Showing posts with label Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Award. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Why did Madan Mohan never win a Filmfare Award?

 It's really surprising that a music composer like Madan Mohan who was mainly productive in the late 50′s, 60′s and early 70′s never received a Film Fare Award. Overall Madan Mohan often had difficulty finding assignments as he was not a part of a group.

There were actors who were also studio heads and had preferred composers like Dilip Kumar - Naushad, Dev Anand - R.D. & S. D. Burman, Raj Kapoor - Shankar JaiKishan etc.

Keeping the above factor aside here is a brief analysis as to how many times Madan Mohan was nominated as best music director and to whom he lost the black lady.

Madan Mohan was nominated first time for Anpadh. Though Anpadh had good songs, the other tough contendor was Hemant Kumar for Bees Saal Baad but the award went to Shankar Jai-Kishan for Professor.

His next nomination was for Woh Kaun Thi? and seriously, Lag jaa gale deserved an award but the contenders were Shankar-Jaikishan for Sangam and Laxmikant-Pyarelal for Dosti. This was a tightly contested race. We all know that each and every song of Dosti is popular even today. So, again a miss for Madan Mohan.

His third nomination was for Gulzar's Mausam. The other nominees were Khaiyyam for Kabhie Kabhie, R. D. Burman for Mehbooba, Kalyanji-Anandji for Bairaag and Ravindra Jain for Chitchor. Khaiyyam won it for Kabhie Kabhie.

Madan Mohan's fourth nomination was posthumous. His unused compositions were re-created by his son Surinder Kohli in 2004 for Veer-Zaara. The music was like a breeze of fresh air. This time the other nominations were Anu Malik for Main Hoon Na and Murder, Jatin-Lalit for Hum Tum, A. R. Rahman for Swades and Pritam for Dhoom. The award went to Anu Malik for Main Hoon Na.

My personal opinion is that this time it could had been Madan Mohan (no doubt Main Hoon Na had good tracks and a modernised qawalli after a long time) but just for the freshness of the compositions of Veer-Zaara which were 4–5 decades old.

Please let know in the comments section what do you think about the nominations and when Madan Mohan deserved the black lady.

Image(s) Courtesy: Google

Saturday, January 31, 2026

What is the greatest Academy Award snub in history?

 My idea of the greatest snub involved one of Hollywood’s greatest films.

It happened on Thursday night, March 2 1944 at Grauman’s Chinese Theater (seen above), where the 16th Academy Awards ceremony was in full swing.

Casablanca, a top contender, had already won “Best Screenplay” and “Best Director”. Then the winner for “Best Picture” was called out …

Jack Warner accepts Casablanca’s “Best Picture” Academy Award from Oscar host Jack Benny

… and producer/ awards participant Hal B. Wallis described what happened next.

After it was announced that Casablanca had won the Academy Award for Best Picture of the Year, I stood up to accept when Jack [Warner] ran to the stage ahead of me and took the award with a broad, flashing smile and a look of great self-satisfaction.

I couldn’t believe this was happening. Casablanca had been my creation. Jack had absolutely nothing to do with it. As the audience gasped, I tried to get out of the row of seats and into the aisle, but the entire Warner family sat blocking me. I had no alternative but to sit down again, humiliated and furious ... Almost forty years later, I still haven't recovered from the shock.

Oscar night: Jack Warner elated; Hal Wallis suppressing his anger

Hal Wallis had worked at Warner Bros. for 20 years. The head of film production for a decade, he’d stepped down from the job in 1941 because he “had no rest, had no home life”. Wallis then negotiated his own independent production deal with the studio, creating his own unit inside Warners where he would only produce four pictures a year.

One of those four was Casablanca, and Mr. Wallis had overseen every aspect of its production, from choosing the property and developing the script, to selecting actors and director, supervising the final edit, and signing off on the music and sound mix.

So, yeah. Wallis was ticked off at Jack Warner. Hugely.

And the snub by Warner was obvious. So obvious that it got noted in the L.A. Times, which caused Wallis (maybe under company pressure?) to fire off a note to Times columnist Edwin Schallert on March 4:

I have been with Warner Bros. for twenty years and during this time it has been customary here as elsewhere for the studio head to accept the Academy Award for the Best Production. Naturally I was glad to see Jack Warner accept the award this year for “Casablanca”. … I am happy also to have contributed my bit toward the making of that picture. Your comment in your column this morning on rivalry at Warner Bros. is totally unjustified. …

But Wallis was, of course, spewing misinformation. He was neither “happy” nor “glad”. And a month later, he resigned from Warners, though there was still two years left on his production deal:

I … felt I could no longer work under the conditions imposed upon me by Jack Warner. … Jack did not live up to the terms of our contract. He often acquired material I never saw and never had an opportunity to consider for my own productions. … Jack began to inject himself into my company’s decision making. Matters came to a head that Oscar night. …

I broke clean, left for New York without any plans, and holed up at the Waldorf Towers for eight weeks. ...

