celebrity almost overnight.

Bend It Like Beckham

Bend It Like Beckham was directed by Gurinder Chadha, a British film director also of Indian descent. It starred Nagra, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, Anupam Kher, Shaheen Khan, and Keira Knightley, for whom this film was also a career breakthrough.

The small-budget picture was a critical and financial success in the United Kingdom, eventually making the leap around the world and to the Canada and the U.S. where it earned over $30 million at the box office. The script, conceived by Chadha with her husband Paul Mayeda Berges and Guljit Bindra, was written especially with Nagra in mind.[citation needed] While initially indifferent to the game of football, Nagra found the football-centred story to be both funny and touching.[citation needed] She agreed to audition and eventually accepted the role.

In the film, Nagra plays Jesminder (Jess) Bhamra, a teenage Sikh football player who idolizes football superstar David Beckham and defies her traditional parents to pursue her dreams of playing football. The rough parallels to Nagra's (and Chadha's) own personal story are apparent.[original research?] However, pulling off the role was no small feat considering that the then-26-year-old actress had never played football and was portraying a character nearly a decade younger than she was. An intensive ten-week training course of the game futsal, led by noted coach Simon Clifford, put Nagra through rigorous nine-hour-a-day workouts.[citation needed] The hard work paid off as Nagra learned to "bend" or curve the ball in flight, as she did in one particularly memorable backyard scene. In a nod to Nagra's actual life, director Chadha wrote and incorporated a scene about Nagra's scar into the film.

Nagra demonstrated that an unknown Indian actress could carry a hit film.[original research?] For her efforts, the actress received much critical acclaim and professional accolades. Nagra became the first woman honoured as FIFA's "International Football Personality of the Year"[citation needed] and garnered no fewer than nine acting award nominations from various film organizations for her performance in Bend It Like Beckham.

In 2002, she was awarded the Golden Wave Award at the Bordeaux International Festival of Women in Cinema for "best actress" and later earned a Movieline Young Hollywood Award for "best breakthrough performance."

Beyond Bend It

Not long after wrapping up shooting on Bend It, Nagra appeared in another motion picture, Miramax's fairy tale Ella Enchanted starring Anne Hathaway and co-starring Minnie Driver, Vivica A. Fox and Cary Elwes, where she was cast in the part of Areida, friend to Hathaway's title character Ella. In addition, Nagra took on two notable television roles for Channel 4—as Viola/Cesario in a multicultural version of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, and as Heere Sharma in the two-part Anglo-Indian drama Second Generation, directed by acclaimed filmmaker Jon Sen and was loosely based on the Bard's King Lear and starred Bollywood legend Om Puri.

Although Second Generation was a ratings flop, it was a huge critical success, earning a place in The Observer newspaper's top 10 British TV programmes of 2003. It garnered Nagra a prestigious Ethnic Multicultural Media Academy (EMMA) Award for her turn as a sexually liberated and independent-minded young Anglo-Indian woman. For the role, Nagra had to muster up the courage to do some of the steamy and passionate love scenes that she had vowed not to do as an actress.[citation needed] The role allowed Nagra her first opportunity to visit her ancestral homeland of India when cast members traveled to Calcutta to shoot the drama's final scenes.

Hollywood

While on a promotional junket in Los Angeles for Bend It, Nagra was informed by her agent that ER producer John Wells was interested in meeting with her.[citation needed] In fact, Bend It director Gurinder Chadha claimed during a 2007 episode of BBC's Movie Connections that this meeting was her doing, because she had recommended Parminder for the role of the new Indian character in ER during a conversation with her friend Wells.[citation needed]

At their initial meeting, Wells made Nagra an offer to join the ensemble cast; she accepted immediately. In recalling the moment, she said, "I had to sit still and act professional, while all the time I just wanted to jump up and run around the room screaming".[citation needed] Not long after the meeting, Nagra signed a one-year contract that included an option for three additional years. Despite her new status, Nagra said, "I don't think Hollywood has changed me at all. The first thing I did when I arrived was buy chapati flour and lentils".[citation needed]

