Soundarya

Soundarya
Born K.S. Sowmya Satyanarayan
(1972-07-18)18 July 1972[1][2]
Mulbagal, Kolar, Karnataka, India
Died 17 April 2004(2004-04-17) (aged 31)
Bengaluru, India
Cause of death Aircraft crash
Years active 1992–2004
Spouse(s) G. S. Raghu (m.2003-2004)
Parents
  • K.S. Satyanarayan (father)
  • Manjula Satyanarayan (mother)

Soundarya Raghu (18 July 1972 – 17 April 2004)[2] was an Indian multilingual actress and producer who predominantly worked in Telugu cinema besides Kannada, Tamil, Malayalam and Hindi films in lead roles.[3]

In 2002, she received the National Film Award for Best Feature Film as producer for the Kannada film Dweepa. She received two Karnataka State Film Awards for Best Actress, several Filmfare Awards South and the Nandi Awards for her performances in films such as Ammoru (1994), Anthapuram (1998), Raja (1999), Dweepa (2002) and Aaptamitra (2004).[3][4] At the peak of her career, Soundarya died in an aircraft crash near Bangalore on 17 April 2004, when she was on her way to Andhra Pradesh to campaign for the Bharatiya Janata Party.[5][6] Soundarya's first movie was the Kannada movie Gandharva in 1992, produced and directed by Hamsalekha. In the same year, she entered Telugu movies ("Tollywood") through the movie Raithu Bharatham opposite Krishna.

Personal life

Soundarya was born to industrialist and Kannada film writer-producer K. S. Satyanarayan. She discontinued her M.B.B.S. first year in Bangalore. She married G. S. Raghu who is a childhood friend and a Software Engineer. She had wide popularity and tremendous goodwill among Andhra Pradesh, Telangana ,Tamilnadu and is probably the most successful actress after Mahanati Savitri in the history of Telugu cinema and is often called the "Savitri of modern Telugu cinema". She died in 2004 aircraft crash along with her brother Amarnath in Bangalore during an election campaign.[7]

Early career

Soundarya's first movie was the Kannada film Gandharva in 1992. Then in the same year, she acted in the Telugu movie Raithu Bharatham, opposite superstar Krishna, directed by Tripuraneni Sriprasad alias Varaprasad. She made more than 120 movies, predominantly in Telugu, in a span of 12 years. Telugu actor Venkatesh once described her as "a thorough actress" of Indian cinema.[8] Tamil actor Kamalahassan paid tribute by revealing that "she came forward to do the movie, when the rest of the industry was unwilling to work with me".5

She'd started off hoping to be a doctor but ended up an actress. She began with insignificant roles in Kannada, her mother tongue, and went on to become the most popular actress in Telugu films. In her first hit in Telugu, in 1993, she acted in the leading role alongside Rajendra Prasad in Rajendrudu Gajendrudu, directed by S.V. Krishna Reddy. The real commercial recognition came with Hello Brother (1994), directed by commercial director E.V.V Satyanarayana, in which she starred alongside Nagarjuna and Ramya Krishna. She had an award-winning role in Ammoru, directed by Kodi Ramakrishna. She starred alongside Ramya Krishna and Suresh where she played the role of Bhavani, a devotee of Goddess Ammoru. She had eleven movie releases in 1995.[8] In Tamil, she was introduced by Ammoru dubbing as Amman. She got major acclaim with Ponnumani, starring with Karthik and Sivakumar. She played the role of a mentally disabled person and received good reviews for her acting.

Continuous success, critical acclaim and popularity (1995–2002)

According to Mughal D. Ramanaidu, the "Most Beautiful Pairs of Telugu cinema" are NTR and Savitri, ANR and Vanisri, Chiranjeevi and Vijayashanti and Daggubati Venkatesh and Soundarya.

In 1997, she continued her success with Pelli Chesukundam, Pavitra Bandam, Amma Donga, Maa Aayana Bangaram, Osi Na Maradala and Aaro Pranam, winning acclaim from all over the industry for her performances. She also starred alongside South Indian superstar Rajinikanth in Arunachalam, which became the highest-grossing film of 1997 in Tamil cinema. This stardom made her come out of the shadow of mainstream heroines and she chose scripts which had a wide potential of performance even alongside big stars which was clearly reflected in her movies.. Though the industry regarded her to be the golden hand, as a former director's daughter, she always regarded the success not as a one-man show, but the teamwork between 36 departments.[8]

