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Information On Waheeda Rehman | ||
Name: | Waheeda Rehman | |
Debut Film: | Ulfat Ki Nayee Manzilen |
Waheeda Rehman's Profile |
Waheeda's simple beauty and refreshingly natural style of acting gave her an edge over the carefully-lacquered bouffant brigade of the 1960s. She did have a penchant for picking three-hanky melodramas (Palki, Dil Diya Dard Liya, Aadmi, Neel Kamal), but even there, Waheeda consciously steered clear of glycerine overdoses and hysterianics. ![]() Guru Dutt signed on Hyderabad-based Waheeda for a Hindi film. She had worked in Telugu films like Jayasimha and Rojulu Marayi. Dutt gave her a vampish role in his production, CID (1956). The Bharata Natyam exponent stepped on the rungs on the ladder of stardom with her fleet-footed dancing to the Geeta Dutt hit, Kahin pe nigahein kahin pe nishana. Impressed, Guru Dutt promoted her to playing one of the leads in Pyaasa. Dutt had the author-backed role of an emotionally spent, penniless poet in Pyaasa (1957), but Waheeda left an indelible mark too as Gulab, the sweet-faced streetwalker who comforts the poet stung by societal barbs. After Pyaasa, Waheeda's thirst for work was amply slaked. She had a contract with Dutt but he magnanimously permitted her to work in outside films (Solva Saal, Twelve o’Clock, Kaala Bazaar). Dutt next cast his muse Waheeda as the solo heroine in his cinemascope epic, Kaagaz Ke Phool (1959). A scathing comment on the transient nature of stardom, the film was however rejected by the audience. Waheeda and Dutt's next collaboration, a purely commercial Muslim social, Chaudhvin Ka Chand (1960), fared better at the box office. The title song has endured over four decades. Fired by her critical successes, Waheeda was keen on playing the doomed and drunken Chhoti bahu of Dutt's Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962). But Dutt deemed her too young for the role and cast doyenne Meena Kumari. Waheeda was a breath of fresh air in the heavy film; Meena's role was, of course, unforgettable. ![]() Waheeda reached her acme in the Dev Anand-produced Guide (1965), based on R K Narayan's classic novel. The film over the years attained an exalted cult status. Waheeda's producers were aghast when she accepted the role of an adulteress in Guide: "Aap apne pairon pe kulhadi maar rahi hain." The English version of the bilingual Guide (directed by Ted Danielski) didn't create many ripples but the Hindi version (directed by Vijay Anand) is a cinematic milestone --- S D Burman's mood-enhancing musical score, Dev's best ever performance and Waheeda. Hers was a soul-in-her-eyes performance as Rosy, a danseuse who walks out on her impotent and imperious husband for a career and a new life with an encouraging guide (Dev Anand). Rosy's life is no bed of roses. The guide too exploits her emotionally and financially. Besides giving her a chance to break the taboo against grey-shaded roles, Guide also showcased Waheeda's dancing expertise --- watch her on a precarious ledge to the strains of Shailendra's life-affirming, Aaj phir jeene ki tamanna hai, aaj phir marne ka iraada hai. Subsequent hits like Patthar Ke Sanam (1967) and Neelkamal (1968) enhanced Waheeda's star status. But while Teesri Kasam (a rustic love story between a nautankiwali and a yokel) and Khamoshi (a tragic romance between a nurse and her psychologically-affected patient), were artistically satisfying, their black-and-white format in an era of riotous colour curtailed their box office chances. ![]() Waheeda has flown down to Mumbai since to work with big names like Amitabh (Kabhi Kabhie, Adalat, Namak Halal) or Yash Chopra (Chaandni, Lamhe). After an extended break, Waheeda was set to star in Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham but the sudden demise of her husband Kamaljeet on November 20, 2000, had her opt out at the nth hour. Today, Waheeda lives with her children (now in their 20s) in her sea-facing bungalow at Bandra, Mumbai. She enjoys gardening and gabfests with good friend Nanda over seafood at Mahesh lunch home and is content to do an occasional film (the Anupam Kher directed Om Jai Jagdish). Famous Films: ![]()
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