Rehana Sultan
Rehana Sultan | |
---|---|
Born | Rehana Sultan (1950-11-19) 19 November 1950 (age 73) Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India |
Alma mater | FTII, Pune |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1970–1992 |
Spouse | B. R. Ishara |
Awards | National Award (Best Actress), 1971 |
Rehana Sultan (born 19 November 1950[citation needed]) is an Indian actress best known for her debut role in the acclaimed 1970 film Dastak which won her the National Film Award for Best Actress. A graduate of Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune, she is also known for another bold role in the film Chetna (1970), which got her typecast thus ending her film career, despite its promising start.[1][2][3] She said "The sex in my films was not forced, but part of the narrative. Today, I feel these scenes are used for commercial reasons. All I can say is Babuda was ahead of his times."[4]
Biography
Rehana Sultan was born and raised in Allahabad in a Bahai family, she graduated from high school in 1967, and was selected in the same year to study acting at FTII.[5] After she graduated with a sexy role in Vishwanath Ayengar's diploma film Shadi Ki Pehli Salgirah (1967),[6] she got her break in a feature film in Rajinder Singh Bedi's Dastak (1970), making her the first actress from the Institute to land a lead role in the film industry.[7][8] She won the National Film Award for her role in that film. In the same year she also played the lead role in the film Chetna which was shot in 28 days along with the shooting of Dastak. That film was about the rehabilitation of prostitutes, and her role changed the portrayal of sex workers in Hindi cinema.[9]
Her avant-garde roles brought her success but limited her choices in future films. Some of her well known films include Haar Jeet (1972), Prem Parbat (1973) and the political satire Kissa Kursi Ka (1977). Vijay Anand's Hum Rahen Na Rahen (1984) in shich she costarred with Shabana Azmi was her last Hindi film in a lead role. She married writer-director B. R. Ishara, who had directed Chetna. She has also appeared in a Punjabi movie Putt Jattan De (1981) with Shatrughan Sinha.
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1970 | Chetna | Seema | Bengal Film Journalists' Association Award for Best Actress (Hindi) |
Dastak | Salma Ahmed | National Film Award for Best Actress[10] | |
1971 | Padosi | ||
Man Tera Tan Mera | Jyoti | ||
1972 | Tanhai | ||
Savera | |||
Man Jaiye | Suman | ||
Haar Jeet | Kamal | ||
1973 | Prem Parbat | ||
Dil Ki Rahen | |||
Bada Kabutar | Rita | ||
1974 | Albeli | ||
Khote Sikkay | Rani / Paro | ||
Ek Ladki Badnaam Si | |||
1975 | Yeh Sach Hai | ||
Zindagi Aur Toofan | Tara | ||
1976 | Sajjo Rani | ||
1977 | Agent Vinod | Zarina | |
Ooparwala Jaane | |||
1978 | Nawab Sahib | ||
Assignment Bombay | |||
1979 | Deen Aur Imaan | ||
Aaj Ki Dhara | |||
1980 | Sister | ||
Agent 009 | |||
1981 | Jwala Daku | Rambhabai | |
1982 | Bedard | ||
1983 | Putt Jattan De | Jagat Singh's wife | Punjabi |
Bandhan Kuchchey Dhaagon Ka | Advocate Thakur | ||
1984 | Hum Rahe Na Hum | Kalyani Sharma | Nominated—Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress |
1985 | Aakhri Chaal | TV film | |
1992 | Sooraj Mukhi | Sandhya | |
2013 | Inkaar[citation needed] | Maya's mother |
References
- ^ Rehana Sultan who was a trailblazing 'sexy actress' The Telegraph, 25 November 2005.
- ^ Anupama Chopra (28 September 2011). "Why Silk Smitha is Bollywood's favourite bad girl". NDTV Movies. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011.
- ^ "Rehana Sultan: The trail-blazing actress Bollywood forgot". BBC News. 20 March 2017.
- ^ Dubey, Bharati (6 August 2012). "Rehana Sultan: Bollywood's first 'bold actress' wants to act again". The Times of India. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
- ^ Down the memory lane with Rehana Sultan[permanent dead link] movies.indiainfo.com, 29 October 2008.
- ^ The Sunday Standard, Bombay, India, 10 June 1973.
- ^ Charge of the FTII brigade Screen.
- ^ "Merits - FTII". Archived from the original on 26 April 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ^ Fallen women in Bollywood films Times of India, 26 July 2004.
- ^ "The Illustrated Weekly of India". 92. 1971: 57. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
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External links
- Rehana Sultan at IMDb
- Rehana Sultan at Bollywood Hungama
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- Nargis (1967)
- Sharada (1968)
- Madhabi Mukherjee (1969)
- Rehana Sultan (1970)
- Waheeda Rehman (1971)
- Sharada (1972)
- Nandini Bhaktavatsala (1973)
- Shabana Azmi (1974)
- Sharmila Tagore (1975)
- Lakshmi (1976)
- Smita Patil (1977)
- Sharada (1978)
- Shoba (1979)
- Smita Patil (1980)
- Rekha (1981)
- Shabana Azmi (1982)
- Shabana Azmi (1983)
- Shabana Azmi (1984)
- Suhasini (1985)
- Monisha (1986)
- Archana (1987)
- Archana (1988)
- Sreelekha Mukherji (1989)
- Vijayashanti (1990)
- Moloya Goswami (1991)
- Dimple Kapadia (1992)
- Shobana (1993)
- Debashree Roy (1994)
- Seema Biswas (1995)
- Tabu (1996)
- Indrani Haldar and Rituparna Sengupta (1997)
- Shabana Azmi (1998)
- Kirron Kher (1999)
- Raveena Tandon (2000)
- Shobana and Tabu (2001)
- Konkona Sen Sharma (2002)
- Meera Jasmine (2003)
- Tara (2004)
- Sarika (2005)
- Priyamani (2006)
- Umashree (2007)
- Priyanka Chopra (2008)
- Ananya Chatterjee (2009)
- Mitalee Jagtap Varadkar and Saranya Ponvannan (2010)
- Vidya Balan (2011)
- Usha Jadhav (2012)
- Geetanjali Thapa (2013)
- Kangana Ranaut (2014)
- Kangana Ranaut (2015)
- Surabhi Lakshmi (2016)
- Sridevi (2017)
- Keerthy Suresh (2018)
- Kangana Ranaut (2019)
- Aparna Balamurali (2020)
- Alia Bhatt and Kriti Sanon (2021)