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Biography for: Dev Anand
Biography By: Suneil Anand and Navketan Publicity.
 

Birth Name
Devdutt Pishorimal Anand
Height
5' 7" (1.70 m)
 
 
After having played the Lead Actor for more than five decades in over 110 motion pictures, Dev Anand continues to bestride Indian Cinema today. He has given a new dimension to that magical state known as Stardom. And for his exemplary work he was recently awarded the Padma Bhushan - a title awarded to a person of extraordinary talent, in his discipline, for his outstanding contribution and/or achievements by the President of India. From the time he embarked on his career as a Film Actor in the mid-forties till now, his movies has been a journey filled with enriching experiences for the 'Evergreen Living Legend' of Indian Cinema. And he has always remained eternally youthful by his remarkable ability to live always in the present and the future--never in the past.
 
 
Also, as head of his film production company Navketan International Films, which was founded in 1949, Anand has introduced a multitude of talent to the Indian Film Industry by way of actors, directors, music composers and cinematographers. Today, he continues to introduce new talent to cinema and experiment with new ideas for movies. And today, he also heads one of the finest Film Sound Post-Production facilities in India - Anand Recording Studios - which has to its credit more than 3,000 Indian feature films that have been mixed/ surround mixed for worldwide release.
 
 
Anand has won two Filmfare Awards - India's equivalent of the Oscars - in 1958 for his performance in the film "Kala Paani" (Black Water) and in 1966 for his performance in Navketan International Films' "Guide". "Guide" went on to win Filmfare Awards in five other categories including 'Best Film' and 'Best Director' and was sent as India's entry for the Oscars in the foreign film category that year. He co-produced the English Version of "Guide" with the Nobel Laureate Pearl S. Buck ("The Good Earth"). Eventually, his creative sensibilities got the better of him and he started writing and directing his own movies.
 
 
In 1993, he received a Filmfare 'Lifetime Achievement Award' and in 1996 he received a Screen Videocon 'Lifetime Achievement Award'. Then in 1997 he was given the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images Award for his Outstanding Services to the Indian Film Industry. In 1998, he was given a 'Lifetime Achievement Award' by the Ujala Anandlok Film Awards Committee in Calcutta. In 1999, he received the Sansui 'Lifetime Achievement Award' for his 'Immense Contribution to Indian Cinema' in New Delhi. In the year 2000, he was awarded the Film Goers' 'Mega Movie Maestro of the Millenium' Award in Mumbai. And then in July 2000, in New York City, he was honored by an Award at the hands of the then First Lady of the United States of America - Mrs. Hillary Rodham Clinton - for his 'Outstanding Contribution to Indian Cinema'. And again Anand was awarded the Indo-American Association 'Star of the Millennium' Award in the Silicon Valley, California. The President of India honored Anand with the prestigious Padma Bhushan Award on India's Republic Day - August 15, 2001. And yet again, Donna Ferrar, Member New York State Assembly, honored him with a New York State Assembly Citation for his 'Outstanding Contribution to the Cinematic Arts Worthy of the Esteem and Gratitude of the Great State of New York' on May 1, 2001.
 
 
Most recently, in April 2003, Anand was given a 'Lifetime Achievement Award' by the F.I.F.A. Committee in Johannesburg, South Africa. For an Indian Movie Icon who has hobnobbed with royalty, heads of State and celebrities, he has done it all. Anand continues to forge ahead with his new All American Film Project "Song Of Life" - a musical love story which will be entirely shot in the United States. He will play the central character in this film which will have a predominantly American star cast and for which the Music will be composed by American composers and sung by American singers. "Song Of Life" will be made in English and will be directed by Dev Anand.
 