Furthermore, the critical success of Chudalani Vundi, directed by Gunashekar, opposite Chiranjeevi in 1998 made her reach the pinnacle of her cinema career. She also starred along Kamal Haasan and Prabhudeva in Kaathala Kaathala in Tamil in the same year, dubbed in Telugu as Navvandi Lavvandi, directed by Singeetam Srinivas. Pelli Peetalu and Sri Ramulayya, Ninne Premista in Telugu and Doni Saagali in Kannada were commercially highly successful. Anthapuram, directed by Krishnavamshi, stood as one of the finest performances of Soundarya in her career, winning her a State Nandi Award for Best Actress and also her second consecutive Filmfare Award for Best Actress. The producers and directors realized Soundarya's ability to be a crowd puller and the biggest plus for the promotion of the movie. Her 1999 release Raja, opposite Venkatesh, was another blockbuster and won her her third Filmfare Award. Her other releases, Padayappa opposite Rajinikanth, Azad opposite Nagarjuna and Premaku Velayera, Premaku Swagatam and Arundathi further solidified her position. In the same year, she starred opposite Amitabh Bachchan in Sooryavansham, which was one of the few failures of her career, and prevented her from entering into the Bollywood business.[8]

In 2000, she starred in yet another commercial success, Annayya, opposite Chiranjeevi, Jayam Manadera and Deviputrudu, opposite Venkatesh, Ninne premista, opposite Nagarjuna and Srikanth and several others and went on displaying her acting abilities, continuing her successful journey with films such as Eduruleni Manishi and Sri Manjunatha, opposite Chiranjeevi, Arjun Sarja, Ambareesh and Sumalatha and Narasimha, opposite Rajinikanth and Ramyakrishna, Pelli peetalu, Dongata and Nagadevatha.[8]

She has also given special songs in a few movies. alongside Akkineni Nageswara Rao in Mayabazar, directed by Dasari Narayana Rao, In Adhipathi, alongside Akkineni Nagarjuna and in Shubalagnam, alongside Ali Also. She had about 10 film releases each year, most of them in Telugu, from 1993 to 2001, which reflects her path-breaking success. After the entry of the budding next generation, she slowed down, but even later she went on acting in eight films each year till 2004. She has never been proud about stardom, she has been recognized for her super talent, her directors and costars describe her as an honest, grounded and friendly person.[8]

During the period, Balakrishna is announced plans to act and direct in the remake of Nartanasala, and a launch event was held in Hyderabad during March 2003. Soundarya was signed to play Draupadi.[9] The remake was shelved later due to the death of Soundarya in an flight accident.

She worked with almost all the top Directors of Film Industry's like Dasari Narayana Rao, K. Raghavendra Rao, Singeetam Srinivasa Rao, A. Kodandarami Reddy, Priyadarshan, Girish Kasaravalli, S.V. Krishna Reddy, K.S.Ravikumar, Krishna Vamsi, Kodi Ramakrishna, E. V. V. Satyanarayana, Muthyala Subbaiah, Gunasekhar, P.Vasu, Muppalaneni Shiva, Bharathi Kannan, Sundar C. and many more.

She starred along with many actors such as megastar super-star Krishna for 5 movies, Chiranjeevi for 4 in Telugu and 1 in Kannada movies, Balakrishna in only one movie, Nagarjuna for 5 movies, Venkatesh for 8 movies, Jagapathi Babu for 7 movies, Mohan Babu for 5 movies, Rajashekar for 5 movies, Suman for 3 movies, Harikrishna for 2 movies, Srikanth, Saikumar for 5 movies and Rajendra Prasad for 4 movies and has given films with all heroes such as Vinod Kumar, Naresh, Suresh, Harish, Abbas, Vineeth, Vadde Navven, Ramesh Babu, Avinash, Bhanu Chander and J.D. Chakravarthy.[8]

In Tamil, she also collaborated with superstar Rajinikanth for 3 movies, Kamal Hassan for one movie, Karthik for 3 movies, Arjun Sarja for 4 movies, Vijaykanth for 3 movies, Parthiban for 3 movies,and along with chiyaan vikram , Anand ,Rehman, etc. and also she shared screen with Shivaji Ganesan in Padayappa[8]

Kannada Cinema

In Kannada movies, she has acted with Vishunuvardhan, Anant Nag, Ravichandran, Shashikumar, Ramesh Arvind and Avinash. In 1996, she acted in the musical blockbuster Sipayi, along with Ravichandran and Chiranjeevi, dubbed in Telugu as Major. In 2002, she received the National Film Award for Best Feature Film (producer) for Dweepa. She also acted beside Ambareesh in Sri Manjunatha. Her last film was the Kannada film Apthamitra, a runaway hit with Vishnuvardhan. The film won her the Filmfare Award for Best Actress posthumously in 2004.

