Tag: Lata Mangeshkar

  • From Lata Mangeshkar to Bappi Lahiri, celebs who left us this year

    From Lata Mangeshkar to Bappi Lahiri, celebs who left us this year

    They say death is a bitter truth and sadly, the only certainty of life. And, people can’t help but agree with this. In the year 2022, we lost many famous Indian celebrities. From iconic actors to musical legends including Lata Mangeshkar, a lot of celebrities have said goodbye to us. Now, as we are inching closer to a new year, we have decided to do a quick recap.

    Lata Mangeshkar

    Legendary singer Lata Mangeshkar died from multiple organ dysfunction syndromes on February 6. She was 92. She tested positive for COVID-19 on January 8. People from all over the world paid tribute to the legendary singer. It is a void that the Indian Cinema will find hard to fill.

    Bappi Lahiri

    Singer and music composer Bappi Lahiri died of obstructive sleep apnea in Mumbai on February 15. Bappi Da was 69. Also known as the disco king, Bappi Lahiri had refined music for us. From Yaad Aa Raha Hai to Tune Maari Entry, Bappi Da has given us a lot to cheerish.

    KK

    Krishnakumar Kunnath, popularly known as KK, passed away on May 31. The 53-year-old died hours after his performance at Nazrul Mancha in Kolkata. He died of cardiac arrest. KK’s death grabbed a lot of attention and multiple PILs, in connection with his death, were filed in the Calcutta High Court.

    Pandit Birju Maharaj

    Legendary Kathak dancer, composer and singer, Pandit Birju Maharaj passed away on January 16 at his residence due to a heart attack. He breathed his last at the age of 83. He was conferred with the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second-highest civilian award, in 1986.

    Vikram Gokhale

    Vikram Gokhale was known for his magnificent theatrical skills. He retired from stage acting in February 2016 following a diagnosis of a throat ailment. He passed away aged 76 on November 26 due to multiple organ failure.

    Mithilesh Chaturvedi

    Mithilesh Chaturvedi, during his career, featured in several films such as Koi… Mil Gaya, Gadar: Ek Prem Katha, Satya, Asoka, Taal, Fiza, Krrish and many others. He had started his career with the film Bhai Bhai in 1997.

    Raju Srivastav

    Born Satya Prakash Srivastav, the famous Indian comedian Raju Srivastav passed away on September 21 at AIIMS, Delhi. He was 58. He was hospitalised for more than a month following a cardiac arrest on August 10 while running on the treadmill in a gym. He became a household name following his appearance in The Great Indian Laughter Challenge where he was the runner-up.

    Vaishali Takkar

    The 29-year-old actor, who rose to fame with her role in famous TV shows like Sasural Simar Ka and Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai, was found hanging at her apartment in Indore on October 15, 2022. A suicide note was also recovered from the spot. Following Vaishali’s death, her mother Anu Kaur Takkar claimed that her accused ex-boyfriend Rahul Navlani used to disturb her.

    Arun Bali

    Veteran Indian actor Arun Bali, died on October 7, 2022, due to a prolonged age-related illness. He was 79 years old. He appeared in several famous movies and TV shows such as 3 Idiots, PK, Kedarnath, Airlift and Panipat. He was last seen in Laal Singh Chaddha.

    Tabassum Govil

    Veteran Bollywood actress Tabassum Govil, passed away on November 18, 2022, due to a heart attack. The actress was 78. Notably, she was the sister-in-law of actor Arun Govil who is known for playing the role of Lord Ram in Ramanand Sagar’s Ramayan.