Born as Devdutt on September 26, 1923, in the Punjabi-speaking Anand family, son to Advocate Pishorimal, younger and older brother to Chetan and Vijay respectively and one sister, who was subsequently married in the Kapur family, and gave birth to actor/film-maker, Shekhar Kapur, two daughters, Neelu, who was married to actor Navin Nischol, and Aruna who was the wife of Ajay/Parikshat Sahni, son of renowned Balraj Sahni. Both Neelu and Aruna have since been divorced. Dev graduated from Government College, Lahore, British India, left his hometown to work in the Military Censor Office at Churchgate, Bombay. He was offered a role in the 1946 flick 'Hum Ek Hain'. This is where he stuck a friendship with Bollywood legend Guru Dutt.
 
 
Ashok Kumar introduced Dev as a leading man opposite Kamini Kaushal in 'Ziddi'. Thereafter there has been no looking back for the 'evegreen' Dev Anand, who went on to star in over 110 movies, spanning from 1946 through to 2005.
 
 
He is perhaps one of the few who dreamed of starlet Snehprabha Pradhan and had his dream come true when he got to not only meet her but also act with her. His other dream was of owning a car, a Hillman, was also fulfilled.
 
 
While filming opposite Singer-actress Suraiya, the boat capsized, Dev rescued her and in true Bollywood style both fell in love and wanted to get married. This did not happen as Suraiya's grandma strongly opposed this alliance. Suraiya, who acted with Dev in half a dozen movies, remained unmarried all her life.
 
 
In 1954 Dev met Mona, whose screen name is Kalpana Kartik, and married her in 1954 in a quiet ceremony in Russia where they were on a tour to screen 'Rahee' and 'Aandhiyan'. Mona was a college beauty queen from Simla, and she starred opposite her to-be-husband in all her movies. Both became parents in 1956 when Suneil was born.
 
 
Dev is also known for introducing two of the most beautiful actresses to Bollywood, namely Zeenat Aman in 'Hare Rama Hare Krishna' and Tina Munim in 'Des Pardes.
 
 
Not easily intimidated, Dev Anand, Shatrughan Sinha, Inder Sen Johar, Kishore Kumar were amongst the few that actually stood up against the authoritarian regime of Indira Gandhi during the Emergency, while many in the opposition preferred to flee India to escape Mrs. Gandhi's wrath.
 
 
The Anand family founded Navketan Films which is still active and being administered by Dev's son, Suneil.



Last edited by Music on 26 Sep 2008 10:24; edited 1 time in total





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Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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The Dev Anand I know
26 Sep, 2008 12:30 pm ISTlChuman Das
INDIATIMES MOVIES


Dev Anand Sitting in his office is like going through a journey of his life. Dev Anand has been coming to this place regularly for the last 60 odd years. Each nook and cranny is filled with gifts, mementos, lots of bouquets of beautiful flowers and books.
 
 
As usual Dev saab makes his entry into his office at the dot of 2pm, everyday. Traveling from his residence in Juhu to his office in Bandra, the octogenarian quickly sorts out his agenda for the day with his faithful lieutenant of several decades, Anand. Not surprisingly, Anand talks like his boss, using the same pauses and expressions that won Dev Anand millions of fans in the mid 20th century.
 
 
Eying a beautiful antique table clock amidst all that clutter, I picked it up for a closer scrutiny. From over my shoulder, Dev Saab’s voice drifted, “I got this as a gift from a fan in Czechoslovakia. I then went and shot my film there. This clock has been used in the film.” I asked for it as a memento and Dev saab added, “I do not give away anything that has been gifted to me. Apart from my furniture and furnishings, my entire office is a collection of gifts given by some fan or the other. And they help me to make my movies. Where do you think the money comes for making my films? Do you know I receive bouquets daily. They add colour to my surroundings. ”  
 
 
Talking of colour, I remember meeting him in Panchgani for lunch. He always stays at this particular colonial style hotel which has beautiful cottages facing the hills of Mahabaleshwar. And trimming the grounds were some bright red flowers. Co-incidentally I was wearing a red cardigan to ward off the afternoon chill alongwith Dev saab, whose favouirite colour is red.  
 

