Balraj Sahni (1 May 1913 – 13 April
1973), born Yudhishthir Sahni, was a noted Indian film and stage
actor, who is best known for Dharti Ke Lal (1946), Do Bigha Zameen
(1953), Kabuliwala (1961) and Garam Hawa (1973).
He came from Bhera, now in Punjab,
Pakistan, and was the brother of Bhisham Sahni, noted Hindi writer,
playwright, and actor.
Sahni went from his native Rawalpindi,
Pakistan to study at Lahore University, Punjab, British India. He
completed his master's degree in English Literature from Lahore and
then went back to Rawalpindi and joined his family business. He also
held a Bachelor's degree in Hindi, followed by a Masters in English
from Punjab University. Soon after he married Damayanti Sahni.
In the late 1930s, Sahni and his wife
left Rawalpindi to join Tagore's Visva-Bharati University in
Shantiniketan in Bengal as an English and Hindi teacher. It is here
that their son, Parikshit Sahni was born, when his wife Damayanti was
doing her bachelor's degree. He also went to work with Mahatma
Gandhi for a year in 1938. The next year, Sahni, with Gandhi's
blessings, went to England to join the BBC-London's Hindi service as
a radio announcer. He returned to India in 1943.
Sahni was always interested in acting,
and started his acting career with the plays of the Indian People's
Theatre Association (IPTA). Incidentally his wife Damayanti became
well-known as an IPTA actress much before Sahni made a name for
himself in films. He started his film career in Mumbai with the
film Insaaf (1946), followed by Dharti Ke Lal directed by KA Abbas in
1946 (Damayanti's first film), Door Chalein in 1946, and other films.
But it was in 1953, with Bimal Roy's classic Do Bigha Zameen, that
his true forte as an actor was first recognised. The film won the
international prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
He followed it up with an encore in the
1961 classic Kabuliwala penned by Tagore.
Sahni's wife Damayanti, who was the
heroine of his 1947 film Gudia, died at a young age that same year.
Two years later, he married his first cousin, Santosh Chandhok, later
known as an author and television writer.
Sahni's acting was very well liked and
appreciated in all his films. He acted opposite top heroines like
Padmini, Nutan, Meena Kumari, Vyjayantimala, and Nargis in films like
Bindya Seema (1955), Sone Ki Chidiya (1958), Sutta Bazaar (1959),
Bhabhi Ki Chudiyaan (1961), Kathputli (1957), Lajwanti (1958) &
Ghar Sansaar (1958).his character roles in films like
"Neelkamal","ghar ghar ki kahani" "Do
raste"and "ek phool do mali" were greatly appreciated.
However, he is perhaps best remembered by the current generation for
the picturisation of the legendary song Ae Meri Zohra Jabeen from the
movie Waqt (1965) on him. Sahni appeared opposite Achala Sachdev in
the number.
He also starred in the classic Punjabi
film Nanak Dukhiya Sub Sansar (1970) as well as the critically
acclaimed Satluj De Kande.
His role as the angst ridden but stoical
Muslim man who refuses to go to Pakistan during partition, in his
last film Garam Hawa, has often been called his best performance by
critics. Balraj, however, could not see the completed film to rate
his own performance, as he died just the day after he finished
dubbing work. The last line he recorded for the film, and hence his
last recorded line is, Hindustani:- "Insaan Kab Tak Akela Jee
Sakta Hai?" which can be translated in English as:- "How
long can a man live alone?"
Sahni was a gifted writer; his early
writings were in English, though later in life he switched to
Punjabi, and became a writer of repute in Punjabi literature. In
1960, after a visit to Pakistan, he wrote Mera Pakistani Safar. His
book Mera Rusi Safarnama, which he had written after a tour of the
erstwhile Soviet Union in 1969, earned him the 'Soviet Land Nehru
Award'. He contributed many poems and short stories in magazines and
also penned his autobiography, Meri Filmi Aatmakatha. Sahni was an
extremely well-read and politically conscious person.
He and P K Vasudevan Nair worked on the
idea of All India Youth Federation with firebrand Delhi communist,
Comrade Guru Radha Kishan to organise the first national conference
of AIYF in Delhi. Their wholehearted efforts were visible as more
than 250 delegates and observers representing several youth
organisations of various states of India attended this session.
Balraj Sahni was elected as the first president of All India Youth
Federation, the youth wing of Communist Party of India. The
organisation was a huge success and strong presence of the
organisation was noticed by other political groups and the senior
communist leaders everywhere.
Sahni also dabbled in screenwriting; he
wrote the 1951 movie Baazi which starred Dev Anand and was directed
by Guru Dutt. He was also a recipient of the Padma Shri Award (1969).
Balraj Sahni also wrote in Punjabi and contributed to the Punjabi
magazine Preetlari. Very few people know about his love for the
books, In 1950s he was first to inaugurate the Library and study
centre for underprivileged class in Delhi.
Sahni was undoubtedly one of the
greatest actors ever to come on the Indian screen: a highly natural
actor who reminded the audience of the actors like Motilal because of
his simple persona and a sophisticated style of acting. He was looked
up to as a role model as he was never involved in any scandal. His
acting in Do Bigha Zameen and Garam Hawa were the highlights of his
career. He believed in what is known as Neo-Realistic cinema.
Balraj's brother Bhisham Sahni was a
well-known writer who wrote the book Tamas. His son Parikshit Sahni
is also an actor. Balraj Sahni died on 13 April 1973, of a massive
cardiac arrest, less than a month before his 60th birthday. He had
been depressed for some time by the untimely death of his young
daughter, Shabnam.
'Punjabi Kala Kender', founded in 1973
at Mumbai by Balraj Sahni, gives away the annual Balraj Sahni
Award', and also the 'All India Artists' Association'.
Balraj Sahni's Filmography with Super Star Rajesh Khanna :
1969 - Do Raaste : as Navendru Gupta
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