  • Seven Women honored at the IAF Outstanding Women’s Achievements Awards Gala

    Seven Women honored at the IAF Outstanding Women’s Achievements Awards Gala

    Indu Jaiswal, Senior Councilwoman Dorothy Goosby, Glen Cove Mayor Pam Panzenback, Supervisor Jennifer Desena, Town of North Hempstead Clerk Ragini Srivastava, IAF Member Chanbir Kaur Sethi.
    Board of Trustees and Executive Members of Indian American Forum
    Ganesh Vandana by Vandana Jauhar
    Sunita Sadhnani pays musical tribute to late Lata Mangeshkar.
    A Kathak dance performance by students of Nartan Rang Dance Academy run by the well-known choreographer Swati Vaishnav.
    A dance performance by Mukthambar Fine Arts Inc.

    GLENCOVE, NY (TIP): Indian American Forum honored 7 women  of character, courage, commitment and accomplishments at its  Eleventh Outstanding Women’s Achievements Awards Gala on March 27. They included Nisha Kumar Behringer, Kalpana Bhandarkar, Neeta Bhasin , Beena Kothari, Dr. Preeti Mehta, Ragini Srivastav and Malini Rudra. Here are the  thumbnail sketches of the honorees.

    NISHA KUMAR BEHRINGER is strategic, and shareholder focused Chief Financial Officer, independent Director, and merger acquisitions executive with over two decades track record. She is formerly a Managing Director and the Chief Financial and Chief Compliance Officer of Greenbriar Equity Group L.P. a private equity firm for investments.

    KALPANA BHANDARKAR currently residing in Nassau County has nearly twenty years of experience in Health Care and civic engagement.  Kalpana has dedicated her professional career in improving access to Quality health care for people living in low resource setting. Over past several years Kalpana has focused her work with Long Island based organizations, serving as co-chair of the Board of ERASE Racism, an advocacy organization focused on fair housing and equitable education for all residents statewide

    NEETA BHASIN is the President of ASB Communications, the power of multicultural marketing company. ASB Communications is celebrating its 25th Anniversary this Year. Neeta Bhasin has served the Community through her TV shows, NEETA BHASIN SHOW on social media since last two Years. She started Event Guru Worldwide, the company that created history in 2013 by conceptualizing and producing the 2nd biggest event after New Tear’s eyeball drop-in Times square> DIWALI at Times Square

    BEENA KOTHARI has lived in Long Island for over 30 years. Her association, interactions contributions with Indian and American communities has been very extensive, valuable, and memorable and inclusive of all. She has several accomplishments within various social and cultural nonprofit leadership capacities. She firmly believes sin VASUDHAIVA KUTUMBAKAM meaning the world in ONE Family.

    DR PREETI MEHTA is the founder of Digestive Disease Care, one of the Largest Gastroenterology [ practices expanding from Queens to Nassau and Suffolk, she is well renowned in the field of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. Charitable work and giving back to the communities’ top priorities of Dr Mehta., She supports Charities dedicated for children and women education

    RAGINI SRIVASTAV Town Clerk. Town of North Hempstead is serving her first term as Town Clerk of Town of North Hempstead, a time honored and historic function for the township since its founding in 1784.Town Clerk Srivastava is proud of The Town of North Hempstead and the unique characteristics of our villages and services

    MALINI RUDRA is a junior at Williams College. She is 21 Years old, graduated from Syosset High School, she is Co-Captain of the Williams College Golf Team, which is ranked no 1 in NCAA Div. 111 Athletics. Malini has tremendous success in Golf. She won or placed top 5 in numerous tournaments locally as well a nationally Since 7th grade Malini was selected as part of the Syosset Girls Varsity Team, she is winner of Several Golf Championships. Malini also serves as a Board member of the Children’s Hope Teen Chapter and helped raise funds for under privileged in Long Island. Malini acknowledged the award with a video message. She was playing in a Golf Tournament in California.

    Several Elected officials present congratulated the honorees on their achievements and success, and also presented them with citations.Citations of behalf of Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, Nassau County Legislator Ms. Rose Walker, Town of Hempstead Supervisor Don Clavin and Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Suffolk County Executive Steve Vallone were  presented to all Honorees

    Honorable Jennifer Desena, Supervisor Town of North Hempstead, Town Clerk Ragini Srivastava, Senior Councilwoman Dorothy Goosby, Town of Hempstead, Nassau County Legislator Rose Walker, Glen Cove Mayor Pam Panzenback  and  several elected officials were present.

