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Shakeela autobiography pdf

Shakeela

Indian actress and politician

For the 2020 Indian biographic film about the subject, see Shakeela (film).

For other uses, see Shakila (disambiguation).

Not to be confused with Shakira.

Shakeela

Shakeela in 2018

Born

Shakeela Begum


Madras, Tamil Nadu, India

Other namesShakila
Occupations
  • Actress
  • Politician
  • Softcore pornographic actress
Years active1994–present
Political partyIndian National Congress

C. Shakeela, known mononymously as Shakeela, is an Indian actress and politician who has predominantly acted in Tamil, Malayalam and Telugu language films. She is a member of Indian National Congress.[1]

Shakeela debuted in the softcore pornographic film Playgirls (1995) at the age of 18.[2][3] She became a popular figure in Kerala with the release of Malayalam softcore film Kinnara Thumbikal in 2000. This film would go on to pioneer a new wave of low-budget softcore porn films in the state, with Shakeela starring in many of them. In Kerala's hero-centric mainstream industry of her time, Shakeela's emergence as a liberated woman, who displays her sexuality in defiance of social norms led to what became known as Malayalam cinema's Shakeela tharangam (Shakeela wave).[4]

Early life

Shakeela was born in Chennai into Urdu and Telugu speaking Muslim family. Her mother was from Nellore in Andhra Pradesh.[5] She could not complete her school leaving certificate examination, eventually making her foray into films.[5]

Career

From the beginning of her career, she acted in B movies and softcore pornography.[6] One of her big hits was the 2001 Malayalam film Kinnarathumbikal, which brought her into limelight. Kinnarathumbikal was dubbed in more than six Indian languages and was a major commercial success, grossing ₹4 crore at the box office against a budget of ₹12 lakhs. She did a few controversial topless scenes in her initial movies until she got noticed.[2][3] Her B movies were dubbed and released in almost all Indian languages. Her films were dubbed into foreign languages like Nepalese, Chinese, and Sinhala. After she acted in several movies, the soft-porn movies in India were colloquially called as "shakeela films".[7] Shakeela hired a body double Surayya Banu to do her topless scenes.[8]

Shakeela started appearing in family character roles in Tamil, Telugu and Kannada language movies since 2003. She wrote her autobiography in Malayalam,[9] which covered her family, her background, as well as her acquaintance with notable film personalities, politicians and childhood friends.[10][11]

In January 2018, she announced her 250th film as an actor, Sheelavathi, would begin production.[12][13]

Personal life

In 2002, Shakeela announced that she will no longer act in B grade movies.[5] Shakeela released her autobiography Shakeela: Aatmakatha in 2013.[8]

Politics

Shakeela joined the Indian National Congress in March 2021.[14][15]

Partial filmography

As an actress

Shakeela has featured in over 250 in Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi, Kannada, Odia and Telugu Language films in various roles.

Television

Popularity and reception

Shakeela, who rose to fame quickly, served as her movies' main character and the centre of its story. According to film industry analyst Sreedhar Pillai, Shakeela's stardom extended beyond state boundaries as well, with these films getting their own dubbed versions across the country. As a result, for thousands of that generation, their only access to Malayalam cinema was the kind that would star Shakeela. According to critic and film historian C. S. Venkiteswaran, Shakeela became known as the promiscuous Malayali woman in nearby areas like Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, where words like "chechi" or "aunty" were sarcastically used to refer to them. The prejudice that these films appealed to in other states was furthered by the fact that Kerala had a distinctive sartorial culture where ladies wore a lungi and a blouse. And it added yet another depth to their fantasies about these ladies when they included yet another widely held stereotype of the missing Malayali males employed in the Gulf.[18]

According to film director Venkiteswaran, Shakeela eventually became highest paid employee on the set, and the production of the movie was planned around her comfort. She has said in many interviews that how these production teams would trick her into acting as many as three films at once without her knowledge, flooding the market with her films. The fly-by-night studios made more money during this time, more so than the actors who played the leads in these films. According to film scholar Darshana Sreedhar Mini, during the Malayalam cinema industry's crisis in the early 2000s, Shakeela films' success became essential to the industry's existence because her presence guaranteed profit and, thus, the survival of these personnel.[19] In 2001, more than 70% of Malayalam films were of the soft porn genre, and she appeared in many of them. Popular Malayalam films at the period focused on showing heroic masculinity and completely muted the agential role of women. Shakeela's films, in contrast, stood out because they emphasised her presence to the point where the male roles served as functional filler. In actuality, the majority of Shakeela's male co-stars were little more than "extras," with unimpressive careers. Shakeela's presence during a period of economic crisis temporarily destabilised Kerala's hero-centric mainstream business, giving rise to the Shakeela tharangam (wave of Shakeela).[20]

