The droop of
her kiss curl, the anguish-laden voice never
more than a sob from abject despair, the
unblemished beauty made Meena Kumari the
ultimate tragedy queen in Indian Cinema.
This is an image to which she remained shackled
for the rest of her life - the lonely sorrowful
woman whose desires remain unfulfilled in
a cruel world.
She was born Mahjabeen Ali Bux, daughter
of the Parsee theatre actor and music teacher
Ali Bux and the dancer Iqbal Begum. Having
hit upon hard times and living near Rooptara
Studios, Ali Bux sought to get his daughters
into films. Mahjabeen was renamed Baby Meena
and cast in Vijay Bhatt's Leatherface
(1939).
Her early adult work consisted of mainly
mythologicals like Veer Ghatotkach (1949),
Shri Ganesh Mahima (1950) and fantasies
like Alladin and The Wonderful Lamp (1952).
She hit the big time with Vijay Bhatt's
Baiju Bawra (1952).
With Baiju Bawra, the suffering
Indian Woman found a new face in Meena Kumari.
The heroine in the film is ever ready to
negate herself for the material and spiritual
advancement of the man she loves and is
even willing to annihilate herself to provide
him the experience of pain so that his music
would be enriched! It was a strong performance
and fetched her the inaugural Filmfare Award
for Best Actress.
She became Film Director Kamal Amrohi's
second wife and with Daera (1953),
Ek Hi Rasta (1956), Sharda (1957)
and Dil Apna Aur Preet Parayi (1960),
Meena went from strength to strength playing
the suffering woman, the martyr to perfection.
In Daera, her barren life and subsequent
disintegration underscores the Indian Woman's
lack of selfhood and remains one of the
great moments of screen acting. In Sharda
she gave a tour de force performance
as Raj Kapoor's
lover who becomes his stepmother. Unfortunately
coming in the same year as Mother India,
Nargis
swept all the awards but the Bombay Film
Journalists Association named Meena as their
best actress of the year for Sharda.
It is a pity that Meena was known for her tragic roles and
she too chose more such roles to cultivate
her image of being the great tragedienne
because in the few light-hearted films she
did in between like Azaad (1955),
Miss Mary (1957), Shararat (1959)
and Kohinoor (1960), she displayed
an uninhibitedness that was refreshing to
say the least. In these films, her physical
movements are free and unrestrained and
her dialogue delivery absolutely normal
- a stark contrast to the studied mannerisms
and passive postures of her tragic roles.
It was tragedy however which saw Meena Kumari's
greatest ever performance and immortalized
her. The film was Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam
(1962). Produced by Guru Dutt,
the film tells the story of Choti Bahu,
the youngest bride in an aristocratic zamindar
family who strives to make her errant husband
return to her even at the risk of self-destruction.
It is perhaps the greatest performance ever
on the Indian Screen. The sequence where
Choti Bahu dresses for her husband singing
Piya Aiso Jiya Main is a poignant
exploration of a woman's expectations and
sexual desire. You cannot help but cry with
her in the sequence where she pleads with
her husband to stay with her and then angrily
turns on him to tell him how she has prostituted
her basic values and morals to please him.
That year Meena made history as she garnered
all the three Best Actress nominations for
the Filmfare Award - For Aarti (1962),
Main Chup Rahoongi (1962) and of
course Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam for
which she won the award. However the common
factors between the actress's life and Choti
Bahu are too dramatic to be merely coincidental
- The estranged marital relationship, the
taking of alcohol, turning towards younger
male company, the craving to be understood
and loved - all elements evident in Meena
Kumari's own life. Elements which were mythicized
in the film world in the 1960s.
While on the professional front, the emphatic
success of Dil Ek Mandir (1963),
Kajal (1965) and Phoor Aur Pathar
(1966) kept her a top star, her marriage
with Kamal Amrohi ended in 1964. Meena increasingly
relied on the intimate kindness offered
by younger men like Dharmendra
and often dulled her senses with liquor.
Her image grew in dimension as she was now
widely seen as the eternal martyr.
Meena spent the last years of her life
playing the doomed diva. With heavy drinking
she had lost her looks and she began playing
character roles albeit strong ones in potboilers
like Jawab (1970) and Dushman
(1971).
A talented poetess in her own right, she
recorded a disc of her Urdu poems - I
write, I recite. Thankfully her exquisite
speaking voice remained intact.
She came up with a strong portrayal of
an old woman caught between two street gangs
of frustrated, unemployed youth, whose killing
finally makes them realize the futility
of violence in Gulzar's directorial
debut Mere Apne (1971) and realizing
she had limited time left went out of her
way to complete what has now become a cult
classic - Pakeezah (1972).
The film is a stylized, larger than life
mythicization of the familiar tale of the
prostitute with the heart of gold. Jointly
planned by Meena and husband Amrohi in 1958,
the film took 14 years to finally reach
the silver screen. Filming had come to a
halt when the couple split but Meena was
now determined to complete it. There is
grandeur in Amrohi's filmmaking - an epic
magnitude of treatment. The evocative songs
and the background music create the right
period mood and Amrohi's eye for details
brings great depth to the lavish sets. The
film is helped by a stunning performance
by Meena in the dual roles of the mother
and daughter.
Pakeezah finally released in February
1972 and opened to just a lukewarm response
but after her death on 31st March 1972,
the film went on to become a huge success
at the box-office and has since then acquired
legendary status and is regarded as her
best known film.
Meena Kumari's last film was Gomti ke
Kinare (1972). Tanha Chand, a
collection of her poems under the pseudonym
Naaz was compiled by Gulzar and published
after her death.
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