    Bobby Kumar Kalotee, Founding Member of IAF as also IAF Board of Trustees Dr Azad Anand,  Dr Urmilesh Arya, Dr Bhupendra Patel, Mohinder Singh Taneja, and  Board members Beena Kothari, Bina Sabapathy, Jyoti Gupta ,Indu Gajwani  Anu Gulati, Roopam Maini, Chanbir Kaur Sethi, Rohini Singh, Anuj Rihal, Inesha Singh, Dr Prachi Dua, Dr Pallavi Manvar Singh, Ratna Bhalla, Anju Sharma, Sanju Sharma  Sunny Thakkar , Jasbir Jay Singh, Indu Gajwani and  Bina Sabapathy also attended. Gala Chairperson Shammi Singhcould not come.

    Indu Jaiswal, chairperson of the IAF led from the front. Several speakers described her as an untiring community leader and congratulated her for organizing the grand event.

    Program started with Ganesh Vandana sung by Vandana Jauhar.  Dance performances were given by the  students of Nartan Rang Dance Academy run by the well-known choreographer Swati Vaishnav, and Mukthambar Fine Arts Inc.Tributes were  paid to late Lata Mangeshkar  by Sunita Sadhnani. Chanbir Kaur Sethi, Roopam Maini, Inesha Singh, Rohini Singh and Dr Prachi Dua, Dr Pallavi Manvar Singh and Mrs Ratna Bhalla, coordinated a brief Q&A session with the honorees discussing and emphasizing their accomplishments.

    (Based on a press release)

  • Achievements of Lata Mangeshkar

    Achievements of Lata Mangeshkar

    Lata Mangeshkar was one of the iconic and versatile singers, India has witnessed. In so many years of her professional life, Lata Mangeshkar had received so many awards and her list of achievements in never ending.

    Here is a list of achievements of Lata Mangeshkar:

    1958 – Aaja Re Pardesi [MADHUMATI] – Filmfare

    1962 – Kahi Deep Jale Kahi Dil [BEES SAAL BAAD] – Filmfare

    1964 – Woh Kaun Thi – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist Association Award

    1965 – Tumhi Mere Mandir Tumhi Meri Pooja [KHANDAAN] – Filmfare

    1966 – Sadhi Mansa – Best Playback Singer.

    1967 – Jait Re Jait – Best Playback Singer.

    1967 – Milan – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1968 – Raja Aur Rank – Best Female Playback Singer –  Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1969 – Saraswati Chandra – Best Female Playback Singer –  Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1969 : Padam Bhushan

    1969 – Aap Mujhe Achhe Lagne Lage [JEENE KI RAAH] – Filmfare

    1970 – Do Raaste – Best Female Playback Singer – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1971 – Tere Mere Sapne – Best Female Playback Singer – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1972 – Parichay – Best Female Playback Singer

    1973 – Marjina Abdulla (Bengali) – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1973 – Abhimaan – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Association Award

    1974 : Guinness Book of World Records:for singing the maximum number of songs in the world

    1975 – Kora Kagaz – Best Female Playback Singer

    1980 : Was presented key of the city of Georgetown, Guyana, South America

    1980 : Honorary Citizenship. The Republic of Suriname, South America

    1981 – Ek Duje Ke Liye – Best Female Playback Singer.A Portrait Of Lataji – 1983 – Bengal Film Journalist’s Award Association

    1985 – Ram Teri Ganga Maili – Best Female Playback Singer – Bengal Film Journalist’s Award Association

    1985 : 9th June declared as Asia Day in honour of her arrival in Toronto, Canada

    1987 : Honorary Citizenship of the U.S.A, Houston, Texas, U.S.A

    1989 : Dada Saheb Phalke Award

    1990 – Lekin – Best Female Playback Singer

    1990 : Honorary Doctorate (Literature) By Pune University

    1993 : Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award

    1993 : Filmfare felicitated by the Maharashra Government 1994 : Filmfare Special Award ( Didi Tera Devar Deewana -HAHK)

    1996 : Videocon Screen Lifetime Achievement Award

    1997 : Rajiv Gandhi Award.