Other languages

Soundarya acted in the Hindi film Sooryavansham, alongside Amitabh Bachchan. She was also starred in Kollywood super-hits such as Arunachalam and Padayappa, alongside Rajinikanth and Kaadhala Kaadhala, alongside Kamal Haasan. She acted in Mollywood as female lead in Kilichundan Mambhazham, with Mohanlal and Sreenivasan. And also with Jayaram in Yathrakarude Shradaykku in 2002, which was her first movie in Malayalam.

Politics and accidental death

Soundarya joined in Bharatiya Janata Party in the year 2004. Vijayashanti (joined in 1998) and Soundarya are star actresses to host the meetings of Lal Krishna Advani in Nirmal and Adilabad.[10] Soundarya and her brother Amarnath died in an aircraft crash near Bangalore on 17 April 2004, when she was on her way to Karimnagar to campaign for the Bharatiya Janata Party and Telugu Desam Party candidate for the upcoming elections. She was 5 months pregnant when she died.[5][6][7] The aircraft took off at 11:05 a.m. and turned in a westerly direction before crashing on the campus of the Gandhi Krishi Vigyan Kendra of the University of Agricultural Sciences. It had reached only a height of 100 feet before it crashed and burst into flames. B.N. Ganapathi, one of the two persons working on the experimental fields of the university, who rushed to the aircraft to save the occupants, said the plane wobbled before the crash.

Social reforms

Before death, only Soundarya started 3 schools for orphan children in Bangalore in the name of her father, after Soundarya's death, her mother Manjula started schools, institutions and orphanages in the name "AMARASOUNDARYA VIDYALAYA'S" in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

