The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Saroj Khan, choreograp­her of over 2,000 Bollywood songs, dies at 71

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MUMBAI: Bollywood’s first female choreograp­her Saroj Khan, whose sizzling dance routines breathed life into hundreds of films, died Friday, triggering further heartbreak in an industry already reeling from a string of recent deaths.

Khan choreograp­hed more than 2,000 numbers during a 40year career that saw her work with superstars like Madhuri Dixit and Anil Kapoor to create dazzling song-and-dance numbers that are a distinctiv­e feature of Hindi films.

A spokeswoma­n for Guru Nanak hospital told AFP that Khan, 71, was admitted to the facility on Thursday evening after complainin­g of respirator­y problems.

She ‘was declared dead at approximat­ely 2.30am’ after suffering cardiac arrest, the spokeswoma­n said.

Born Nirmala Nagpal, she joined the industry as a child actor aged just three but soon took to dancing instead, starting out as a backup dancer before becoming an assistant choreograp­her at 13.

She reportedly changed her name to Saroj to avoid the censure of conservati­ve relatives who did not approve of her career choice.

She also fell in love with B Sohanlal, her much older mentor who was a married father of four.

Stung by his refusal to leave his first wife, Khan, who had converted to Islam, became a single mother to their two children while still in her teens and walked out of the relationsh­ip to start working on her own.

She got her break in 1974 with ‘Geeta Mera Naam’ (‘Geeta Is My Name’), becoming the first female choreograp­her in Bollywood.

She had no formal training in classical dance, but learnt on the job and hit the big time in the 1980s when her collaborat­ions with two of Bollywood’s top stars, Dixit and Sridevi, became chart-toppers.

The 1988 number ‘Ek Do Teen’ (‘One Two Three’), choreograp­hed by Khan, made Dixit a star overnight, and the actress was among the first to pay tribute to the woman she called her teacher.

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