
HELEN
– Film Actress/Dancer
Helen
Jairag Richardson – (21 November 1939) was born on November 21, 1939 in Burma to an Anglo-Indian
father and Burmese mother. She has a brother Roger and a
sister Jennifer. Her father died during the Second World War.
The family trekked to Mumbai in 1943 in order to escape from the Japanese occupation
of Burma.
Helen told Filmfare magazine during an interview in 1964, "we trekked
alternately through wilderness and hundreds of villages, surviving on the
generosity of people, for we were penniless, with no food and few clothes.
Occasionally, we met British soldiers who provided us with transport, found us
refuge and treated our blistered feet and bruised bodies and fed us. By the
time we reached Dibrugarh in Assam,
our group had been reduced to half. Some had fallen ill and been left behind,
some had died of starvation and disease. My mother miscarried along the way.
The survivors were admitted to the Dibrugarh hospital for treatment. Mother and
I had been virtually reduced to skeletons and my brother's condition was
critical. We spent two months in hospital. When we recovered, we moved to Calcutta".Helen had
to quit her schooling to support her family because her mother's salary as a
nurse was not enough to feed a family of four. In a documentary called Queen
of the Nautch girls, Helen said she was 17 years old in 1957 when she got
her first big break in Howrah Bridge.
Helen was introduced
to Bollywood
when a family friend, an actress known as Cukoo, helped her find
jobs as a chorus dancer in the films Shabistan and Awara (1951). She was
soon working regularly and was featured as a solo dancer in films such as Alif
Laila (1954), Hoor-e-Arab (1953), and number "Mr. John O Baba
Khan" in the film Baarish.
Helen got her break
in 1958 when she performed the song "Mera Naam Chin Chin Chu" in Shakti Samanta's
film, Howrah Bridge, which was sung by Geeta Dutt.
After that, offers started pouring in throughout the 1960s and 1970s. During
her initial career, Geeta Dutt sang many songs for her. The Bollywood playback
singer Asha Bhosle
also frequently sang for Helen, particularly during the 1960s and the early
70s.
She was nominated for
the Filmfare
best supporting actress award in 1965 for her role in Gumnaam.
She played dramatic roles such as the rape victim in Shakti Samanta's
Pagla Kahin Ka
(1970).
Writer Salim Khan
helped her get roles in some of the films he was co-scripting with Javed Akhtar:
Imaam Dharam, Don,
Dostana, and Sholay. This
was followed by a role in Mahesh Bhatt's film Lahu Ke Do Rang (1979), for which she
won a Filmfare Best Supporting Actress
Award. In 1999 Helen was given India's Filmfare lifetime achievement award.
Helen officially
retired from movies in 1983, but she has since then appeared in a few guest
roles such as Khamoshi: The Musical (1996) and Mohabbatein
(2000). She also made a special appearance as the mother of real-life step-son Salman Khan's
character in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam. Helen was selected
for the Padma Shri
awards of 2009 along with Aishwarya Rai and Akshay Kumar.
Helen also performed
numerous stage shows in London, Paris,
and Hong Kong. In 1973, Helen, Queen of the
Nautch Girls, a 30-minute documentary film from Merchant Ivory Films, was released.
Anthony Korner directed and narrated the film. A book about Helen was published
by Jerry Pinto
in 2006, titled The Life and Times of an H-Bomb, which went on to win
the National Film Award for Best Book on
Cinema in 2007. Helen appeared as a Judge in the semi finals and
finals of the 2009 Indian Dancing Queen (Dance Contest).
For 16 years from
1957 to 1973, Helen lived with film director P.N Arora who was her benefactor.
She broke up with him on her 34th birthday on November 21, 1973. In 1981, Helen
married Salim Khan,
and became his second wife and they adopted a girl, Arpita. Salman Khan,
Sohail Khan
and Arbaaz Khan are her stepsons. She has
acted as Salman Khan's
mother in the film Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, as his grand
mother-in-law in Khamoshi: The Musical and Dil Ne Jise Apna Kaha and as his
grandmother in the film Marigold.
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