The Free Press Journal

The last of Bollywood stars from the South

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Actress Sridevi, who died in Dubai, was the last of the heroines from the south who made it big in Bollywood. She was preceded by the likes of Vyjayanthi­mala Bali, Hema Malini, Jayapradha and Rekha.

After Sridevi's entry into Bollywood, the trend of actresses from south heading north ended and a reverse flow began with the entry of Khushbu in Tamil cinema, and the trend continues to this day with stars like Tammana Bhatia, Hansika Motwani and Kajal Agarwal making it big in the south.

Sridevi had debuted in the dream world of cinema as a four-year-old in the Tamil film Thunaivan in 1969 in which she portrayed the role of Lord Muruga (son of Lord Shiva). She has the credit of sharing screen space with three generation­s of Tamil actors -- M G Ramachandr­an (MGR - as a child artiste in Nam Nadu), Sivaji Ganesan (both child artiste and heroine), Rajinikant­h, Kamal Haasan and Vijay (when she returned to Tamil cinema three years ago after a long hiatus).

Her first film as a heroine was in Moondru Mudichu in 1976 in which she starred with Rajinikant­h. The film was directed by the ace filmmaker K Balachande­r and Sridevi did her lead role with aplomb, though she was barely 13 then. A year later she got her big hit in Bharathira­ja-directed 16 Vaiyathuni­le in which she shared equal screen space with Rajinikant­h and Kamal Haasan. The movie was remade in Hindi as Solva Sawan in which Sridevi starred opposite Amol Palekar.

In 1980s she shifted to Mumbai and went on to scorch the screens in the world of Hindi cinema till the early 1990s.

Kamal Haasan tweeted: “Have witnessed Sridevi's life from an adolescent teenager to the magnificen­t lady she became. Her stardom was well deserved. Many more moments with her flash through my mind, including the last time I met her. Sadma's (referring to the hit film with her) lullaby haunts me now. We'll miss her.”

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