As we walked along the garden path, Dev saab stopped to take in the vista. “The palette of colours in Panchgani revive and rejuvenate me. Just see the bright splashes of red against the brown hills, amidst all the greenery around me. I had come here to shoot a song sequence with a leading heroine of my time. Since I was more engrossed with the beauty around me, I failed to compliment the beauty romancing with me. The actress, lets not get into what is her name, was very disappointed in me. And people think that I am a truly romantic hero. I wish people knew me...”, revealed the evergreen actor.
 
 
There are so many incidents that reveal the various facets of Dev Anand.. Today on his 85th birthday, we stick to his love for films and colour, because that is truly the essence of a man, who is vibrant.
 
 
11 things you didn’t knew about Dev Anand
 
 
1. Dev Anand’s birth name is Dharamdev Pishorimal Anand.
 
2. One of his earliest and nearest buddies in Bollywood was actor-director Guru Dutt. They struck an informal agreement amongst themselves that if Dev Anand produced a film, Guru Dutt would direct it and if Guru Dutt produced a film, Dev Anand would act in it. Together they teamed for several hits like Baazi, Jaal and CID.
 
3. Dev Anand, along with Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor formed the top 3 league in the film industry analogous to the SRK-Salman-Aamir trio of together. Much against popular notion of rivalry between these 3, Dev Anand costarred with Dilip Kumar in S S Vasan's Insaniyat and shared great bonding with Raj Kapoor.
 
4. The story of Sunil Dutt saving Nargis from a fire and subsequently falling in love and getting married is popular. In a very similar episode, Dev Anand saved popular singer-actress Suraiya from drowning when their boat overturned. In true Bollywood style, the two fell in love and wanted to get married but couldn’t as Suraiya’s grandmother strongly disapproved of their relationship. Suraiya remained unmarried all her life.
 
5. Dev Anand got married in Russia to costar Kalpana Kartik where they were on a tour to screen their films Aandhiyan and Rahee. Kalpana Kartik whose real name was Mona worked as an actress only in 5 films and all of them costarred Dev Anand opposite her.
 
6. His first coloured film was Guide (1965) which, till date, is considered amongst his best works. The film was a cinematic adaptation of a novel of the same name by R K Narayan and Dev Anand was instrumental in getting assent from the famous writer for making the film. He co-produced the English version of Guide with the Nobel Laureate Pearl S. Buck (of The Good Earth fame) which was simultaneously shot and released for the international audience, though it didn’t get as amazing response as the Hindi version.
 
7. Not many know that he is the maternal uncle (mama) of famous filmmaker Shekhar Kapur (Mr India, Bandit Queen, Elizabeth). Shekhar Kapur is the son of Sheel Kanta Kapur, real sister of Dev Anand. Sheel was the mother-in-law of actors Naveen Nischol and Parikshit Sahni.
 
8. Dev Anand has introduced a multitude of talent to the Indian Film Industry. The most prominent amongst them include the sensuous actress Zeenat Aman (whom he introduced in Hare Rama Hare Krishna) and Tina Munim (in Des Pardes). But not many know that Jackie Shroff debuted as a junior artist in Dev Anand’s 1982 film Swami Dada.
 
9. Dev Anand was amongst the few who stood up against the authoritarian regime imposed by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi during the Internal Emergency.
 
10. Dev Anand shares his birthday (September 26) with the present Prime Minister of India, Dr Manmohan Singh. Incidentally Dev Anand’s last film was titled Mr. Prime Minister. Last year he had Manmohan Singh release his autobiography Romancing with Life on his birthday.
 
11. Dev Anand has won 4 Filmfare trophies, the Lifetime Achievement Award in almost every award ceremony in the country and most importantly the Padma Bhushan by the President of India for the outstanding work in his discipline.
 






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Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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Dev Anand



Last edited by Music on 29 Sep 2008 00:11; edited 1 time in total





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By Shekhar Hattangadi

Dev Anand is not letting up at 80.