Nagra made her first ER appearance as County General Hospital medical intern Neela Rasgotra on September 25, 2003, in season 10's premiere episode entitled, "Now What?". This was one of the first recurring Indian doctor roles on American television[citation needed] (Kavi Raz was a regular cast member on St. Elsewhere). Wells adapted the character to suit Nagra, who was allowed to "keep" her own English accent in portraying the Yale-educated Anglo-Indian Neela. Nagra would go on to appear in 21 of the season's 22 episodes, including "NICU" and "The Student", episodes in which her character was a central player. Noah Wyle, on announcing his departure from the series, described Nagra as "the future"[1] of ER, and the media has concurred, anointing her as one of the show's "golden girls".

Nagra continues to garner professional accolades and honors. In 2004, she received a Teen Choice Award nomination for her work on ER and also had the honor of being a torch bearer as the Olympic torch passed through London on its way to the Games in Athens.[2] In 2005 she took home an Outstanding Achievement in Acting Award from the South Asian Students' Alliance. Later in the year, Nagra finished filming season 11 of ER and returned to her native Leicester to work on director Amit Gupta's Love in Little India[3] in which she was cast as the female lead.

She was nominated for a 2006 Asian Excellence Award, in the category of Outstanding Female Television Performance, for her work in ER. She went on to win the award the following year.[4]

Parminder Nagra was awarded the Honorary Degree of Doctors of Letters by the University of Leicester on 11 July 2007.[5]

Parminder Nagra has recently been cast in the next DC animated movie, Batman: Gotham Knight. The project is produced by Bruce Timm, who produced the Emmy-Award winning Batman: The Animated Series. Nagra will be acting alongside Batman legend Kevin Conroy, who has been voicing Batman for over 15 years. The film will be rated PG-13 like its predecessors, Superman Doomsday and Justice League: The New Frontier.

With the departure of Maura Tierney, Nagra is now the leading lady of ER. She also appeared in 2008's Compulsion.

Personal life

On January 17, 2009 Nagra married her boyfriend of seven years James Stenson. The couple had two ceremonies: a Civil one and a Sikh one. ER castmates Scott Grimes (Dr. Morris) preformed at the reception along with John Stamos (Dr.Gates) on drums. Ex ER castmate Maura Tierney officiated over the ceremony.[6] here TV Guide reported that the couple are expecting their first child who is due to be born in the summer of 2009. [7]





Parvathy Jayaram(Malayalam)


Parvathy Jayaram
   (Malayalam)



Born
Aswathy
Kerala, India Flag of India
Years active 1987-1996 Spouse(s) Jayaram


Parvathy Jayaram (Malayalam: പാര്‍വതി ജയറാം)is an award-winning film actress from Kerala, India. Her actual name is Aswathy. Parvathy was a popular actress of Malayalam cinema industry and was active in films between 1987 and 1996. Her most notable works include "Oru Minnaminuginte Nurungu Vettam" ,"Thalayanamanthram" and "Kireedam" . She later married to malayalam film actor Jayaram, who was her co-star in many films. She now lives with her family in Chennai. She has 2 children, national-award winning child actor Kalidasan and Malavika. She was introduced to the Malayalam Film Industry by the actor,director Balachandra Menon.She has acted with both of the superstars Mohanlal and Mammootty.

She typefied the typical beautiful Malayalee girl and thus was an actress who was able to make it big only in Malayalam. Many Malayalees would remember her performances in Vadakkunokkiyanthram as the lovable innocent wife of the hero, Dineshan Sreenivasan. Many would also refer to her performances in Thoovana Thumbikal as a bubbly young girl, with Mohanlal and in Peruvannapurathe Visheshangal as an insolent, alongside Jayaram.

