Jaya Prada
- Actress
- Music Department
- Producer
Jayaprada was born as Lalita Rani in a middle class household to
Krishna and Neelavani in Rajahmundry, Andhra Pradesh on April 3, 1962.
She was a small town girl with dreams of becoming a doctor. Her mother
enrolled her in dance and music classes when she was seven years old,
in addition to going to a regular school. Even though, her father and
uncle were film financiers, her initial break into films didn't come
through them. She was discovered dancing on stage at a school function
when she was just fourteen years old. Character actor Prabhakar Reddy
gave her the name of Jayaprada and introduced her in a three minute
song in the Telugu film, "Bhoomi Kosam" (1976). That immediately led
her to longer roles in "Devude Digivaste" (1975) and "Naaku Swatantram
Vachindhi" (1976). The floodgates opened. Major film directors, such as
Bapu, K. Vishwanath and K.Balachander, approached her with quality
projects. She immediately became a huge star in Telugu films as diverse
as the color-drenched, big-budget "Seeta Kalyanam" (1976) to the stark,
naturalistic black-and-white film "Antuleeni Katha" (1976), where she
won a special acting award for her unforgettable dramatic performance.
But it was her dancing skills and nuanced acting style as a mute girl
that made K. Vishwanath's "Siri Siri Muvva" (1976) into a timeless
classic. It would also be her passport into Hindi films as K.
Vishwanath remade it into "Sargam" (1979) and made her a overnight star
in Bollywood as well. She earned her first Filmfare nomination as Best
Actress for the film, and it would become one of her favorite films.
She stalled on doing more Hindi films for two years as she wasn't
fluent in the language. But she became fluent in Hindi, as well as
Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam and Bengali, and had hit films in all these
languages. She endeared audiences with her sincere portrayal of Amitabh
Bachchan's girlfriend in her next favorite film "Sharabi" (1984), which
became another big hit and earned her second Filmfare nomination as
Best Actress. K. Vishwanath directed her to her third Filmfare
nomination as Best Actress for her other favorite film "Sanjog" (1985).
But some of her best performances would go unrewarded. In the Telugu
film directed by K.Balachander, "47 Rojulu" (1981) showed Jayaprada as
a innocent girl duped by her husband in Paris, France, and her struggle
to escape from him. But in Hindi films, she usually played the
traditionally dressed, docile, obedient wife, and while that image led
to hit films, it also eventually tired her audiences. She also seemed
bored and indifferent with no new challenges ahead as she had already
made her other favorite films: the Hindi films "Sur Sangam" (1985) and
"Tohfa" (1984), the Telugu film "Sagara Sangamam" (1983), the Kannada
films "Sanadi Appanna" (1977) and "Kavi Ratna Kalidasa" (1983). The
only excitement came from her personal life when she met her husband
film producer Srikant Nahata. They started out as friends as he was
already a married man with children. But it turned into love when he
stood by her because of her income tax problems. She was branded the
"other woman," especially since Nahata wouldn't leave his wife. So she
ended up marrying him in 1986, and he has continued to be married to
both women. In 1994, she also became a politician by joining the Telugu
Desam Party. A few years later, a rift developed with the political
party and she was deeply hurt when she was no longer in the party. She
also didn't have any major films lined up. But she kept up with her
many social and humanitarian causes, especially related to poor women
and children. She also became tough and strong and forged on ahead by
joining a different political party in a different state, Uttar
Pradesh. She won the election with the slogan line, "Andhra is my
janambhoomi but Uttar Pradesh is my karmbhoomi." She also started
making films playing stronger, mature roles. In "Deh," she played an
older woman having an affair with a much younger man. She also wrote
and directed "Class Medal," a Telugu film that starred her sister's son
Siddharth and produced by her brother Rajababu. She didn't forget her
first love, dancing, and did a dance ballet in 2005 that won her great
acclaim. And she also dabbled in playback singing and even recorded an
album with music composer Bappi Lahiri. In
2008, she received the Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award for her long
and plentiful contribution to the South Indian film industry. Having
three careers (acting, dancing, politics), and a husband, left her no
time to have children of her own, even though she has expressed a
desire to have children. So far, she has shown no desire to give up her
three careers and in fact, stated that she'll be as hardworking and
dedicated in the future as she is now.