The elegant, crystal-eyed Nimmi
introduced to Bollywood by Raj Kapoor; groomed by Mehboob Khan; pampered by Dilip
Kumar and directed by K. Asif in her swansong, she blazed the silver screen
with her superlative performances. Vivacity came naturally to coquettish,
elfish and bubbly Nimmi. These traits encouraged film makers to cast her
repeatedly as a naughty and feisty village belle or the contumacious woman. Most
of her films had Nimmi pouting, suffering and willing to sacrifice herself for
the sake of her love. She quietly polished her histrionic abilities and
developed her own unique style of acting. She never run after the big and
glamorous roles, but with her bold and rebellious nature she performed most
unconventional roles which other actresses wouldn’t dare. She belonged to the
rich legacy of courtesans and theatre artistes to the film industry. The curves
of her hairline, the tilt of her chin, the wistfulness of her dark liquid eyes and
captivating smile were Nimmi’s potent weapons to woe the audience.
Nawab Banoo was born in Fatehabad
near Agra on 18 February, 1933. Her mother Wahiddan was a courtesan, singer and
actress in the 1930s. Her father Abdul Hakim was a military contractor. Her forename
‘Nawab’ was given by her grandfather while her grandmother added ‘Banoo’. Her
name was rechristened as "Nimmi" by the showman Raj Kapoor while
introducing her as parallel heroine in ‘Barsaat’ (1949). As a child, she made
her first public appearance on the stage in Calcutta. She lost her mother at
the tender age of eight years and was put under the guardianship of her
grandmother. In 1948, she and her grandmother went to Mumbai and they stayed
with Nawab’s aunt actress Jyoti, who was married to the playback singer G.M.
Durrani.
Those days Mehboob Khan, a family
friend, was shooting for Andaz (1949) with Raj Kapoor, Nargis and Dilip Kumar at
Central Studios. One day Nimmi along with her grandmother visited the set of Andaz.
Raj Kapoor was looking for a fresh face for his film ‘Barsaat’. Something about
the unrehearsed Nimmi appealed to him and after few days she was called for the
audition. She gave a wonderful shot and then immediately broke down in tears.
This endeared her to Raj Kapoor, who gave her the role of an innocent mountain
shepherdess Neela in love with a city slicker (Premnath). The film had three
popular songs: ‘Barsaat Me Hamse Mile Tum; Hawa Me Udta Jaye and Patli Qamar
Hai’ picturised on her. She had the audiences in tears when she commits suicide
in the climax. The shy, teenaged Nimmi fitted the role like a glove. The
dominant metaphor for the flow of desire is that of water, beautifully depicted
in the last shot when the smoke from Neela’s funeral pyre merges with the rain
clouds. The film was a phenomenal, critical and commercial success. Her dew
fresh appeal resulted in Nimmi being flooded with numerous film offers thereafter.
One of her earliest releases
was Fali Mistry’s ‘Sazaa’ (1951) starring Dev Anand. She emoted to the immortal
song ‘Tum Na Jaane Kis Jahan Mein Kho Gaye’. The same year, she worked with
Dilip Kumar and Ashok Kumar in Nitin Bose’s “Deedar”. The seemingly demure
actress, who rose to stardom with Barsaat, was fortunate enough to have
appeared mostly in musical bonanzas.
After the success of
Barsaat, there was no looking back for Nimmi. Mehboob Khan was next to cast her
as Mangala in his magnum opus ‘Aan’ (1952). She played a sweet, rustic belle in
love with Dilip Kumar who, in turn, is enamoured by a fiery princess Nadira.
Though Nimmi dies before the climax, she does an elongated death dance that
captured the imagination of the public. The saucer shaped, expressive eyed actress
made waves with her effective portrayal of virtue under siege. ‘Aan’ had a
lavish London premiere, where Nimmi met many western film personalities
including Errol Flynn. When Flynn attempted to kiss her hand she pulled it
away, exclaiming, "I am an Indian girl you cannot do that." The
incident made the headlines “Nimmi, India's Most Glamorous Movie Star, Has
Never Been Kissed”. Film India editor Baburao Patel called her “Nimmi of the un-kissed
lips”. Surprisingly, she received four film offers from Hollywood. However, she
declined these offers, choosing to focus on her flourishing career in India.
The film was also released in a shortened dubbed version in French as Mangalla
Fille des Indes (1954) named after Nimmi’s character Mangala.
Buoyant with the grand success
of ‘Aan’, the formidable filmmaker Mehboob Khan cast Nimmi in ‘Amar’ (1954), as
a rape survivor, the role no other major actress of her time would have
accepted. She played a poor milk-maid seduced by a lawyer Dilip Kumar, who
refuses to disclose his identity even when she is disgraced and found to be
pregnant. The controversial subject of rape was way ahead of its time and the
film was not a commercial success, although Nimmi's intense performance was
applauded by critics.
Career wise, an ambitious Nimmi
turned producer with the popular film ‘Danka’ (1954). Kundan (1955) produced by
Sohrab Modi co-starring Sunil Dutt, gave Nimmi a memorable double role as
mother and daughter. Her sensitive portrayal earned her further recognition as
a talented and spirited actress. In Udan Khatola (1955), she (Soni) disguised
as a man Shibu to secretly meet her beloved Dilip Kumar (Kashi), who had been
captive at Rajrani’s palace. But soon she put her life to risk to the tune of ‘O
Door Ke Musafir...’ In ‘Char Dil Chaar Raahein’, she deftly played a dancer who
turns down a Nawab for his driver (Ajit), but eventually spurns him when he
refuses to accept her mother. Nimmi was seductively peppy even in two
hero-oriented films ‘Basant Bahar’ and ‘Bhai Bhai’, which proved big successes
in 1956. Dancing to the ‘Flute’ tunes of the song ‘Main Piya Teri..’ in ‘Basant
Bahar’, Nimmi mesmerised even the exponents of classical music.