[edit] Filimography

Year Title Role
1986 Vivahitharae Ithile Ithile Manju
1987 Amrutham Gamaya Sreedevi
Ezhuthappurangal Seetha
Jalakam Latha
Oru Minnaminunginte Nurunguvettam Unnimaya
Thoovanathumbikal Radha
Thaniavarthanam
1988 Abkarie Sharadha
Aranyakam Shailaja
Dinarathrangal
Vaishali Shantha
Witness Indu.R.Nair
1921
Aparan
Ponmuttayidunna Tharavu
Ashokante Aswathikuttikku Aswathi
Ulsavapittennu
Mrithunjayam
KudumbaPuranam
Sankham
1989 Adharvam Usha
Ardham Geetha
Douthyam Biji
Jagrada Aswathy
Kireedom Devi
Mudhra
Peruvannapurathe Visheshangal Kunjulekshmi
Puthiya Karukkal Sreedevi
Swagatham Ammalu
Utharam
Vadakkunokkiyanthram Shobha
Vachanam
Varnam Revathy
Pradeshika Varthakal Mallika
Adhipan
1990 Akkare Akkare Akkare Sethulakshmi
Carnival
Doctor Pashupathi Ammukkutty
Kuruppinte Kanakku Pusthakam
Malayogam Rema
Orukkam Kausalya
Pavakkoothu
Purappadu
RadhaMadhavam
Sandram Indulekha
Subhayathra Arundhati
Thalayanamanthram Shailaja
Vyooham Tessy
1991 Amina Tailors Amina
Souhridam
Abhayam
1992 Kunikkitta Kozhi Indu
Suryagayathri Sreelakshmi
Kamaladalam
Gowri
Kizhakkan Pathrose
Valayam
1995 Khoshayathra
1996 Oru Neenta Yathra Parvathi
Mizhi Ithalil Kanneerumayi

Parvati Melton


Parvati Melton



Parvati Melton (Telugu: పార్వతి మెల్టన్) (born 1983) is a tall (5 feet 9 inches)Indiamodel and a Tollywood actress. She acted with Raja in the film Vennela, which turned out to be a success. She acted in the hit Malayalam film Hallo along with Mohanlal.

Early life

She was born in California to a German father and Punjabi mother. She has a sister Ariana and learnt Bharatnatyam as a child. Her first film Vennela is just a prelude to her immense potential as an actress.

Filmography

Year Film Role Language Notes
2005 Vennela Pavani Telugu Raja
2006 Game(Remake of Taxi Number 9211) Telugu vishnu
2007 Hallo Parvathi Malayalam Mohanlal
Madhumasam Maya Telugu Sumanth
2008 Jalsa Jyotsna/Jo Telugu Pawan Kalyan
Varudu(Yet to be released) Telugu Mahesh Babu

Parvati Menon(Malayalam, Tamil, Kannada)


    Parvati Menon
(Malayalam, Tamil, Kannada)




Born :Kannur, Kerala, India Other name(s) :Parvathi Menon, Parvathi T K, Parvathy Occupation :Actress Years active :2006—present


Parvathi Menon (Malayalam: പാര്‍വതി മേനോന്‍) is an actress who hails from Kerala, India. She made her debut in the Malayalam film Out of Syllabus in 2006.

Parvathi has acted in 4 Malayalam films and one Kannada film, Milana[1], which was released in September 2007. Her latest film is Flash, released in December 2007, in which she stars opposite veteran actor, Mohanlal.

Parvathi is making her entry to Tamil Cinema with Poo opposite Srikanth, scheduled to be released later this year. The movie is currently in post-production. She has now signed up for her second Kannada movie "Male Barali Manju Irali" to be directed by Vijayalakshmi Singh which goes on floors on Sunday, The 3rd of August 2008 in Kushalanagar,Madikeri District,Karnataka.



Personality

Parvathi was born in Kozhikode, Kerala to P Vinod Kumar and TK Usha Kumari. Her initials come from her mother's family name Thiruvoth Kottuvata. Her elder brother Karunakaran TK is an MBA from Amrita School of Business, Coimbatore. During her schooling years, her family shifted to Trivandrum, and she had her college studies there. She is a bharatanatyam dancer and is currently a student of English literature in All Saints College Trivandrum, Kerala. After moving to Thiruvananthapuram she finished her schooling at Kendriya Vidyalaya, Pangode. She was a successful TV anchor of Kiran TV, a full time music channel based in Thiruvananthapuram. She was famous for her phone-in-programs. She thanks the small screen for giving good push in her life. [2]