Filmography

YearFilmRoleLanguageNotes
1992Nanna ThangiKannadaDebut movie
1992GandharvaSudhaKannada
1992Raithu BharathamSoundaryaTelugu
1992Baa Nanna PreethisuKannada
1992Manavarali PelliSoundaryaTelugu
1993Vijaya KranthiKannada
1993PonnumaniChinthamaniTamil
1993Rajendrudu GajendruduLalithaTelugu
1993Amma Naa KodalaNeelimaTelugu
1993Number OneSoundaryaTelugu
1993MayaloduSiriTelugu
1993Inspector JhansiJhansiTelugu
1993Asalae Pellaina VanniTelugu
1993Donga AlluduLathaTelugu
1993Urmlia (film)Cameo RoleTelugu
1994Thooguve KrishnanaKannada
1994MadamSoundaryaTelugu
1994Hello BrotherOohaTelugu
1994Allari PremikuduJhansiTelugu
1994Top HeroChitraTelugu
1994Super PoliceBharathiTelugu
1995Amma DongaKumari Padma PriyaTelugu
1995Muthu KaalaiPoonjolaiTamil
1995Dear Son MaruthuRaaniTamil
1995RikshavoduNarasakkaTelugu
1995AmmoruBhavaniTeluguNandi Award for Best Actress
Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Telugu
Dubbed in Tamil as Amman
1995Bhale BulloduRaadhaTelugu
1995Amma Naa KodalaNeelimaTelugu
1995PeddarayuduBharathiTelugu
1995Chilakapachcha KaapuramSatyavathiTelugu
1995Raja SimhamSundariTelugu
1995Vetagadu Telugu
1995Balaraju Bangaru PellamTelugu
1995Maya BazaarHerselfTelugu
1996JagadekaveeruduSoundaryaTelugu
1996Pavithra BandhamRadhaTeluguNandi Award for Best Actress
1996Maa Voori MarajuSatyavathiTelugu
1996RamudochaduSoundaryaananda Aravindha Vadhana SundaraLakshmiTelugu
1996Intlo Illalu Vantintlo PriyuraluSeetaTelugu
1996Puttinti GowravamTelugu
1996Maa Inti AdapadachuJanakiTelugu
1996SipayiKannada
1996Urmila
1996SenathipathiAishwaryaTamil
1996Prema PranayamTelugu
1997PellichesukundamShantiTelugu
1997Adirindi GuruTelugu
1997Taraka RamuduTarakaTeluguDubbed in Tamil as "Velli Nilave"
1997Maa Aayana BangaramVennela, SruthiTelugu
1997Oosi Na MaradalaManisha Koirala, Kanchana MalaTelugu
1997Aaro PranamMaknaa, AakaankshaTelugu
1997ArunachalamVedhavalliTamil
1997PriyaragaluPriyaTelugu
1998Choodalani VundiPadmavathiTelugu
1998Pelli PeetaluAnjaliTelugu
1998Sri RamulayyaSeethammaTelugu
1998SooryuduPanthulamma PrameelaTelugu
1998Doni SaagaliKannadaKarnataka State Film Award for Best Actress
1998Anthapuram/AnthapuramBhanumathiTelugu/TamilNandi Award for Best Actress
Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Telugu
1998ThambulaluTelugu
1998DongataSubbaLakshmiTelugu
1998Subha VaarthaMeghanaTelugu
1998RayuduMadhaviTelugu
1998Kaathala KaathalaSundariTamil
1999Mannavaru ChinnavaruTamil
1999RajaAnjaliTeluguFilmfare Award for Best Actress – Telugu
1999AryabhataBharathiKannada
1999Anaganaga O AmmayiSandhyaTelugu
1999ArundhatiArundhatiTelugu
1999Premaku VelayaraMadhavi, MalathiTelugu
1999Manavudu DanavuduTelugu
1999PadayappaVasundharaTamilDubbed in Telugu as "Narasimha"
1999Naanu Nanna HendthiruSeethaKannada
1999SooryavanshamRadha SinghHindi
1999Mayadari MosagaduLathaTelugu
2000AnnayyaGajjela Kanaka Maha Lakshmi DeviTelugu
2000Jayam Manade RaaUmaTelugu
2000Ninne PremisthaMeghamalaTelugu
2000Moodu MukkalataShravaniTelugu
2000Ravannapirralamma SirishaTelugu
2000AzadAnjaliTeluguDubbed in Tamil as "Gurushethram" and Dubbed in Hindi as "Mission Azad"
2000Naga Devathe/Naga DevathaGoddess NagammaKannada / Telugu bilingualDubbed in Tamil as "Nagadevathai"
2000PostmanArchanaTelugu
2001Devi PutruduKarnaTeluguDubbed in Tamil as "Paapa" and Dubbed in Hindi as "Aaj Ka Deviputra"
2001Sri ManjunathaKatyaayiniKannada / Telugu bilingual
2001Eduruleni ManishiVasundharaTelugu
2001Sarduku Podam RandiRaadhaTelugu
2001Naa Manasisthaa RaaNandhiniTelugu
20019 NelaluSavithriTeluguDubbed in Tamil as "Kanden Seethaiyai"
2001AdhipatiJagan's fianceeTelugu
2001Eshwar AllahTelugu
2001Vijayadasami/Thaye BhuvaneswaryGoddess BhuvaneswaryKannada / Tamil bilingualDubbed in Telugu as "Peddamma Talli"
2001ThavasiPriyadarshiniTamil
2001Kalisi NaduddamVijayaTelugu
2002Kondaveeti SimhasanamChittiTelugu
2002Premaku SwagathamLahariTelugu
2002Yathrakarude SradhakkuJyothiMalayalam
2002GelupuTelugu
2002IvanDikshanyaTamil
2002DweepaNagiKannadaAlso as Producer
National Film Award for Best Feature Film
Karnataka State Film Award for Best Actress
Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Kannada
Filmfare Award for Best Film – Kannada
2003Chokka ThangamPavalaTamil
2003Prema DongaTelugu
2003SeetayyaSeethaTelugu
2003Kilichundan MampazhamAminaMalayalam
2003Sri RenukadeviGoddess Renuka DeviKannadaDubbed in Tamil as "Namma Ooru Ellaiamman" and Dubbed in Hindi as "Ma Ka Chamatkar"
2004Shwetha Nagu/Shwetha NaagaraMadhuTelugu / Kannada bilingualPosthumously released. Dubbed in Tamil as "Madhumathi"
2004Shiva ShankarPadmaTeluguPosthumously released
2004ApthamitraGanga / NagavalliKannadaPosthumously released
Filmfare Award for Best Actress – Kannada

Awards

National Film Awards
Karnataka State Film Awards
Filmfare Awards South
Nandi Awards

References

  1. Pandya, Haresh (10 May 2004). "Obituary: Soundarya". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  2. 1 2 https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0815897/
  3. 1 2 Pandya, Haresh (2004-05-10). "Soundarya". Online edition. The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  4. "International Film Festival of India-2002". Pib.nic.in. 2002-09-26. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  5. 1 2 "Indian Actress Soundarya Dies in Plane Crash". online edition. Voice of America news. 2004-04-17. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  6. 1 2 Hemant Raj, Ashwin (2005-04-17). "Soundarya dies in plane crash". Online edition. Times of India. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  7. 1 2 Press Trust of India (2004-04-17). "Soundarya killed in plane crash. its a tragedy". The Indian Express. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Kumar, Ch Sushil (1998-03-28). "Child, woman, star". Interview. Rediff.com. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
  9. http://www.pressreader.com/india/deccan-chronicle/20121024/282518655747664
  10. http://www.thehindu.com/2004/03/18/stories/2004031810540300.htm
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
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