myUpperstall   :   About   :   Wallpapers   
New to Upperstall? Join Now | Sign In
6568 films, 8314 profiles, and counting

  • films
  • people
  • blogs
FOLLOW US ON

 contents
Photos

Upperstall Profile



Memorable films

  
Nadira

 

Upperstall profile by: TheThirdMan

Even if she had played no other role other than the scheming Maya in Raj Kapoor’s masterpiece Shree 420 (1955), she would always remain the Mud Mudke Na Dekh girl trying to entice the naïve hero into crime!

Nadira was born a Jew, Farhat Ezekiel in Nagpada, Mumbai in 1932. Her parents split up when she was just four. Her mother got remarried and Nadira and her brother were brought up by her grandmother. She was still in her teens when she was spotted by Sardar Akhtar, the great filmmaker Mehoob Khan’s wife. After convincing her mother, Sardar Akhtar took Nadira under her wing and groomed her. Nadira recalled in an interview… “She bought me my first bra. I did not know the use of the garment till then. She gave me my screen name Nadira as Farhat was thought to be too soft. My first saree was a gift from her, so was my first tube of paint. She taught me to put on make up. I still have that tube which I use each time I start something new.”

When Nargis turned down the lead role in mentor Mehboob Khan’s Aan (1952), Nadira was cast in her place as a haughty princess and introduced opposite Dilip Kumar in this spectacular take on Taming of the Shrew also co-starring Nimmi and Premnath. Aan, Mehboob’s first film in colour, even had a release in London and was much appreciated even though a critic did quip - it goes aan and aan and aan! Nadira was now a star.

At this juncture just when things were starting to look up for her, Nadira married film lyricist Naqshab. Naqshab made her break her contract with Mehboob Khan and with her earnings made films like Nagma (1953) and Raftaar (1955) exploiting her star status but basically to move himself further. Nadira walked out of the marriage leaving behind all her money and rented a suite in Marine Drive and continued working!

It was Raj Kapoor who then used Nadira to stunning effect in what was to become her signature role in Shree 420 but which also proved to be almost a death knell in her career. Then still a leading lady, the film cast her against type as the cigarette smoking vamp who with her arched eyebrows seduces the hero to a glamorous and crooked lifestyle to such strong effect (she has never acted or looked better!) that she stole a march over both Raj Kapoor and Nargis in the film and thereafter was only offered negative roles! She refused most of them still wanting to play the heroine only to find few offers now forthcoming. The negative roles she refused were then offered to Shashikala making a big star out of the latter thus making Nadira lose out in the vamp department as well. But films like Shree 420 and Pocketmaar (1956) with Dev Anand prove that there when Nadira was up to her scheming vamping antics or seducing the hero through songs like Mud Mudke Na Dekh or Duniyake Saath Chal Pyare, she had no equal!

When Vyjayanthimala turned down the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress for her turn as Chandramukhi in Bimal Roy’s Devdas (1955) arguing that both Paro and Chandramukhi were in fact leading roles, the award was offered to Nadira for Shree 420. She sensibly turned it down saying she would win the award on merit or not at all but never as a hand-me-down.

Nadira tried settling down again but went through a second, disastrous short-lived marriage to an Arab. Nadira’s other really effective and well-known film was the Kishore Sahu directed and Kamal Amrohi produced Dil Apna Aur Preet Parayi (1960) co-starring Meena Kumari and Raaj Kumar. Again she came off strongly in the film as the wife of Raaj Kumar, who would stop at nothing to keep her husband though he and Meena Kumari loved each other before his marriage. It was an interesting film in that the ‘vamp’ is the wife trying to make her marriage work while the goody-two shoes heroine really is the other woman but of course the film gives full sympathy to Meena Kumari and Raaj Kumar suffering in unrequited love with Nadira being the shrew in their way.

She did work on and off sometimes with long breaks but always made an impact in the films she did – Chhoti Chhoti Baatein (1965), Pakeezah (1972), Hanste Zakhm (1973), Ishq Ishq Ishq (1974) and especially Julie (1975). In Julie, as the heroine Lakshmi's mother Margaret - an Anglo-Indian housewife who considers herself more English and who keeps her brood together while facing crises with poise, Nadira came up with easily the strongest performance of the film and 20 years after Shree 420, won the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress on merit! In fact when not vamping it, even when she played the mother, Nadira was rarely the stereotypical, crying, helpless woman in white. She always added spirit to the various roles of the mother, aunt or other older woman roles.

Nadira’s other films include Amar Akbar Anthony (1977), Saagar (1985) – again making a very strong impression, Tamanna (1997) and Josh (2000). She also acted in the Ismail Merchant directed Cotton Mary (1999) and the Television Serials Thoda sa Aasmaan and Margarita.

Nadira passed away in Mumbai on 9th February, 2006 after a prolonged illness.



  • Comments
  • News
  • TheThirdMan on One-on-one with Suriya:
    Thanks everyone for your comments. @Akash: High time for Suriya the actor to choose his films now
  • Tamilboy on One-on-one with Suriya:
    Ahhh Karan, this is a great read man! I have had the privilege of being in the same school and cl
  • Anand Subramanian on One-on-one with Suriya:
    Insightful indeed ! Karan has the ability to dig deeper to reveal small details that make his writin
  • Ronnie on One-on-one with Suriya:
    He has a down to earth charming quality about him that's infectious. Good introductory piece on him,
  • Banno on One-on-one with Suriya:
    For someone who doesn't know Tamil cinema or Suriya at all, this is a really good introduction. I li

 



Recent
  • Reviews
  • Films
  • People
  • Blogs
Right Yaaa Wrong
Practically nothing is right and plenty wrong in this tacky, inept thriller that was shot way back in 2007 but has manag...
Hide & Seek
What is it about thrillers, suspense films, murder mysteries, and whodunits that keeps filmmakers trying their luck with...
Road, Movie
At least Abhay Deol reaches his destination finally in Road, Movie. Wish one could say the same about the film....
Vel
Vel is Suriya's second film with Hari after Aaru (2005)...
Hide & Seek
What is it about thrillers, suspense films, murder mysteries, and whodunits that keeps filmmakers trying their luck with...
Right Yaaa Wrong
Practically nothing is right and plenty wrong in this tacky, inept thriller that was shot way back in 2007 but has manag...
Bina Rai
Even though Madhubala is considered the most beautiful Hindi film heroine ever, actress Shyama rev...
Ajay Devgan
From being dismissed as a non-looker who was adept only in action, Ajay Devgan has proved that he ...
Vikram
'Chiyaan' Vikram is one of the finest actors in mainstream Tamil cinema today as his superlative p...

popular

film releases