Filmography

Year of Release Film Role Language Co-stars Other notes
2006 Out of Syllabus Gayathri Malayalam Jayakrishnan Debut Film
2006 Notebook Pooja Krishnan Malayalam Roma,Maria,Skanthan Award winning film.
2007 Vinodayathra Rashmi Malayalam Dileep, Mukesh,Meera Jasmine
2007 Milana Anjali Kannada Puneet Rajkumar Magnificent film and second kannada film to successfully complete 1 year at PVR Bengaluru & still running
Won SICA award for best actress 2007
2007 Flash Dhwani Malayalam Mohanlal,Indrajith Won the state film critics second best actress award,2007
2008 Poo Mari Tamil Srikanth Outstanding opening with very good verdict by critics
2009 Male Barali Manju Irali Sneha Kannada Kitti filming

Trivia

  • Parvathi won the Malayali Manka Contest in 2004 organised by Sensations.
  • Parvathi's biggest success till date is her recent Kannada movie Milana, which was the biggest hit of 2007 in the Kannada industry and completed grand 200 days in many cinema halls across the state recently and marching towards a successful 35 week run all over.
  • Parvathi Menon is often wrongly referred to Parvati Melton in many news sources.


Parveen Babi(Hindi)


Parveen Babi(Hindi)



Born
:April 4, 1949
Junagadh
Died
:January 20, 2005 (aged 55)
Mumbai
Occupation:Actress


Parveen Babi (Gujarati: પરવીન બાબી, Hindi: परवीन बाबी, Urdu: پروین بابی) (April 4, 1949 - January 20, 2005) was an Indian actress, who is most remembered for her glamourous roles alongside top heroes of the 1970s and early 80s[1] in blockbusters like Deewar, Namak Halaal, Amar Akbar Anthony and Shaan




Personal life and education

Babi was born in Junagadh and did her early schooling in Aurangabad and later attended St. Xavier's College, Ahmedabad. Her father Vali Mohammed Babi, a Gujarati Muslim, was an administrator with the Nawab of Junagadh. Babi was born fourteen years after the marriage of her parents and was the only child.

Parveen did not marry but shared intimate relationships with married men: director Mahesh Bhatt, actors Kabir Bedi, and Danny Denzongpa. Parveen was also rumoured to have a relationship with her co-star Amitabh Bachchan.

Career

Parveen was considered to be one of the most successful Bollywood actresses in the 1970s and was known for her portrayal of iconoclastic women who did not care about the conventional norms of society. She made her film debut with film, Charitira, in 1973 while still in college [4].

She was the first Indian actress to have been featured on TIME magazine's cover, in March 1977. In her most successful films, she was paired opposite Amitabh Bachchan, who was one of the biggest stars of the decade, in cinematic blockbusters like Deewaar (1975) Amar Akbar Anthony (1977), Shaan (1980), Kaalia (1981), and Khud-daar (1982).

She was often compared with her contemporary Zeenat Aman due to their common image of being sex-symbols. In fact, she acted alongside Aman in Mahaan (1983) and Ashanti (1982) (inspired by the American television show Charlie's Angels, with the third role played by Shabana Azmi). [1] In films like Deewar (1975), Shaan (1980) and Namak Halaal (1982) her screen presence may have been minimal (the films largely working around the hero) but Babi brought a certain attractive aloofness to the roles and songs she appeared in. In Manoj Kumar's big hit Kranti (1981), she stole scenes with her supporting role from Hema Malini, the heroine of the film. Babi also acted in offbeat films like Vinod Pandey's Yeh Nazdeekiyan (1982).

Her success did not run into the mid-eighties as she had left the film industry to move to New York in 1983. Many of her completed films released in the following years right uptill her last film releasing in 1988. in New York she became associated with the spiritual philosopher U. G. Krishnamurti. She returned to Mumbai in 1992 where she was unrecognizable as her former self after having put on a considerable amount of weight. She accused many foreign dignitaries and her former co-star, Amitabh Bachchan, of conspiring to kill her but her petition in court was dismissed for lack of evidence. She also filed an affidavit in the special court hearing the 1993 serial bomb blasts case, claiming that she had evidence to show, but she did not turn up in court after being summoned saying that she was afraid of being killed.