However, by the late 1950s,
Nimmi’s career began slowly sliding. The films she did like Anjali (1957) and
Shama (1961) flopped at the box office. It was during this phase, Nimmi became
very selective as she strove for better quality projects and roles. She took on
controversial characterizations and offbeat roles such as the prostitute of Char
Dil Char Raahen, the blind girl in Pooja Ke Phool (1964) and Ashok Kumar’s mute
wife in Akashdeep (1965). However, it did not prove strikingly successful for her
career. She rejected films like ‘Sadhna’, ‘Woh Kaun Thi’ and ‘Saraswati Chandra’.
She was first offered the coveted female lead in ‘Mere Mehboob’ but she preferred
to the sister’s role believing it to be more important. In rejecting the female
lead, opposite a hugely popular leading man, Rajendra Kumar, for what was
ostensibly a character role, Nimmi lost a valuable chance at making the
successful transition into the new phase of films that were then evolving. Her
career went under a cloud. Although she retained her star status and continued
to be credited above the title, junior actresses like Nanda and Mala Sinha were
cast as the romantic leads.
One film that remains
significant in her career was K Asif’s ‘Love and God’ (1986), which took a gruelling
23 years to be completed. The film was first shot in black and white with
Bharat Bhushan as hero. But later, Mughal-E-Azam took precedence. It was then
restarted with Guru Dutt and for seven years it remained in the cans. Then Guru
Dutt passed away, so Asif took Sanjeev Kumar. But then Asif himself passed
away. Nimmi had delivered a subtle and sensitive portrayal and looked beautiful
in Technicolor and the period costumes. It was edited heavily and the final
print seemed to be a cut paste job. Nimmi once jokingly remarked “Laila lived
but Majnu kept dying”. And now Laila too is gone.
Nimmi gained popularity by
playing spirited village belle characters, but has appeared in diverse genres
such as fantasy and social films. The larger-than-life histrionics eventually
gave way to mellow performances in films like Kundan and Bhai Bhai. Her best
performances were seen in the films Sazaa, Aan, Uran Khatola, Bhai-Bhai, Kundan,
Mere Mehboob, Pooja Ke Phool, Akashdeep and Basant Bahar. Apart from Nargis
with whom she co-starred in Barsaat and Deedar, she also shared screen with many
notable heroines like Madhubala (Amar), Suraiya (Shama), Geeta Bali (Usha
Kiran), and Meena Kumari (Char Dil Char Rahen).
During her early career, Nimmi
was fortunate to work with the Bollywood Triumvirate of Raj Kapoor, Dilip Kumar
and Dev Anand under the direction of renowned directors like Mehboob Khan, Nitin
Bose, Amiya Chakravarty, Kidar Sharma, SU Sunny, K.A. Abbas, Chetan Anand and
Vijay Bhatt. While she went on to play heroine opposite Raj Kapoor (Bawra), Dev
Anand (Sazaa, Aandhiyan), Bharat Bhushan (Basant Bahaar) and Sanjiv Kumar (Love
& God), it was her tragic chemistry with Dilip Kumar that made her the
delight of the ticket-window and tabloids.
It was her tragic chemistry
with Dilip Kumar in Deedar, Daag, Amar & Udan Khatola that made her the
delight of the ticket-windows. Like others, Nimmi too was awed by thespian
Dilip Kumar’s acting skills. While their ill-fated love on screen wowed audiences,
off-screen too there were rumours linking them up. The media even wrote
grapevine about their romantic affair. Nimmi denied as she was involved with S.
Ali Raza, who had written dialogues for her films Barsaat, Aan and Amar etc. She
left movies in 1965 to get married to S. Ali Raza. The couple was not blessed
with any children and they adopted her sister's son Parvez, who now lives in
London. Ali was diagnosed with blocked arteries and he passed away in 2007.
Like her mother Wahiddan, Nimmi
was also a singer-actress and sang her own song ‘Nanadiya Jaane Na De... in
Badardi(1951). But she concentrated on acting passion alone and never continued
with her singing ventures. She used to tie a rakhi to Raj Kapoor every year. Her
Lucknowi mannerism and penchant for shayri was well known in the Bollywood.
Nimmi was suffering from
breathing problems and on 25 March, 2020 she embarked the ‘Uran Khatola’ to her
eternal journey:
‘Chale Aaj Tum Jahan Se, Hui Zindagi
Parayi…..O Door Ke Musafir’
Wonderful article on Nimmi, the. versatile actress of the yore depicting her multifaceted talent, ups & downs of her career graph as well as her personal & public life. Mr. Garg has also shown his iconic style in elaborating his impressions about the great actress of yesteryears.
ReplyDeleteThank you Sir, for your kind comments and taking out time from your busy schedule.
ReplyDeleteGarg Saheb - You have written very nice and detailed informative article on Nimmi.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ashok Srivastava Ji.
ReplyDeletesir, thankyou very much for a detailed and informative article on Nimmiji, heroine of golden years of indian cinema. Sir i would like to ask a question: has she portrayed a blind girl in the hindi film of 1950s where devanand was a hero.I weighly remember having seen such a film on television. thankyou very much with kind regards
ReplyDelete