Word of the rupture got around, with tales and jokes about the Wallis-Warner breakup circulating widely. Five years after the fact, novelist and screenwriter Raymond Chandler related one of them to his British publisher:

My favorite Hollywood story is about the Warner Brothers, Jack and Harry. The day after Hal Wallis ankled and left them flat, there was deep gloom and a horrid sense of catastrophe at the executive lunch table. … Jack and Harry come in. Jack turns to Harry.

Jack: That sonofabitch, Wallis.

Harry: Yes, Jack.

Jack: A lousy fifty dollar a week publicity man. We built him up from nothing. We made him one of the biggest men in Hollywood. And what does he do to us? He picks up his hat and walks out and leaves us cold.

Harry: Yes, Jack.

Jack: That’s gratitude for you. And take that sonofabitch Zanuck. A lousy hundred a week writer and we took him in hand, built him up and made him one of the biggest men in Hollywood. And what did he do to us? Picked up his hat and walked out on us cold.

Harry: Yes, Jack.

Jack: That’s gratitude for you. Why, we could take any sonofabitch we liked and build him up from nothing and make him one of the biggest men in Hollywood.

Harry: Yes, Jack.

Jack: Anybody at all. (Jack turns and looks at writer/associate producer Jerry Wald, sitting there at the executive table.) What’s your name?

Wald: Jerry Wald, Mr. Warner.

Jack: (to Harry) Jerry Wald. Why, Harry, we could take this fellow here, this Jerry Wald, and build him up from nothing to be one of the biggest men in Hollywood, couldn’t we, Harry?

Harry: Yes, Jack. We certainly could.

Jack: And what would it get us? We build him up to be a big man, give him power and reputation, make him one of the biggest names in Hollywood, and you know what would happen? The sonofabitch would walk out on us and leave us flat.

Harry: Yes, Jack.

Jack: So why wait for that to happen, Harry? Let’s fire the sonofabitch right now.

In actual fact, Jack Warner did his share of seething. He commenced making snide comments about his former studio chief, and allegedly refused to let his one-time studio head have a picture taken with the Casablanca Oscar. It got to the point where Jack Warner’s actual brother Harry fired this cable off to him, soon after Wallis ankled the Warner Bros. lot.

MY ADVICE TO YOU IS NOT TO MENTION THAT PARTY’S NAME [Hal Wallis] EVEN IN FORM OF KIDDING. ATTEND TO YOUR OWN BUSINESS. I ASSURE YOU HE WILL DO VERY WELL. IT COMES ACROSS THE WIRE MANY PEOPLE SEE IT AND THEY THINK YOU ARE JEALOUS. YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO BE A BIG MAN.

Harry Warner’s predictions regarding Hal Wallis proved correct. Soon after resigning from Warner Bros., Wallis set up a production unit at Paramount Pictures, and went on producing highly regarded films into the 1970s.

And somewhere along Hal W.’s new road to further success, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences sent Mr. Wallis his own Casablanca “Best Picture” Oscar, along with a letter of apology.

End Note: Yeah, this isn’t a “snub” in the way the question intends, but a snub nevertheless.

End Note Too: Warner was technically justified in getting up to accept the “Best Picture” award, since other studio heads had done it. But elbowing out the person who actually did the work was incredibly bad form. Independent producers had accepted Oscars before, and Wallis was within his rights being ticked off at Jack Warner. (Academy rules didn’t officially acknowledge individual producers until 1951.)

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Which actress won the best Actress award at the 2025 IIFA Awards?

  this award at the Young age of 17 years and she became the youngest in the history of IIFA to receive this award in this category.

Nitanshi Goel made her acting debut in Kiran Rao directorial, Aamir Khan productional film Laapataa Ladies. While receiving her first IIFA, she conveyed her heartly gratitude to Kiran Rao, Aamir Khan productions and for the entire team of Laapataa Ladies. She credited this award to her parents for giving their unconditional love, support, sacrifices and for believing her.

On this occasion she said that as a little girl she began her journey with big dreams and the moment just does not to her but it belongs to every single person who believed her. She also gave a message for all dreamers to have belief in themselves and should never stop chasing of what could set their soul on fire and magic might happen when they refuse to give up.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Which actors win the National Film Award at a young age?

 There are several actors and actresses who won the National Film Awards at a young age, they are:

Monisha Unni:

She won the National Film Award for Best Actress at a very young age of around 15 to16 years in 1986 for the Malayalam movie Nakhakshathangal.