Parveen had developed a persecution complex possibly stemming from other undiagnosed psychological factors.


Later life

It is speculated that Parveen Babi suffered from schizophrenia and had become a recluse due to her paranoia. It also probable that she was not schizophrenic but had a Delusional Disorder DSM-IV TR and withdrew from society. It is probable that her mental disorder could be Substance-Induced Psychosis, as she allegedly took LSD and other hallucinogens with her lovers Kabir Bedi & Mahesh Bhatt - in addition to drinking heavily & also consuming marijuana. The move to New York was in order to obtain confidential psychiatric treatment, or perhaps partially motivated by the initial psychotic break - as she did not trust psychiatrists in India to keep her information confidential.

However, she managed to maintain her posh penthouse apartment in Mumbai and live affluently from sound financial investments. She was diabetic for most of her life - possibly due to the side-effects of powerful anti-psychotic medications.

Mahesh Bhatt made Arth (1982), a semi-autobiographical film about his extramarital relationship with Babi, and Woh Lamhe (2006) based on actual facts about his relationship with her [5].Woh Lamhe turned out to be a runaway hit and one of the most successful movies of the year.

Death

She was found dead in her Mumbai apartment on January 20, 2005 after her residential society secretary complained to the police that she had not collected milk and newspapers from her doorstep for two days [6]. She was found to have gangrene of the foot as a complication of her diabetic condition. The police ruled out any foul play. She was buried next to her mother at Santa Cruz, in Mumbai on January 23, after her funeral was held according to Islamic rites.

Filmography

  • Charitra (1973)
  • Charitraheen (1974)
  • Dhuen Ki Lakeer (1974)
  • 36 Ghante (1974)
  • Trimurti (1974)
  • Majboor (1974)
  • Kala Sona (1975)
  • Deewaar (1975)
  • Bullet (1976)
  • Bhanwar (1976)
  • Rangeela Ratan (1976)
  • Mazdoor Zindabad (1977)
  • Maama Bhanja (1977)
  • Amar Akbar Anthony (1977)
  • Mastaan Dada (1978)
  • Chandi Sona (1977)
  • Darinda (1977)
  • Chalta Purza (1977)
  • Chor Sipahee (1977)
  • Aahuti (1977)
  • Pati Patni Aur Woh (1978)
  • Kaala Patthar (1979)
  • Suhaag (1979)
  • Shaan (1980)
  • Ek Gunaah Aur Sahi (1980)
  • Do Aur Do Paanch (1980)
  • The Burning Train (1979)
  • Ashanti (1981)
  • Meri Aawaaz Suno (1981)
  • Ameer Aadmi Ghreeb Aadmi (1981)
  • Kaalia (1981)
  • Raksha (1981)
  • Kranti (1981)
  • Gunahgaar (1980)
  • Mangal Pandey (1982)
  • Desh Premee (1982)
  • Dil Aakhir Dil Hai (1982)
  • Bad Aur Badnaam (1982)
  • Taaqat (1982)
  • Yeh Nazdeekiyan (1982)
  • Namak Halaal (1982)
  • Khud-daar (1982)
  • Jaani Dost (1983)
  • Razia Sultan (1983)
  • Chor Police (1983)
  • Kanoon Meri Muthi Mein (1983)
  • Mahaan (1983)
  • Rang Birangi (1983)
  • Arpan (1983)
  • Sitamgar (1985)
  • Telephone (1985)
  • Bond 303 (1986)
  • Avinaash (1987)
  • Aakarshan (1988)
Landmark Films 
Year Film Costars
1974 Majboor Amitabh Bachchan
1975 Deewar Amitabh Bachchan
1977 Amar Akbar Anthony Amitabh Bachchan
1979 Suhaag Shashi Kapoor
1981 Kaalia Amitabh Bachchan
1981 Meri Awaaz Suno Jeetendra
1982 Namak Halal Shashi Kapoor
1982 Ashanti Mithun Chakraborthy
1982 Khuddar Amitabh Bachchan
1983 Rang Birangi Amol Palekar


Patience Cooper


Patience Cooper



Born:
1905
Calcutta, British India
Died
:1983
Pakistan
Occupation: actor Years active :1920-1946 Spouse(s) :Gul Hamid



Patience Cooper (1905–1983) was an Indian film actress. An Anglo-Indian[1] from Calcutta (in West Bengal), Cooper had a successful career in both silent and sound films.She was the One of the early superstars of Bollywood.[2]Cooper is credited with the first double roles of Indian cinema - as twin sisters in Patni Pratap and as mother and daughter in Kashmiri Sundari.