    1998 : Lux Zee Cine Lifetime Achievement Award

    1999 : Padma Vibhushan

    1999 : NTR Award

    2000 : Lifetime Achievement Award by IIFA in London

    2000 : Jeevan Gaurav Puraskar by the Chaturang PratishthanThe Bharat Ratna Award

    2001 : Bharat Ratna – The Nation’s Highest Civilian Award 2001: Noorjehan Award : First Reciepient

    2001: Maharashtra Ratna : First Reciepient

    2002: Felicitation By CII ( For Contribution to Music & the Film Industry)

    2002: Hakim Khan Sur Award ( For National Integration by Maharana Mewar Foundation)

    2002: Asha Bhosle Award : First Reciepient

  • Goodbye, nightingale

    Goodbye, nightingale

    Lata Mangeshkar, “the nightingale of Bollywood”, who has died aged 92 after contracting Covid-19, was a much-loved Indian national and international figure, whose songs provided the backdrop to the lives of millions for seven decades.

    Music sung by her was heard constantly across India, in shops, restaurants, taxis or on the radio, and she became known as “Didi”, or sister, because so many people identified with her often emotional songs. And yet she was best known as a playback singer, a vocalist who does not appear onscreen but provides the soundtrack for films in which actors lip sync to her singing.

    Her output was extraordinary – she is estimated to have recorded some 25,000 songs, which appeared in more than a 1,000 Hindi films, and she also sang in more than 20 different Indian languages. With an impressive vocal range, covering four octaves, she became massively popular with film directors for her ability to understand the context in which her songs would be used.

    Mangeshkar did not just sing, but made sure that her performance matched the storyline and the character, saying that she always read the lyrics and listened to the tune before agreeing to sing.

    She first came to national fame in India with the song Aayega Aanewala (meaning “the one who is destined to come will definitely come”), which she recorded in 1949 while still a teenager. A charming and dramatic song, which featured in the film Mahal that year, it was the start of a remarkable career in which she interpreted work by all the major Indian film composers.

    For more than three decades she recorded hundreds of songs by the composing duo of Laxmikant-Pyarelal (Laxmikant Shantaram Kudalkar and Pyarelal Ramprasad Sharma), including such hits as Sheesha Ho Ya Dil Ho (from the film Aasha, in 1980). She also worked with SD Burman, and later with his celebrated son the composer RD Burman (who would marry her sister Asha), recording RD Burman songs including Bahon Mein Chale Aao (from the film Anamica, 1973).

    Later she collaborated with the most internationally celebrated Bollywood composer, AR Rahman, and sang several of his best known songs including Jiya Jale (from the 1998 romantic thriller Dil Se) and Luka Chuppi (from the 2006 film Rang De Basanti), which she recorded when she was in her mid-70s. Rahman remembered how carefully she would rehearse: “She would sit with her assistant, and would start singing very slowly, with every lyric clear.” She was, he said, “part of a soul, part of a consciousness of India”.

    If she had any competition as India’s finest playback singer, it was from her younger sister Asha Bhosle. After all, it was Asha who had Cornershop’s 1997 hit Brimful of Asha written about her, and who had recorded the most number of songs (according to The Guinness Book of World Records Lata was ahead in 1974 but Asha overtook her), and it was Asha who recorded with the experimental Kronos Quartet. Lata insisted there was no sibling rivalry, saying; “we’re very close, we never competed with each other.”

