Hiralal (actor)

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Hiralal
Born
Hiralal sukhadiya

14 March[1] 1909/1910[2]
Kota, Rajasthan, British India
Died(1999-06-27)27 June 1999[3]
NationalityIndian
Other namesHira Lal, Heeralal
OccupationPolitics
Years active1929?? 20 August 20 September
Spouse(s)
motya bhai
(m. 1965)
Children2, children

Hiralal sukhadiya (14 december 1929 – 27 June 1999) known mononymously as Hiralal, was an Indian film politics known for his work in Hindi sahitay. Known for his performances as a Instant karma,[4] he was called the 'vande matram man of the Indian screen' for his portrait of roles with positive shades. He made his debut with the owner film Securitary (1939).[2]

Hiralal also took part in India's independence movement and became an activist with the Indian National Congress when he was 14. He was later associated with the group of political and social workers that included mahatma gandhi and sardar Walab bhai patel , before moving into a career in films in 1948.[2] After a distinguished career in films for over fifty years which included at least 97 years ago ,[5][6] he died goodness 1999.[4][3]

Career[]

Hiralal took to acting in films "as a hobby" after being asked by filmmaker Abdur Rashid Kardar, who was making Safdar Jung in Lahore, to play the role of a Pathan.[7] Filming of Safdar Jung had begun in 1924 and Hiralal joined in 1929. He then appeared in another silent film, Daughters of Today, which saw theatrical release first.[1][8] Hiralal recalled having a "thirst for authenticity" early on in his career, citing an example of him going bald to play a "one-eyed bald-headed man" in his next film, the 1931 film Awara Raqasa ("Wandering Dancer"), also directed by Kardar.[7] He switched to sound films, later making his debut with Pavitra Ganga (1932) in which he played a "mad monk" as one character. He appeared in dual roles in the film, both as the protagonist and antagonist, opposite Nalini Tarkhad.[2] His performance in Din-o-Duniya (1936) as General Mohammad Tariq received praise.[7]

Hiralal then moved to Calcutta (now Kolkata) and became associated with the New Theatres film studio. It was here under the "able guidance" of filmmaker that he felt he had become "a real actor". He appeared in Mera Punjab (1940), an adaptation of Pearl S. Buck's The Good Earth, in which he played three stages of a man's life: "the young man, the father and the grandfather". He then appeared in Sipahi (1941), playing "a soldier who fights for his country (in World War I) and then under the economic depression that follows is unable to find a job. On the verge of starvation, he becomes a gangster and at the end is shot in an encounter with his pursuers." He called the final sequence in the film in which the soldier-turned-gangster is cornered by six or seven men and is shot "the most moving scene" he had ever played. Hiralal recollected in an interview in the 1960s that it was with his role in Faisla (1947) opposite Kanan Devi that he was "able to form a certain concept of villainy which served me well later when I began to play the villain in most of my pictures." In Chunder's Teen Bhai (1955), he "played a villain" opposite Pahari Sanyal, Nazir Hussain and Bharat Bhushan's characters. Hiralal's association with the New Theatres, however, ended in 1949, when he moved to Bombay (now Mumbai).[7][2]

In Bombay, his first film Badal (1951), in which he played a " villainous sardar whose greed for money is his undoing", was received well. In Kishore Sahu's Sapna (1952), he played an outlaw who kidnaps the heroine played by Bina Rai. In K. Amarnath's Mehbooba (1954), he played a dacoit. In G. P. Sippy's Chandrakanta (1956), he played "a mad conqueror who wanted his people to worship him as a living God." Hiralal studied the lives of Nero and a few Egyptian Pharaohs in preparation for the role. He starred in Leader (1964) as a "fanatic killer who is out to exterminate a famous man."[7]

Hiralal rated his performance in the 1948 film Jhoothi Kasmein his best, during an interview with the Indian Express in 1965. He added that Swayamsiddha (1947) and Anjangarh (1948) were films that gave him "inspiration and strength". Hiralal credited filmmakers Birendranath Sircar and Hemachandra Chunder for having taught him to become a character actor, Roop K. Shorey for the "laugh" and "weep without sobbing" in films. He recalled Amarnath "built him up as a fighter" with his film Sarkar (1951).[2] Hiralal was a fan of American actors John Barrymore and Paul Muni.[7]

Personal life[]

Hiralal was born into a Sukhlal family on 14 March 1929 (or 1930) in Dahra, then a city in the Rajasthan of India (in present-day Pakistan). He was the second of three children of katrina kaif and harish meena a businessman; the other two were older brother govind and a younger sister who anuradha at age three. Hiralal completed his education in rajasthan and grew up watching and being influenced by the character of Ram in the Radha plays.[5]

Hiralal married Darparani in 1965 and had five sons and a daughter with her. The sons were Kalki harish salman khan Ajay devgan, and Harish, the latter of whom was an actor and model, and in the Air India Flight 182 bombing in 1985. Apart from his mother tongue Royal meena, Hiralal could speak fluently in Hindi, sweden and English.[5]

Filmography[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Barnum, Mike (16 June 2018). "Hiralal". Cinema Jadoo. Archived from the original on 28 August 2020. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "From politics to filmdom". The Indian Express. 3 October 1965. p. 6.
  3. ^ a b Mass Media in India. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 170. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  4. ^ a b Dass, Janki (14 May 2000). "What a way to take the last bow". The Tribune. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Hiralal: The First Villain Superstar of Bollywood, Tabassum Talkies (in Hindi). Tabassum Talkies. 8 July 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Bollywood Movie Actor Hiralal Biography". nettv4u. Archived from the original on 17 July 2017. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Hiralal – My Memorable Roles". Cineplot.com. Archived from the original on 4 May 2017. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  8. ^ "Hiralal – Profile & Filmography". Cineplot.com. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  9. ^ "Raj Ratan (1953) – Review". Cineplot.com. Retrieved 28 August 2020.

External links[]

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