Stage career

Cooper began as a dancer in Bandmann's Musical Comedy, a Eurasian troupe. She later joined Jamshedji Framji Madan's Corinithian Stage Company as an actress.

Film career

She started as a dancer in Bandmann's Musical Comedy, a Eurasian troupe before being employed by Madan's Corinithian Stage Company. Cooper was often cast as the sexually troubled but innocent woman at the center of moral dilemmas, a forerunner to the type of roles played later by Nargis. Cooper first made an impact with Nala Damayanti (1920). The film starred Keki Adajania as Nala and Cooper as Damayanti . The film was a big budget Madan Theatre production and was directed by Italian Eugenio De Liguoro, known in Italy for his Orientalist spectacles like Fascino d'Oro (1919). Nala Damayanti was famous for its special effects at the time - Narada's ascent of Mount Meru to heaven, the transformations of four gods into impersonations of Nala, the transformation of Kali into a serpant among others.

Her next film was Vishnu Avtar, released in 1921. Cooper acted in over 40 films until she retired in 1944, after performing in her last film, Iraada. Cooper was often cast in the role of a sexually troubled but innocent woman, always at the centre of moral dilemmas, often caused by the men in her lives. Cooper was the first actor in Indian films to play double roles. De Liguoro also directed Dhruva Chartitra (1921), a mythological based on the legend of Dhruva whose quest for eternal knowledge and salvation was rewarded when he became the brightest star in the heavens, the pole star also known as Dhruvatara. The film was made as a bid for an international breakthrough for Madan Theatres and featured many Europeans in the cast along with Cooper who played the female lead, Suniti.

One of Cooper's biggest successes was Pati Bhakti (1922). Cooper played Leelavati in the film, directed by the great JJ Madan himself, advocating that women should be devoted to their husband. The film is regarded as her greatest film and was also involved in a small controversy as in Madras, the censor demanded that a dance number be removed on the grounds of obscenity!

A major aspect of Cooper's star image was the successful achievement of the 'Hollywood look' in spite of different light and technical conditions. Her dark, sharp eyes and skin tone allowed technicians to experiment with the imported convention of eye-level lighting.

Cooper also played perhaps the first ever double roles in Hindi films - Patni Pratap (1923), where she played two sisters and Kashmiri Sundari (1924), where she played mother and daughter.

Cooper did films right through to the mid 1930s. One of her last major films was Zehari Saap (1933). The film was a typical Cooper vehicle about a medieval chieftain's revolt against the good Nawab Bakar Malik. The nawab's outlaw son vows revenge and finally all's well that ends well. The dramatic conflict in the film sees the chieftain wanting to marry the princess, whom he had raised as his own daughter.

The low number of women, especially Hindus, in the film industry during the 1920s (due to conservative attitudes) meant Parsi and Anglo-Indian actresses, like Cooper, were in demand. Her distinctively Anglo-Indian features, like dark eyes, sharp features, ebony hair and light skin tone, allowed technicians to experiment with the imported technique of eye-level lighting and achieve the Hollywood look, an appearance similar to Hollywood stars of the silent era. Her appearance in a string of successful films has led her to being called the first ever female Indian film star.

Later life

Cooper married Isphahani Saheb, a tea-estate owner. In 1947, they migrated to Pakistan. Actually she was married to MAH Isphahani at the age of 21 and divorced soon after. She then got married to Gul Hamid Khan, one of the first early silent movie actors. He died six years later due to a throat ailment. She remained friends with MAH Isphahani till the end of her life. Cooper changed her name to Sabra Begum. She fostered and/or adopted 17 children during her life time. Cooper passed away in 1983.