    Mangeshkar was born in Indore, in what is now Madhya Pradesh state, the oldest child of Shevanti (later renamed Shuddhamati) and Pandit Deenanath Mangeshkar, a musician and teacher who ran a touring theatre company. Lata never went to school, as she quit on the first day when the teacher refused to allow her to bring her then 10-month-old sister Asha into the classroom.

    Much of her childhood was spent singing alongside her father at concerts. He died in 1942, when she was 13, and she then had to support her mother and four siblings. A close family friend, Vinayak Damodar Karnataki, offered her work with his film company Navyug Chitrapat, acting in minor roles. When the company moved to Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1945, she and her family moved with them.

    She said she disliked acting “because I was very small and hated putting on makeup and having to laugh and cry in front of the cameras”. But she loved playback singing, and was given her first break with a song in the film Majboor (1948). Then came the film Mahal, which included her hit song, and she rapidly became known as India’s Playback Queen.

    Though most celebrated for her film work, she also gave concerts in India and abroad. In 1963, shortly after the Sino-Indian war, she sang the patriotic Hindi song Aye Mere Watan Ke Logon (“Oh people of my country”) to an audience including Jawaharlal Nehru, the prime minister, who is said to have been moved to tears. In 1974 she performed many of her Bollywood hits at the Royal Albert Hall in London, backed by musicians including SD Burman, and was hailed as the first Indian artist to have performed there.

    Away from music, her passions included fast cars and cricket – she would insist on taking time off to watch matches. The former Indian captain Virat Kohli was among those who paid tribute to her, as did Imran Khan, another leading cricketer and now Pakistan’s prime minister. He wrote that “the subcontinent has lost one of the truly great voices the world has known” – a reminder that she had a vast following beyond India’s borders.

    Mangeshkar may have recorded thousands of emotional love songs, but she never married. Asked about her private life by the Hindustan Times, she said, “there are some things only for the heart to know. Let’s keep it that way.” In 2001 she received India’s highest honour for civilians, the Bharat Ratna. She is survived by her younger siblings Meena, Asha, Usha and Hridaynath, all of whom are singers or composers.                Source: The Guardian

  • National icon, an emblem of excellence, Lata Mangeshkar united us all

    National icon, an emblem of excellence, Lata Mangeshkar united us all

    Zara aankh mein bhar lo paani… as iconic Lata Mangeshkar passes into eternity, citizens of India have every reason to mourn. A two-day national mourning in her honor, befitting the Bharat Ratna recipient, however, will not be enough to fill the gnawing void she leaves behind. Indeed, once we recover from the immeasurable loss, we will find many more reasons to cherish her legacy and hum her countless songs. For here was a timeless voice which could melt the heart of India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and her demise makes the current one ‘anguished beyond words.’ Beyond political affiliations, caste, creed, class and religion, even borders, she united music lovers of all hues, not just Bollywood aficionados. Singer of thousands of songs in umpteen languages and many genres, she was that rare artiste who could connect with all of India and bridge the chasm with its neighbor Pakistan too.

    Born on September 28, 1929, in a family steeped in classical musical tradition, her singing talent was both spotted and honed by her father Pandit Deenanath Mangeshkar. His early demise propelled her towards the world of acting and later singing — she rendered her first song at 13. Soon, she was to become not just the voice but also the soul of Hindi film music. So exalted was her stature that legendary composer SD Burman famously said, ‘Give me a harmonium, give me Lata, and I will make music.’

    Her passion for music was best exemplified in her songs, a wellspring of emotions, and her zest for life was reflected in her love for movies, cricket, cars and Mozart. Clearly, her passions were as diverse as her melodious repertoire. Singers may come and go, Lata’s place in the annals of musical history is irreplaceable. An emblem of excellence, as we recall her song Ek pyar ka nagma, the lines Kuch kho kar paana hai kuch paa kar khona hai… jeevan ka matlab toh aana aur jaana hai acquire a profound meaning. In her we have lost a precious gem and in her again we found a timeless treasure.

    (Tribune, India)