Farhat Ezekiel, Born on December 5, 1932, Sagittarian, subsequently named Nadira, a Baghdadi Jew, hailing from Nagpada, South Mumbai, a predominantly Muslim and Jewish locality, was at the tender age of 19 when she literally stormed her way into Bollywood with the movie "Aan" (Mehboob Khan's) opposite Dilip Kumar, the reigning heart-throb of the times. Nadira was chosen mostly for her glowing skin, sharp features, European looks as Khan wanted to dub "Aan" into English as well. The feisty and boisterous Nadira not only took leading roles, but also went on to accept negative roles, for example the one in "Elaan", and the one in "Shri 420" containing the song "Mud mud ke na dekh mud mud ke...", which continues to be popular even now. And who can forget "Ajeeb dastaan hai yeb..." from "Dil Apna aur Preet Parai", picturized on Nadira, Raaj Kumar and Meena Kumari. Nadira thus reigned supreme in the 1950s and 1960s. Thereafter, she appeared in character roles where she played the mother, an aunt, or older woman, adding poise and dignity to these roles. And it was in "Julie" (1975), in which she played the leading lady's (Laxmi) Anglo-Indian mother that she bagged the award for "Best Supporting Actress". She went on to play character roles even in Tele-serials, amongst which "Thoda Sa Aasman" has been rated as one of the best television performances ever, in which she plays the wife of Bollywood veteran actor, Shreeram Lagoo. Despite of her success and popularity, she led a lonely life. Her two other siblings, both brothers had migrated to the United States and Israeli respectively, and she lived alone in her South Mumbai flat in Vasundhara building. She was known for a small but well maintained library of books ranging from the works of Shakespeare, Adolf Hitler, Vivekananda, World War II, Judaism, and Philosophy, which friends and neighbors used to borrow from time to time. Shobha, her maid, was the one who took care of her, especially when she entertained friends like Tanuja, Nimmi, Shyama, Deepti Naval, and model-turned-actor Milind Soman, who acted with her in a tele-serial "Margaritta", visited her frequently. She always celebrated her Birthday on December 5 with mostly children from the neighborhood and served them biryani and cakes. Nadira suffered from a variety of illnesses, including tubercular meningitis, & paralysis. Her bout with heavy alcoholic drinking also resulted in alcoholic liver disorder. She was hospitalized on January 2nd and following a cardiac seizure died on Wednesday January 8th at Bhatia Hospital in Mumbai. She was 74. Nadira had never married, but she will always be remembered by her fans worldwide.
Born in Israel she headed to India in the late 1940s to try to break into movies and eventually appeared in more than 60 films.After she played a screen villain in the 1955 film "Shree 420" she was typecast by the industry and never played a heroine again.
Shah Rukh Khan and Sharad Kapoor are the leaders of the two rival gangs. Aishwarya Rai is Shah Rukh Khan's twin sister. Shah Rukh is in love with Priya Gill. Chandrachur Singh is Sharad Kapoor's younger brother who studies in a catering college in Bombay. He comes to Goa to visit his brother and plans to go back and start a restaurant there. He sees Aishwarya and falls in love with her. Chandrachur gives up the idea of going back to Bombay and opens a bakery in Goa. When Shah Rukh comes to know about the romance between Aishwarya and Chandrachur, the fight between the gang turns more violent. How the conflict is resolved is the rest of the story.
A girl, whose mother dies of sorrow from her husband's family's rejection, grows up singing and dancing like her mother. She works as a dancing girl and is courted by a prince, but can think only of a man she has never met, who left her a message on the train. She dreams of him and cannot dance, becomes frightened and runs into the night