Filmography

Year Film Director Co-Star Remarks
1920 Nala Damayanti Eugenio De Liguoro Actor
1921 Bishu Abatar Jyotish Bandyopadhyay Actor
Dhruba Charitra Jyotish Bannerji Actor
Nal Damayanti Jyotish Bandyopadhyay Actor
Dhruva Charitra Eugenio De Liguoro Actor
Behula C. Legrand Actor
Vishnu Avatar C. Legrand Actor
1922 Sati Actor
Ratnavali Jyotish Bannerji Actor
Pati Bhakti J. J. Madan Actor
Kamale Kamini Sisir Kumar Bhaduri Actor
Ramayan Jyotish Bandyopadhyay Serial Actor
Ramayan Eugenio De Liguoro Serial Actor
Nartaki Tara Jyotish Bandyopadhyay Actor
Ratnavali C. Legrand Actor
Raja Bhoj Actor
Mohini Sisir Kumar Bhaduri Actor
Bhagirathi Ganga Actor
Rajkumari Budur J. J. Madan Actor
Laila Majnu J. J. Madan Actor
1923 Matri Sneha Jyotish Bannerji Actor
Noorjehan J. J. Madan Actor
1924 Patni Pratap J. J. Madan Serial Actor
Turki Hoor J. J. Madan Actor
1925 Sati Lakshmi Jyotish Bannerji Actor
Adoorat Chheley J. J. Madan Actor
Sansar Chakra Actor
Kashmiri Sundari Actor
1926 Prafulla Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1926 Joydev Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1926 Dharmapatni Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1927 Jana Priyanath Ganguly Actor
1927 Krishnakanter Will Priyanath Ganguly Actor
1927 Durgesh Nandini Priyanath Ganguly Actor
1927 Chandidas Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1928 Aankh Ka Nasha Actor
1928 Hoor-E-Arab Ratansha Sinore Actor
1928 Bhranti Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1929 Giribala Modhu Bose Actor
1929 Kapal Kundala Priyanath Ganguly Actor
1930 Bharat Ramani Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1930 Vaman Avatar Actor
1930 Rajsingha Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1930 Kal Parinaya Priyanath Ganguly Actor
1930 Ganesh Janma Jal Ariah Actor
1931 Bibaha Bibhrat Jyotish Bannerji Actor
1931 Alladin And The Wonderful Lamp Jal Ariah Actor
1931 Samaj Ka Shikar Actor
1931 Satyawadi Raja Harishchandra J. J. Madan Actor
1931 Bharati Balak Aga Hashr Kashmiri Actor
1932 Pati Bhakti Actor
1932 Chatra Bakavali J. J. Madan Fantasy Actor
1932 Bilwamangal Fram Madan Actor
1932 Alibaba And Forty Thieves J. J. Madan Actor
1932 Educated Wife Actor
1932 Hathili Dulhan J. J. Madan Actor
1933 Madhur Murali Actor
1933 Naqli Doctor J. J. Madan Actor
1933 Zehari Saap J. J. Madan Actor
1934 Kismet Ka Shikar Actor
1934 Bhakta-Ke-Bhagwan V. M. Gunjal Actor
1934 Garib Ki Duniya Sorabji Kerawala Actor
1934 Anokha Prem F. R. Irani Actor
1934 Kanya Vikraya Mohammad Hussain Actor
1934 Sakhi Lutera Sorabji Kerawala Actor
1935 Dil Ki Pyaas J. J. Madan Actor
1935 Asmat Ka Moti Fram Sethna Actor
1935 Khudadad Actor
1935 Prem Ki Ragini Actor
1935 Sulagto Sansar G. R. Sethi Actor
1935 Mera Pyara Ezra Mir Actor
1936 Noor-E-Wahadat G. R. Sethi Actor
1936 Baghi Sipahi A. R. Kardar Actor
1936 Khyber Pass Gul Hamid Actor
1937 Fakhr-E-Islam Nanubhai Vakil Actor
1944 Chandar Kalanka Pramathesh Chandra Barua Actor
1944 Iraada S. Shamsuddin Actor
1946 Khan Saheb Prem Sethna Actor.


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