What set Nutan
apart from other actresses of her time was
that she was a thinking actress who tried
to fathom the inchoate motivations of the
characters she played. She could convey
much more with just a look or fleeting glance
than most could even with expansive dialogue.
In fact Lata
Mangeshkar has singled her out as the
heroine whose expressions came closest to
suggest she was genuinely singing the song
herself!
Nutan, the daughter of actress Shobhana Samarth, grew up
full of complexes. Though renowned for her
beauty later, she was dismissed by unfeeling
relatives as skinny and ugly. Undeterred,
Shobana Samarth launched her in Humari
Beti (1950). Hum Log (1951) and
Nagina (1951) both proved popular
but Nutan got her major breakthrough and
respectability as an actress par excellence
with Seema
(1955) where she played a delinquent
in a reform home. It was a powerhouse performance
and won her the Filmfare Award for Best
Actress.
Subsequently whether it was the lighthearted
Paying Guest (1957), or Dilli
ka Thug (1958), where she performed
with a frothy uninhibitedness comparable
only to Madhubala,
or Bimal Roy's
intense Sujata
(1959), which brought out the best in
her as an artiste, Nutan was always matchless.
In 1959 Nutan married Naval Lieutenant
Commander Rajneesh Behl and took a small
break when her son Mohnish was born. She
made a stinging comeback with Navketan's
Tere Ghar ke
Saamne (1963), a refreshing romantic
comedy and Bimal Roy's Bandini
(1963) boasting of possibly her greatest ever performance
and certainly one of the greatest performances
of Indian Cinema. The film tells the story
of a woman prisoner charged with murder.
Totally devoid of highly charged emotion
and theatrics, Nutan appears as a quiet
woman with her passions raging from within
her and plays her role with great delicacy
and dignity. One just has to see the entire
gamut of emotions fleeting across her face
in the film's key sequence as she murders
her lover's wife. It is a masterful performance
by an artiste supreme.
Nutan's career shone bright right through
the 1960s and 1970s with strong performances
in films like Milan (1967), Saraswatichandra
(1968), Saudagar (1973), Sajan
Bina Suhagan (1978), Kasturi (1978)
and Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki (1978).
She carries the last film entirely on her
shoulders even though the sympathy is with
the mistress rather than the wife, (Nutan).
Gradually, she began being saddled with
mundane mother roles and barring Meri
Jung (1985) none of her later films
even remotely offered her any histrionic
challenges.
Even as she continued to act, her diary
farm, her bhajan singing (she was actually
blessed with a fine singing voice and did
her own playback in Chabili (1960))
and her search for spirituality took up
her time. When she died of cancer in 1991,
Indian Cinema had lost one of its greatest
performers.
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