Image
 
Sons will be sons. Had Dharamdev Pishorimal Anand heeded his father's advice and joined the local bank about 60 years ago, he'd be pottering around today in a middle-class retiree's apartment in his hometown of Gurdaspur in Punjab. Instead, the glamour-struck teenager took the train to Bombay with 30 rupees in his pocket. After a period of struggle and penury, he became a Hindi film hero and Indian banking's loss became Bollywood's most durable legend - Dev Anand.
 
 
As actor and later as film-maker as well, Dev Anand has worked in more than 100 movies. He wooed dozens of heroines on-screen and captivated millions of fans off it with his urbane charm. With Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor, he formed a dominant troika in the golden years of popular Indian Cinema. But unlike Kumar's intense brooder and Kapoor's bumbling simpleton, Anand's city-smart hero was also a loveable rake who brought a touch of mischievous buffoonery to Bollywood's seduction routine, and his own trademark mannerisms: loose-limbed gait, tilted head, and a rapid-fire dialogue delivery. A journalist once described him as "evergreen." It was to prove prophetic. At an age - he turned 80 on Sept 26 - when his contemporaries are either dead or nursing creaky joints, a sprightly Dev Anand is planning two films to be made in the United States, besides writing his memoirs. "And I've only reached 1954," he shrugs, implying its wealth of detail. The veteran, awarded the Padma Bhushan in 2001, can shame younger directors with the volume of his output - and younger men with his agility.

Having defied age, he's also known to subvert gravity. Keeping up with a buoyant boss gives his staff a daily aerobic workout. And during our interview - in his penthouse office littered with magazines, scripts, posters and snapshots of aspiring starlets - an animated Dev Anand was apt to spring up to emphasize a point as he unspooled his life and times. Outside, Mumbai was depressingly grey and wet. But it was clear it would take much more than a mere monsoon to dampen the man's spirit.

At 80, what gets you out of bed every morning?
The sheer excitement of my work. Age has nothing to do with it. I'm working on my autobiography, and on Song Of Life and Between Two Worlds to be shot in the United States. In the first film, I play a famous Indian musician who discovers he has a gifted daughter from an affair with an American girlfriend.

Is it about Ravi Shankar and Norah Jones?
Stories are written when something triggers off. I was to return after the New York premiere of my film Love At Times Square, when a local Indian journalist mentioned the Grammy ceremony scheduled that evening. I saw Norah Jones on television winning five awards - and in a flash I decided to stay put at the hotel for a month, and wrote the entire script. But if I publicly say it's about someone, I'm obliged to satisfy him or her about the story's authenticity. A film's characters should be larger than life - or else there's no drama and you can't write a good climax. So let's say it's not about particular individuals, but about the relationships in the lives of famous men.

And the other film?
In Between Two Worlds, an NRI billionaire dreams of building an Indian pavilion at Disney's Epcot Center in Florida. He's caught between two wives - an Indian and an American - and therefore two cultures. His son from the latter wife is the first American soldier to enter the Iraq warfront. I want to recreate those scenes with help from the U.S. army.

Both are English-language projects with an Indian temperament and an American feel. Who knows, an Indian film-maker making a movie in America might just strike a chord with American audiences! The best Hollywood directors have been imports from abroad - Capra, Hitchcock, Wilder, Chaplin.

Your films as director deal with contemporary themes.Image
I see cinema in incidents. My directorial debut Prem Pujari was based on the 1965 Indo-Pak conflict. During King Birendra's wedding in 1970, I visited Kathmandu's hippie hangout - The Bakery - and saw this brown-skinned girl swaying in the lap of a dirty, bearded, bespectacled white foreigner. What's a nice Indian girl doing in a place like this? I wondered. She inspired the story as well as Zeenat Aman's character in Hare Rama Hare Krishna. I picked up the idea for Des Pardes - on illegal Indian immigrants in U.K. - during a trip there.

Why haven't your recent films done well?

I'm convinced they're ahead of their time. Unfortunately, people in India - especially in smaller towns - don't accept tomorrow's ideas because they're living in the yesterday. But the growth of information technology is bringing the world together, and they're growing.

How do you continue getting money to make films?