In popular culture

Indrajit Lankesh directed her biopic Shakeela (2020) based on her life in which Richa Chadda portrays the title character.[21][22] On 22 September 2023, a 5 minute sketch featuring Shakeela was released by Netflix on YouTube to promote the concluding season of their series Sex Education, among the Malayali audience. The sketch titled "'Shakeela's driving school" was also a reminiscent of her successful film Driving School.[23]

See also

References

  1. ^Methil Renuka (29 December 2020). "From the archives: Who is Shakeela Khan?". India Today.
  2. ^ ab"Outlook". Outlook Publishing. 22 December 2008 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ ab"The soft porn queen of India Shakeela decides to tell her life story – many bombshells worried what she may reveal!". India Daily. 8 June 2005. Archived from the original on 13 June 2006. Retrieved 13 June 2006.
  4. ^Mini, Darshana Sreedhar (1 April 2019). "The Rise of Soft Porn in Malayalam Cinema and the Precarious Stardom of Shakeela". Feminist Media Histories. 5 (2): 49–82. doi:10.1525/fmh.2019.5.2.49.
  5. ^ abc"സിനിമാ അഭിനയവും വിവാദങ്ങൾ നിറഞ്ഞ ജീവിതവും". 24 News Live. YouTube. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  6. ^Nathan, Archana (14 March 2018). "After turning softcore films into hits, Southern actress Shakeela gets a biopic of her own". .
  7. ^"Smut glut". The Hindu. 8 August 2002. Archived from the original on 1 October 2004.
  8. ^ ab"Shakeela, the woman who inspired genres without ever doing porn". 9 August 2015.
  9. ^"A Soft Porn Star's Life". 11 February 2014.
  10. ^"Providing a political platform". The Hindu. 13 January 2003. Archived from the original on 19 January 2005.
  11. ^"Promises and lies". The Hindu. 26 May 2003. Archived from the original on 1 August 2003.
  12. ^"Why can't a Shakeela film be called 'Sheelavathi' ?". The Times of India. 14 June 2018.
  13. ^Actress Shakeela's 250th movie titled Seelavathi – VirginArchived 14 February 2020 at the Wayback MachineAP News Corner. 28 January 2018
  14. ^"Shakeela Joins Congress in Kerala". . 28 March 2021.
  15. ^"Yesteryear actress Shakeela joins Congress". OnManorama.
  16. ^Jeevi (4 February 2005). "Movie review - 786 (Khaidi Premakatha)". . Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  17. ^"Alitho Saradaga: సావిత్రి అన్నీ పుణ్యాలే చేస్తే అలా ఎందుకు పోయింది.. ఆత్మకథలో అబద్ధాలు చెప్పాలా? షకీలా సంచలన కామెంట్స్". Samayam Telugu (in Telugu). Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  18. ^Menon, Vishal (16 May 2020). "Shakeela, Superstardom And A Softporn Wave That Threatened The Survival Of Malayalam Cinema". . Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  19. ^Shilpa (31 July 2019). "Malayalam Cinema's Other: Soft-porn and the Stardom of Shakeela". Ala / അല. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  20. ^Mini, Darshana Sreedhar (2016). "The Spectral Duration of Malayalam Soft-porn: Disappearance, Desire, and Haunting". BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies. 7 (2): 127–150. doi:10.1177/0974927616667971. ISSN 0974-9276.
  21. ^"Shakeela lauds her biopic that stars Richa Chadha". The Times of India. 31 December 2020.
  22. ^"Richa Chadha's 'Shakeela' to release theatrically on Christmas". The Hindu. 30 November 2020.
  23. ^Staff, T. N. M. (5 September 2023). "Shakeela offers sex ed tips while promoting Netflix's popular show Sex Education". The News Minute. Retrieved 23 September 2023.

External links


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