Remembering Sridevi - The Hawa Hawai Girl

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Posted: 6 years ago
#1
Remembering Sridevi - The Hawa Hawai Girl
Today ie 24/02/2019 is the first Death anniversary of Sridevi

Remembering Her on this day

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Nikhil718 thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
#2
It was a sad loss from not only the film industry but audiences as well. I'm not going to talk about what happened on that day she passed away but I will say this first female superstar was very versatile. I mean every role she did was done with heart and passion with the ability to portray any type of role.

You watch Mom and her method of acting is very unique. For example, the emotional scene in the hospital was just terrific and I don't think anyone can act like that compared to Sridevi. Plus, perfect dialogue deliveries in English Vinglish as well.

Some performances that I like from Sridevi e.g. Himmatwala, Aulad, Mr India, Nagina, Chaalbaaz, Sherni, Janbaaz, Himmat Aur Mehanat, Guru, Chandni, Lamhe, Khuda Ghawah, Heer Ranjha, Roop Ki Rani Choron Ka Raja, Gumrah, Laadla, Mom, English Vinglish and etc.

---

Sridevi will be missed :)



TotalBetty thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
#3
She made her mark in whatever language she ventured

Superstar in all of them That's a rare feat
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Posted: 6 years ago
#4
This day must be very tough for her daughters
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Posted: 6 years ago
#5

Before Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan, Sridevi was the undisputed superstar of Tamil cinema