I close my eyes, and God pours money on me.

God in the form of NRIs?

Not just NRIs. I manage because I'm not extravagant. I own a post-production studio. I don't pay myself. And I enjoy tremendous goodwill - not just in India. I was very close to Nepal's royalty: they rolled out the red carpet for the shooting of Hare Rama Hare Krishna. Many Nepalis want me to make a film on the family's massacre. But it's a sensitive subject, so I'd like to take everybody into confidence: the King, the Prime Minister, the Maoists. Why the Prince killed - or why he was provoked to kill - we don't know for sure. Here again is an intriguing love story. The Prince wanted to marry his girlfriend, his mother didn't want it. But he must have had other affairs. If I were a prince, I'd have them.

You too were a prince of sorts in Bombay's film industry.

In my own way, yes. I'm a private person, not a sanyasi. I had a teenage crush in Lahore, on our history professor's daughter. It was only from a distance, something we all go through at that age. But when you're seriously in love, you propose and tell the girl, "I can't live without you.'


That happened with singer-actress Suraiya, right?

It did. Suraiya was my first and only real love. I wanted to marry her and she was willing. But her Muslim family objected to my being a Hindu, and created a big row over the communal issue. Remember, she was already a big singing star when we first met, and I was a nobody. Fans mobbed her, her songs were on the air, and her star image added to the attraction.

Film lore has it that you still send Suraiya a rose on her birthday.

Never. Once I was through with her, I got busy with my production company Navketan, and Mona Singh joined us for Baazi. As Kalpana Kartik, she was my costar in a few films. We became friendly, and then got married. Well, you find yourself alone, in need of emotional security, and suddenly comes this young girl with a college degree like yours and a liberal worldview.

You married secretly on the sets during a lunch break?

Because I don't like this tamasha of the groom riding in on a horse with a band-baja. It's ridiculous. I'm told some of today's actors dance at weddings for a fee. They're selling their souls. I'd never do that - it was our generation's value system. My good friends - Singhanias - approached me once for a corporate ad. I agreed, but didn't charge a penny. I'm a film star, not a model.

Your marriage, from all accounts, isn't a happy one. Is marriage more difficult for celebrities?

I'm in showbiz, mingling with the world's best, the most glamorous. My wife prefers to stay out of the limelight. My marriage is as good or bad as any other - except that I'm in the public eye, and most other people are not. If a man is an achiever, his marriage cannot really work because he needs to be totally in love with his own work. No matter what field you're in - entertainment or politics. Do you think the Prime Minister can have the time for his family? He can't.

Is that why Atal Behari Vajpayee has remained a bachelor?

[Laughs] I don't know. That could be for other reasons.

Image
 
That happened with singer-actress Suraiya, right?

It did. Suraiya was my first and only real love. I wanted to marry her and she was willing. But her Muslim family objected to my being a Hindu, and created a big row over the communal issue. Remember, she was already a big singing star when we first met, and I was a nobody. Fans mobbed her, her songs were on the air, and her star image added to the attraction.

Film lore has it that you still send Suraiya a rose on her birthday.

Never. Once I was through with her, I got busy with my production company Navketan, and Mona Singh joined us for Baazi. As Kalpana Kartik, she was my costar in a few films. We became friendly, and then got married. Well, you find yourself alone, in need of emotional security, and suddenly comes this young girl with a college degree like yours and a liberal worldview.

You married secretly on the sets during a lunch break?

Because I don't like this tamasha of the groom riding in on a horse with a band-baja. It's ridiculous. I'm told some of today's actors dance at weddings for a fee. They're selling their souls. I'd never do that - it was our generation's value system. My good friends - Singhanias - approached me once for a corporate ad. I agreed, but didn't charge a penny. I'm a film star, not a model.

Your marriage, from all accounts, isn't a happy one. Is marriage more difficult for celebrities?

