Bahurani | |
---|---|
Directed by | T. Prakash Rao |
Written by | Inder Raj Anand |
Story by | Manilal Banerjee |
Based on | Swayamsiddha (novel) by Manilal Banerjee |
Starring | Guru Dutt Mala Sinha Feroz Khan |
Music by | C. Ramchandra |
Distributed by | Meena Movies |
Release date | 1963 |
Running time | 132 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Bahurani (transl. Daughter-in-law) is a 1963 Indian Hindi-language drama film directed by T. Prakash Rao. The film stars Guru Dutt, Mala Sinha and Feroz Khan in pivotal roles.
It is a remake of the Telugu movie Ardhangi, which was based on Maddipatla Suri's Telugu translation of the Bengali novel Swayamsiddha, written by Manilal Banerjee. Swayamsiddha went on to be made into a 1975 Bengali movie of same name.[1] Ardhangi was remade in Tamil as Pennin Perumai and was also remade again in Hindi as Jyoti in 1981.
Plot
Zamindar (Nazir Hussain) has two sons — Raghu, by his first wife and Vikram, by his second wife. Raghu (Guru Dutt) is a simple-minded and innocent young man. Vikram (Feroz Khan) is cruel, domineering, selfish and greedy and he maltreats everyone, from servants to his own brother Raghu. Vikram's vicious mother Rajeshwari (Lalita Pawar) does the same.
After Vikram has a feud with a tough and smart village girl named Padma (Mala Sinha), who is the first person to ever confront him, Zamindar gets the idea of marrying Vikram and Padma. Vikram refuses and after a series of incidents, Padma marries Raghu instead. When she understands how her husband has been treated over the years, she vows to set things right and in the process falls in love with him. Inspired by her love, fearlessness and no-nonsense attitude, Raghu begins to find the courage to resist his oppressors.
Cast
- Guru Dutt as Raghu
- Mala Sinha as Padma
- Feroz Khan as Vikram
- Nazir Hussain as Zamindar
- Lalita Pawar as Rajeshwari
- Mukri as Sukhiya
- Shivraj as Diwan
- Agha as Banwarilal
- Badri Prasad as Vaid
- Shyama as Chanda Bai
- Manorama as Chanda's mother
- Pratima Devi as Dai Maa
- Nazir Kashmiri as Kalicharan
Awards
- Nominated, Filmfare Best Actress Award - Mala Sinha
Music
The songs of the film was composed by C. Ramchandra with lyrics authored by Sahir Ludhianvi.
Song | Singer |
---|---|
"Eetal Ke Ghal Mein Teetal" | Hemant Kumar |
"Umra Hui Tumse Mile, Phir Bhi Jane Kyun Aise Lage" | Lata Mangeshkar, Hemant Kumar |
"Main Jagoon Saari Rain" | Lata Mangeshkar |
"Balma Anari Man Bhaye" | Lata Mangeshkar |
"Bane Aisa Samaaj, Mile Sab Ko Anaaj, Na Ho Loot, Na Ho Phoot, Na Ho Jhoot To Ji" | Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle, Manna Dey |
"Yeh Husn Mera, Yeh Ishq Tera" | Asha Bhosle |
"Kaam Krodh Aur Lobh" | Mahendra Kapoor |
Other versions
The story line has been inspiration for various movies and has had various remakes in Indian film industry.
Year | Title | Language | Director | Cast | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Step-mother | Son | Wife | ||||
1955 | Ardhangi | Telugu | P. Pullaiah | Santha Kumari | Akkineni Nageswara Rao | Savitri |
1956 | Pennin Perumai | Tamil | P. Pullaiah | Santha Kumari | Sivaji Ganesan | Savitri |
1969 | Mallammana Pavaada | Kannada | Puttanna Kanagal | Advani Lakshmi Devi | Rajkumar | B Sarojadevi |
1975 | Swayamsiddha | Bengali | Sushil Mukherjee | Ranjit Mallick | Mithu Mukherjee | |
1981 | Jyothi | Hindi | Pramod Chakravorty | Shashikala | Jeetendra | Hema Malini |
1987 | Enga Chinna Rasa | Tamil | K. Bhagyaraj | C. R. Saraswathy | K. Bhagyaraj | Radha |
1992 | Beta | Hindi | Indra Kumar | Aruna Irani | Anil Kapoor | Madhuri Dixit |
1993 | Abbaigaru | Telugu | E. V. V. Satyanarayana | Jayachitra | Venkatesh | Meena |
1993 | Annayya | Kannada | D. Rajendra Babu | Aruna Irani | V. Ravichandran | Madhoo |
1998 | Santan | Oriya | Snigdha Mohanty | Siddhanta Mahapatra | Rachana Banerjee |
References
- ↑ Narasimham, M. l (6 June 2014). "Ardhangi (1955)". Thehindu.com. Archived from the original on 15 August 2021. Retrieved 17 November 2021.