It is very difficult to come to terms with a person turning into a memory overnight. It is even harder to make sense of it if that is someone with whom you had no personal relationship, but who always felt like a part of your life. Such is the power of mediums like cinema and sport they allow a person to be a loved by millions of people whom they have never even met. Many Indians have wanted to be Sachin Tedulkar at some point, imitating his batting stance on the dusty streets we played cricket. Likewise, few could categorically state that they have never felt like being, or knowing, a character they saw on screen. This yearning to be much more than we are is what the cinematic medium exploits so well and that is how superstars are born. Cinema can also be a marker of time. When we watch a movie or a scene years later, we sometimes associate it with a particular moment of our lives. In this way, even sequences with little cinematic value can become deeply significant. That is the power of memory and of nostalgia. When I heard on Sunday morning that Sridevi had died the previous night, the first thing that came to my mind was something a school teachers had told me years ago. My teacher was a film buff. Born and married into a conservative family, she had no scope of imitating her cine idols in real life, unlike the privilege that men had to flaunt their bell bottoms, coloured cut banians (sleeveless vests), or whatever else was the rage at the time. But when she became a parent, she was bestowed with a new power: she could make decisions for another person, her child. Such was my teacher's love for Sridevi that she went out of her way to dress her daughter in what she called "Sridevi dresses. She was not the only one: Sridevi's outfits in her movies would dictate fashion trends among numerous women in the late 1970s and '80s. When the Tamil drama Vazhve Maayam came out in 1982, my teacher's daughter was six or seven years old. She managed to stitch for her the black skirt that Sridevi wore in a song sequence, a skirt with a shiny black fabric. Sridevi was elegance personified. I am often told by women of that generation that the pearl necklace the actress wore with her simple yet stunning sarees in the song Oru Iniya Manathu in Johnny (1980) put elaborate silk sarees out of fashion for a whole season. I wonder how many gave piano classes a try after watching the song En Vaanile in the same movie, in which Sridevi's character mesmerises Rajinikanth's with her singing. It was an era of stupendous talent. Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan had climbed to the top of the ladder very quickly. Director Balu Mahendra's mastery over the camera made every scene a thing of beauty. And then there was Ilaiyaraaja. He was melody personified and his background score could turn scenes into intoxicating dreams. To make a mark as a woman in the highly misogynistic world of Tamil cinema, amid such colossal figures, was no mean feat. Achieving this put Sridevi in a completely different league. Even before Haasan and Rajinikanth were given that tag, Sridevi was the reigning superstar. She also benefited from the kind of roles that her predecessors did not get. There were just a handful of roles for heroines in the 1950s and 1960s. Women played either historical characters queens and princesses waiting for their knights in shining armour or daughters of wealthy men who would be swept of their feet by heroes from modest backgrounds. With the 1970s came the character of a middle-class woman in an urban setting, emanating from the sensibilities of directors like K Balachander and Sridhar. Anything else was a rarity. Weighty characters for women, like that of Padamani in AP Nagarajan's "Thillana Mohanambal (1968), came once in a lifetime. Sridevi found a mentor of sorts in Bharathiraja. The mannvasanai (literally, scent of the soil) characters he created, such as Sridevi's Mayilu in 16 Vayathinile, turned her into possibly the first female star in Tamil Nadu who appealed to all markets. Here was a heroine who wowed audience watching cinema in tent halls in nondescript villages as well as the elite in Chennai's Besant Nagar. But Sridevi breathed life into these characters as much as the men who created them. Many of her directors could not look beyond Sridevi for many years, because they needed her calibre to inject life into a character. They benefited both from her popularity and her acting prowess. Sridevi played an important role in establishing their careers. Who could forget her role as a mentally challenged girl in "Moondram Pirai (1982)? The movie's climax is often hailed for Haasan's dramatic acting. But Sridevi matched Haasan in every frame. In "Moondru Mudichu (1976), she dominated over both her co-stars, Rajinikanth and Haasan. This was also a time when television had gained a foothold in homes. This gave Sridevi an advantage that the previous generation of stars such as Savitri and Padmini did not have. By entering people's living rooms through the small screen, cinema struck a more personal relationship with its viewers. By the late 1980s, Sridevi was in people's homes almost every weekend, when Doordarshan aired regional movies. The technological revolution magnified her stardom. When she moved to Bollywood in the late 1980s and 1990s, she became the darling of advertisers such as Dabur, Cema and Lux. Sridevi became synonymous with beauty. She was the yardstick for an entire generation. "Un moonjiku Sridevi kekutho (You want Sridevi for your face)? is an insult most men of that generation in Tamil Nadu would have received at some point. As a star, she did what even Rajinikanth and Haasan could not dream of: dominating Bollywood. Ask them and they might say they were never interested in making the transition. But there is little chance they would have so fantastically ruled over a second film industry the way Sridevi did. This feat, however, was never celebrated enough, another clear mark of the misogyny in the industry. Sridevi's untimely death reminds us of Kannadasan's emotional lines from the song Kanne Kalaimaane (Moondram Pirai): Yeno deivam sathi seithathu; pethai pola vithi seithathu (God has conspired for some reason; has made fate the way a fool would.) This article was originally published on Scroll.in and is being republished under special arrangement
TotalBetty thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
#6

Sridevi's death anniversary: Janhvi Kapoor, Arjun Kapoor, Boney Kapoor on how they coped with tragic loss as a family

Veteran actor Sridevi's untimely death last year left her family in shock. The way Boney Kapoor, Janhvi Kapoor, Khushi Kapoor, Arjun Kapoor and Anshula Kapoor came together to deal with it is what a family all about.

It has been a year since veteran actor Sridevi died from accidental drowning in Dubai. The loss came as a huge shock to her family and millions of fans who still grieve over her untimely demise. While her absence continues to be felt even today, her family, including her daughters Janhvi and Khushi and her step children Arjun and Anshula, made an effort to come together in the time of need. Two and a half months after Sridevi's death, Boney Kapoor put up a united front at his niece Sonam Kapoor's wedding with all his four kids on his side.

On the eve of the late actor's death anniversary, daughter Janhvi Kapoor shared a picture of two pairs of hands, probably of her sitting in Sridevi's lap, on her Instagram handle and captioned it, "My heart will always be heavy. But I'll always be smiling because it has you in it. Soon after, her eldest cousin Sonam dropped a comment, "Love you sweety with a heart emoji, again emphasising how the Kapoor family came together after the veteran actor's death.