I'm in showbiz, mingling with the world's best, the most glamorous. My wife prefers to stay out of the limelight. My marriage is as good or bad as any other - except that I'm in the public eye, and most other people are not. If a man is an achiever, his marriage cannot really work because he needs to be totally in love with his own work. No matter what field you're in - entertainment or politics. Do you think the Prime Minister can have the time for his family? He can't.

Is that why Atal Behari Vajpayee has remained a bachelor?

[Laughs] I don't know. That could be for other reasons.

That happened with singer-actress Suraiya, right?

It did. Suraiya was my first and only real love. I wanted to marry her and she was willing. But her Muslim family objected to my being a Hindu, and created a big row over the communal issue. Remember, she was already a big singing star when we first met, and I was a nobody. Fans mobbed her, her songs were on the air, and her star image added to the attraction.

Film lore has it that you still send Suraiya a rose on her birthday.

Never. Once I was through with her, I got busy with my production company Navketan, and Mona Singh joined us for Baazi. As Kalpana Kartik, she was my costar in a few films. We became friendly, and then got married. Well, you find yourself alone, in need of emotional security, and suddenly comes this young girl with a college degree like yours and a liberal worldview.

You married secretly on the sets during a lunch break?

Because I don't like this tamasha of the groom riding in on a horse with a band-baja. It's ridiculous. I'm told some of today's actors dance at weddings for a fee. They're selling their souls. I'd never do that - it was our generation's value system. My good friends - Singhanias - approached me once for a corporate ad. I agreed, but didn't charge a penny. I'm a film star, not a model.

Your marriage, from all accounts, isn't a happy one. Is marriage more difficult for celebrities?

I'm in showbiz, mingling with the world's best, the most glamorous. My wife prefers to stay out of the limelight. My marriage is as good or bad as any other - except that I'm in the public eye, and most other people are not. If a man is an achiever, his marriage cannot really work because he needs to be totally in love with his own work. No matter what field you're in - entertainment or politics. Do you think the Prime Minister can have the time for his family? He can't.

Is that why Atal Behari Vajpayee has remained a bachelor?

[Laughs] I don't know. That could be for other reasons.

You went with him on the bus to Lahore. Tell us about that 1999 trip.
Image
The Pakistanis recognized me as I got off the bus - that's the power of popular cinema. Nawaz Sharif rushed forward and grabbed my hand, saying we're from the same college. When he told me he'd seen my films, I promptly put his hand into Prime Minister Vajpayee's, and said "This should be the beginning of the end of our problems." It was great revisiting Government College Lahore - the same architecture, classrooms, hostels. Only, the buildings now have Muslim names. I was never a good student. But I was fond of reading, and keen on doing my M.A. My father's legal practice wasn't doing well, so he asked me to join a bank instead. I hated the thought of a sedentary job, so I came to Bombay to become a film star.

Didn't your mother stop you?

She wasn't around by then. Our society treats its women very badly. My mother was a simple housewife who bore nine children, and died young of TB when there was no cure for it. My siblings were either away in college or too young, so I was the only child close to her. As a young boy I nursed her before she was taken away to a sanatorium. She never came back. Every morning, I brought her goat's milk which was prescribed by the doctor. I remember her gentleness and loving nature. On her deathbed, she held my hand, looked into my eyes and told my father: 'This son of mine will become a very important man.'

A woman's intuition?

A mother's intuition. Similarly, I'd gone to Amritsar to fetch her medicine. It was a burning hot afternoon in June, and I stopped outside the Golden Temple for some cold sherbet. As he gave me the glass, the man kept staring at my face, then said in Punjabi: O baau, tu baut vadda banda banega. (Brother, you'll become a very big man.) I was only 16 then, and he was a complete stranger.

You think someone up there has scripted your life story?
Image
I often wonder. At times, one works hard without results. At other times, things just happen and one succeeds. I came with no family connections in the movies, not even a letter of recommendation. I stayed initially with my older brother Chetan's friends - the famous novelist Raja Rao, and then the famous communist K.A. Abbas. Later I moved into a chawl. I was rejected by a couple of studios, and worked as an accounts clerk for three days.

