Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

Jaya Prada Returns to Rampur as BJP Candidate, Up Against Friend-Turned-Foe and SP Veteran Azam Khan

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Mar, 2019 08:20 PM

    More than a decade after first winning Rampur, Jaya Prada has returned to the Lok Sabha constituency to challenge Samajwadi Party strongman Azam Khan, who once ensured her victory in the seat dominated by the family of Rampur Nawabs.


    The actor-turned-politician was fielded from the crucial constituency hours after joining the BJP.


    What would Jaya Pradas film long and fruitful innings as an actor have been if Sridevi was not around? Throughout her career, and not just in Hindi films but also in Tamil and Telugu, Jaya Prada was pitched against the much-missed iconic Sridevi and found to be lacking…in what, one cant say.


    Because Jaya Prada could dance as well as Sridevi, and Jaya also had the classic chiseled features of a perfectly carved Durga idol which prompted Satyajit Ray to call out Jaya's exquisite face as one of the most beautiful he had ever seen. Jaya could have been another Waheeda Rehman. But she always wore a mask…and I don't mean just the garish makeup which hid her immaculate features.



    There is always a sense of incompletness in Jaya Prada's performances. As though her aspirations were constantly stopped by distractions.


    Somehow, Jaya never reached the zenith that her all-round combination of talent beauty and grace promised. Starting out in Telugu cinema in 1974 she quickly garnered a reputation for being both saleable and assailable with blockbuster films "Manmatha Leelai" and "Seetha Kalyanam". Renowned directors like K. Balachander, K. Vishwanath and Bapu cast her repeatedly.


    "There's something very pure very graceful and poised about Jaya Prada," Bapu had once raved. Unknowingly he pinned down the lack oomph in her personality that all female superstars are known to possess.



    When Jaya Prada moved to Hindi cinema she was an instant hit in the underrated blockbuster "Sargam". The film and its songs were super-hits. And Jaya Prada was soon approached by every major filmmaker in Mumbai.


    However, "Sargam" remained her career's highest point in Hindi. Sadly Jaya Prada's most ambitious film, "Sur Sangam", a striking spectacular homage to Indian classical dance and music sank without a trace. The Telugu version of the same film was a game-changer in Andhra Pradesh. Hindi cinema didn't seem to respect her virtuous personality. Jaya Prada was heartbroken, as she was quickly typecast as the typical long-suffering Sita-reincarnated wife in forgettable family dramas produced in the South with street-side arrow-pointers like "Swarg Se Sundar" and "Ghar Ek Mandir" as titles.


    A very successful leading man of the 1970 and 1980s who worked with both Sridevi and Jaya Prada compared the two rather ebulliently. "Jaya was more the domesticated wifely type while Sridevi could be anything she wanted. Jaya was restricted and typecast."



    The constant comparisons with Sridevi soon got to her and her career. A string of Amitabh Bachchan starrers in the 1980s, where she had little to do except wait while the hero fought all odds, including the mega-hit "Sharaabi" only reiterated Jaya Prada's beautiful-but-dull image. She soon gravitated to politics where she found a mentor and guiding force in Amar Singh, then a top honcho in the Samajwadi Party, but not without a hiccup.


    She initially joined the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) in 1994 at the invitation of founder and former chief minister N.T. Rama Rao.


    After N. Chandrababu Naidu led a revolt against his father-in-law NTR and took over the reins of the government and the party in 1995, she backed the Naidu camp.


    Naidu made her the president of Telugu Mahila, the women's wing of the TDP and also nominated her to Rajya Sabha. When she was denied a second term in 2002, she distanced herself from the party and moved to Uttar Pradesh to join the Samajwadi Party at of Amar Singh's invitation.


    In 2004, Jaya Prada was elected to the Lok Sabha from Rampur, a seat which she retained in 2009.


    A year later, then Samajwadi Party president Mulayam Singh Yadav expelled her and Amar Singh for anti-party activities.


    Amar Singh and Jaya Prada then floated a new political outfit - Rashtriya Lok Manch - in 2011 but it came a cropper in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections held a year later.



    Since then, she had been living in political oblivion. On few occasion, she dropped hints of making a comeback to Andhra Pradesh politics.


    "My heart and soul are always with the people of my home state," she had said. There were indications that she may come back to The TDP. YSR Congress Party had also sent her the feelers - but on Tuesday, she chose otherwise by joining the BJP.


    In sum, Jaya Prada never relinquished cinema. It was more the way Hindi cinema could never properly fit Jaya in. This applies to politics also, where she always seems a little uncomfortable as though caught in the boogie of an express train.


    What she lacked in her film career was a guiding force like Sridevi's husband Boney Kapoor. Jaya's scandalous marriage to the already-married producer, Srikanth Nahata, in 1986, plummeted her stock in Bollywood even further.


    I remember sitting with Manmohan Desai in his office when news of Jaya Prada's marriage came in.


    "Oh damn, why did she have to get married? Now she will get pregnant," Desai couldn't hold back his anger.


    He was worried about his Bachchan-Prada starrer "Ganga Jamuna Saraswati" that on release was an ambitious flop. Jaya Prada was never lucky in love or career. Let's hope the change to saffron will bolster her so-far bleak innings.

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    Sexism Exists Not Only In Film Industry But Also Globally: Vidya Balan

    I would say that now, I have put myself in a position where it does not affect me. Of course, it has taken a lot and I completely empathize with people who face that.

    Sexism Exists Not Only In Film Industry But Also Globally: Vidya Balan

    Glad I Didn't Get Caught Up In Archetype Of Bollywood Heroine: Pallavi Sharda

    Glad I Didn't Get Caught Up In Archetype Of Bollywood Heroine: Pallavi Sharda
    Actress Pallavi Sharda says she is glad that she did not get caught up in the archetype of the ‘Bollywood heroine.

    Glad I Didn't Get Caught Up In Archetype Of Bollywood Heroine: Pallavi Sharda

    Nawazuddin Siddiqui's Wife Aaliya Siddiqui To Don The Producer's Hat With THIS Film

    Aaliya Siddiqui, actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui's wife, is set to produce a film titled "Holy Cow", with a cow playing the central character.

    Nawazuddin Siddiqui's Wife Aaliya Siddiqui To Don The Producer's Hat With THIS Film

    Kumar Sanu's Daughter Dedicates Song To People With Broken Heart

    Singer-songwriter Shannon K, daughter of singer Kumar Sanu, has dedicated her latest single "Always" to people experiencing heartbreak.  

    Kumar Sanu's Daughter Dedicates Song To People With Broken Heart

    Raja Kumari Unveils 'Battle Anthems'

    Grammy-nominated songwriter Raja Kumari, also a rapper, has released "Bloodline", which has "battle anthems".

    Raja Kumari Unveils 'Battle Anthems'

    How Do We Ban The Already Banned, Asks Actor Sushant Singh

    "Post the Uri attack (in 2016), producers and the Federation (Federation of Western India Cine Employees) had banned Pakistani artistes. Did the government take any official stand? No."

    How Do We Ban The Already Banned, Asks Actor Sushant Singh