Actor Arjun Kapoor, being the eldest of them all, emerged as the caring brother to both Janhvi and Khushi in the time of need. Not only did he support his father but also stood up for his siblings.

Speaking to HT in October last year, Arjun had said, "It's my job to be a good son to my father and the byproduct of that is I've managed to find two more sisters; they allow me to call them my sisters and that's very large-hearted on their part.

Just like Janhvi, who made her Bollywood debut with Dhadak last year, Arjun, too, lost his mother before his debut film Ishaqzaade could hit the theatres. Talking about bonding with his step sisters post Sridevi's death, Arjun had said, "It's unfortunate that we've met in such circumstances. I wish they didn't have to go through what they're going through. I don't wish that for anybody because I've seen it and lived it. It's just gut-wrenching. It breaks your back. Imagine having your back stabbed and then being told to walk; it's not possible. So, they are going to take their time. And yeah, it's a very unique place to be in for me. It has given me a different perspective of life where I have realised there's more to life than a Friday.

Janhvi's debut film Dhadak released in July last year and went on to enter the Rs 100 crore club. In an interview to Filmfare, Janhvi had revealed, "You know at the end of the day, we have the same blood in us. I don't remember anything of those four months (between Sridevi's death and Dhadak's release) but I do remember that one day when we were sitting in Harsh (Anil Kapoor's son) Bhaiya's room and Arjun Bhaiya and Anshula (Arjun Kapoor's sister) Didi came in -- I think that was the one day when I felt like, Ok maybe we might be okay'. She had added, "Whom could we rely on? So, Khushi and I found ourselves leaning on them. A strong trust was forged between us. They're so chilled out, such gracious and strong people, who encourage you and are real with you. We're blessed.

In a first, Arjun and Janhvi were also seen sharing the couch on chat show Koffee With Karan. Arjun had shared a few pictures from the show on his Instagram handle and had captioned it with a mix of emotion and his usual candidness, "Just what I needed in the middle of my chaos. A reminder of what matters most to me now... Family. Swipe To notice @janhvikapoor is in shock & awe about the fact that the Koffee Champ agreed to share the Kouch with her.

Also read: Sridevi death anniversary: Sonam Kapoor, Farah Khan remember the late actor with rare pictures, heartfelt messages

Both Arjun and Janhvi are part of the same profession and being an elder brother, the former surely has advice for his little sister. Janhvi had once told a section of media, "The only reason we can stand strong after whatever happened is because of the kind of love and support Arjun bhaiyya and Anshula didi [half-siblings] have been giving us [she and her younger sister, Khushi]. It's a family dynamic that I relish.. I couldn't have asked for a better brother and a better sister. They have given us a lot of strength. He is a very wise man and has given tips like, just be honest, be yourself and be respectful towards people.' Somehow, when he says it, I take it like the gospel truth.

First Published: Feb 24, 2019 08:41 IST

TotalBetty thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
#7

Janhvi posts a HEART-WRENCHING message for Mom Sridevi

On Sridevi's First Death Anniversary, Janhvi Kapoor has posted a very beautiful picture with a HEART-WRENCHING message...

Sunday, February 24, 2019 | 3:46:02 PM IST (+05:30 GMT)
0 Comments | By Priyanka Chauhan

janhvi kapoor with mom sridevi emotional crying

Remembering her late mother Sridevi, Janhvi Kapoor has posted a very beautiful picture with a HEART-WRENCHING message...
Bollywood's legendary actress, Sridevi left for heavenly abode on February 24, 2018. On her first death anniversary today, her elder daughter and actress Janhvi Kapoor has posted a heart-wrenching message in rememberance of her dear mom.

Janhvi took to her social media account and posted a beautiful picuture and wrote an emotional message alongside that reads, "My heart will always be heavy. But I'll always be smiling because it has you in it."

Here's what she posted:


We pray for Sridevi's departed soul to rest in peace and may God grant strength to her family.




Edited by BettyA1 - 6 years ago

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