Which was the most depressing of your struggling days?

The day I sold my beloved stamp collection. I spent my last penny for the bus to Bombay's Fort area and then walked along the main road, hungry and thirsty. I found a stamp-seller on the pavement who gave me 30 rupees for it. It was a godsend, but I was also heartbroken - that collection had many rare stamps. Looking back however, I don't regret the day. It made a man out of me. I continued looking for acting roles. I went to IPTA (Indian People's Theatre Association), where the senior actors never took me seriously. Meanwhile at the military censor's office, my degree got me a job scanning soldiers' letters for wartime secrets. Reading letters is like peeping into lonely hearts pining for their sweethearts and their desires. It was educative, but still a routine desk-job. Then one day I barged into the Bombay office of Prabhat Studio. The boss gave me a ticket to Poona for a screen test and I got hired for Rs 400 a month - a lot of money in those days. But it wasn't just the money. The best turning point in life is finding the first job that you truly like






____________
"I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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Post Re: Devdutt Pishorimal Anand 
 
Maine Hindustan ko itna achcha studio diya hai aur ise main nahin mitaunga
 

Contrary to rumours, Dev Anand says that he will never sell Anand Recording Studio
Monday, October 06, 2008 
 

Vickey Lalwani

 

Anand Recording Studio at Pali Hill has been Dev Anand's second home for 22 years now. Recently, when Dev Anand was in London, gossip mills were working overtime that he has sold the studio and a swanky building is likely to replace it. We caught up with him as soon as he was back in the country yesterday. Excerpts from the interview:



•   Have you have sold Anand Recording Studios?


You couldn't have asked anything more absurd.



•  Why?


Selling off Anand Recording Studios will be like selling off my soul.  In fact, I am gearing up to refurbish my studio and make it better. I want to have a lot more modern amenities. I will expand my studio.



•   Rumour has it that a 12-storey apartment building will come up at the studio property and you will get two large flats there?


The property is big. A few people have come forward and expressed interest in it. If a building comes up, it will have to co-exist with Anand Recording Studio.



Even if there is one tall building in the premises tomorrow, my Anand Recording Studio will always remain. Maine Hindustan ko itna achcha studio diya hai aur ise main nahin mitaunga (I have given such a great studio to India and I will not destroy it)



•  Please continue...


But it's too early to talk about the building. To tell you the truth, a lot of builders wanted to buy my studio since many years and do away with it. If I wanted to dispose it off that way, I would have done so long ago.



•  Would you like to shift from your current residence at Juhu to Pali Hill?


I am a royal man and live in an exclusive bungalow in Juhu. There are people who want to buy my Juhu property and make a tall building there. So I don't know what will happen on the building front.



I haven't signed any deal with anybody yet. If something concrete materialises, I will definitely make an official announcement.



•  So, where did these rumours about you selling your studio come from?


Even I want to know who is spreading these false rumours about me selling off my studio. Kuch din ke liye main chala gaya London, and gossip mongers had nothing better to do.



Also, the studio plot is under my name and shall always remain that way. I don't believe in partnerships. Aaj ke daur mein bhai bhai ke beech nahin banta (Today, even brothers do not get along)







____________
"I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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Dev Anand: My three love affairs
The evergreen Super Star shares some of his life's secrets 

 

In an extensive interview with the History Talking .com editor Vijay Rana the evergreen Bollywood star Dev Anand shares some  of the secrets of his life. He talks about his first and failed love affair with the Bollywood beauty Suraiyya. “I proposed to her … and it was a romantic disappointment that made a man out of me.”  A heartbroken Dev Anand than found comfort in the 'aanchal' of Kalpana Kartik. They married on the set of 'Taxi Driver'. After that Kalpana disappeared from the films. His third love was the love of movie making, a passion that will never fade away. So who stopped his marriage with Suraiyya? Did he stop Kalpana Kartik from acting in the films and what is the secret of his evergreen image? Dev Anand answers questions that you always wanted to know from him.







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Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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