Unfortunately she passed away at a very young age of 21 years in 1992 in a car accident.

Shoba:

She had won the National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of just 17 years for the Tamil film Pasi.

She also passed away at a very young age of around 17 years in 1980, she took her life by herself.

Riddhi Sen:

He won National Film Award for Best Actor in 2018 at a young age of around 20 years for the Bengali film Nagarkirtan.

In this film he did the role of Parimal, a trans woman from rural Bengal. Riddhi Sen is a Bengali actor who also worked in some Hindi films.

Smita Patil:

She won her first National Film Award among her 2 National Awards at the age of 22 years in 1977 for the Hindi film Bhumika.

Shabana Azmi:

She has won 5 National Film Awards for Best Actress. For the first time she won the award at the age of of 24 years in 1974 for the Hindi film Ankur.

Suhasini:

She won the National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 24 years in 1985 for the Tamil film Sindhu Bhairavi.

Tabu:

She won her first National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 25 years in 1996 for the Hindi film Maachis.

Mithun Chakraborty:

He received National Film Award as a Best Actor at the age of 26 years for his debut film Mrigayaa in which he did the role of Ghinua, which was released in 1976.

Priyanka Chopra:

She won the National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 26 years in 2008 for Bollywood film Fashion.

Keerthy Suresh:

She won the National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 26 years in 2018 for the Telugu film Mahanati.

Rekha:

She won the National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 27 years in 1981 for the film Umrao Jaan.

Dhanush :

He won the National Film Award for Best Actor at the age of 27 years for the film Aadukalam which was released in 2010.

Kamal Haasan:

He won the National Film Award for Best Actors for 3 times. For the first time he won at the age of 28 years for the Tamil film Moondram Pirai which was released in 1982.

Alia Bhatt:

She received National Film Award for Best Actress at the age of 28 years in 2021 for the film Gangubhai Kathiawadi.

Naseeruddin Shah:

He won his first National Film Award among 3 National Film Awards at the age of 29 years for the Hindi film Sparsh which was released in 1979 in which he did the role of Anirudh Parmar.

Ajay Devgn:

He won the National Film Award for the first time at the age of 29 years for the film Zakham which was released in 1998.

Rajkumar Rao:

He won the National Film Award for Best Actor at the age of 29 years in the year 2013 for the film Shahid.

Vicky Kaushal:

He won the National Film Award for Best Actor at the age of 30 years for the film Uri: The Surgical Strike which was released in 2018.

The above are the actors and actresses who won the National Film Award at the age of before 30 years.

Actress Monisha Unni is the youngest actress who received at 15 or 16 years and Riddhi Sen is youngest actor to receive National Film Award at the age of 29 years so far.

As a child artist, the youngest to win the National Film Award is Treesha Thosar, she won the award at the age of just 4 years in 2023 for the Marathi film Naal 2.

Here one can remember that the veteran actor Kamal Haasan as a child artist won the National Film Award at a very young age of 4 or 5 years for the Tamil film Kalathur Kannamma which was released in 1960.

Even there may be many other child artists who proved their talents in acting and won National Awards when they were around 10 years.

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Who was the first actor or actress to reject a Filmfare award?

 Vyjayanthimala rejected Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1957.

The production of the original Devdas (1955) involved several big actresses leaving the project. Director Bimal Roy was willing to have Meena Kumari as Paro and Nargis as Chandramukhi opposite Dilip Kumar as Devdas.

Meena was left out because her husband Kamal Amrohi set some unrealistic conditions which Roy didn’t accept. The role went to Suchitra Sen eventually.

Nargis left because she wanted to play the more important role of Paro. Bina Rai and Suraiya left for the same reason.

Ultimately, the role of Chandramukhi was given to Vyjayanthimala. Screenwriter Nabendu Ghosh didn’t approve of Vyjayanthimala’s casting, but they couldn’t waste any more time.

Devdas earned critical acclaim and over 1 crore rupees at the box-office, making it the 10th highest-grossing film of the year.

At the 4th Filmfare Awards (1957), Dilip and Motilal won Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor respectively. Vyjayanthimala was awarded Best Supporting Actress but rejected it saying that she deserved Best Actress because her role was as important as Suchitra’s Paro.

Vyjayanthimala became the first actress to refuse a Filmfare award.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Which Designers Deserve An Award For Their Amazing Creativity?

 1. This bridge so you can feel the water.

2. 3D sculptures that will give you tenderness.

3. An LED light that looks like a fountain.

4. To save space at home and be able to iron clothes.

5. Now it is more interesting to travel by bus.

6. A duck ramp.