
SHRIYA SARAN - Film Actress
Shriya Saran (born 11
September 1982) was born in the Dehradun / Haridwar region of Uttarakhand
in Northern India
to Pushpendra Saran and Neeraja Saran. Her father worked for Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited
and her mother was a chemistry teacher in Delhi Public School, Ranipur in Haridwar
and Delhi Public School, Mathura Road,
New Delhi. Saran completed her schooling from both schools where her mother had
taught. Her family lived in the small town of BHEL colony in Haridwar when she was growing up. She later
studied at Lady Shri Ram College in Delhi and received a Bachelor of
Arts degree in literature. Saran is an accomplished dancer. She was
first trained as a child by her mother in Kathak and Rajasthani folk dance, and later trained
in Kathak style by Shovana Narayan. She was involved with many
dance teams in college and with her teacher. They would incorporate social
issues into their dance routines. She has an older brother named Abhiroop who
lives in Mumbai.
While in her sophomore year at the LSR College in
Delhi, Saran got her first opportunity to appear in front of the camera for a
video shoot. Following her dance teacher's recommendation, she was invited to
appear in the music video of Renoo Nathan's "Thirakti Kyun Hawa".
Shot in Banaras,
the video was seen by Ramoji Films who offered her the lead role of
Neha in their film Ishtam. Saran accepted the part, and even before it was
released she was signed to four more films, including Nuvve Nuvve,
in which she played a millionaire's daughter who falls for a middle class man.
In 2002, she starred in Santosham, co-starring Nagarjuna, Prabhu Deva
and Gracy Singh,
which was her first commercial success. The film took the Nandi Award for Best Feature Film
and Filmfare Best Film Award (Telugu).
Saran played a girl who lets someone she loves go with another, but wins him
back later in life. For her performance, she earned a nomination for the CineMAA Award for Best Actor- Female,
giving her a good foothold in the Telugu
industry in the early part of her career.
In 2003, Saran acted a supporting role in her
first Hindi film,
Tujhe Meri Kasam, starring debutants Ritesh
Deshmukh and Genelia D'Souza in leading roles. She also
performed the lead female role in several Telugu films including Tagore,
which was screened at the International Indian Film Academy
Awards, and was a commercial success. She followed it with her Tamil
film debut in Enakku 20 Unakku 18, alongside Tarun
and Trisha Krishnan, which was simultaneously shot
in Telugu as Nee Manasu Naaku Telusu, in which she
played a football coach. Though she acted in films in three languages that
year, overall eight of the first ten films of her career were in Telugu.
In 2004, Saran acted in two Hindi and two Telugu
films, including Nenunnanu, where she played a student in classical
singing. She had ten 2005 releases, nine of which were Telugu films, the most
notable for her being Chatrapathi. There she appeared
opposite Prabhas,
and earned her first nomination for the Filmfare Best Telugu Actress Award.
A reviewer for Moviebuzz said that as an action film, Saran's character of the
lead's love interest was not well developed; that she was there primarily for
the songs.[11]
Meanwhile, she tried to make her comeback in Tamil with Mazhai, a
remake of the Telugu film Varsham. Neither the movie nor her performance were
received well. Also in 2005, she appeared as one of only three characters in
the film Mogudu Pellam O Dongodu, which was
about a married couple's first night together, and made a guest appearance in a
children's film called Bommalata, which won the National Film
Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu. Saran's only lead role in
2006, excluding three special appearances, was in the Tamil film Thiruvilayadal Arambam.
In 2007, she was chosen to play the lead female
role opposite Rajinikanth in S. Shankar's
Sivaji: The Boss, which was the most
expensive Indian film at that time. Her performance earned her a South Scope
Style Award for Best Tamil Actress, her first award win, and a nomination at
the Vijay Awards.
The role also made her a star in the south Indian film industry. During this
phase of her career, she made several special appearances in item numbers,
including in the films Devadasu, Munna,
and Tulasi.
Also in 2007, Saran made her comeback in Hindi
cinema with Awaarapan, which was a joint production between India and
Pakistan, and in which she played a Muslim girl and had to learn Urdu. This was
her fourth Hindi film, but the others had failed to make any impact. Saran
later said that the film strengthened her conviction that all religions are
equal. Later that year she appeared in one more Tamil film, Azhagiya Tamil Magan opposite Vijay.
That same year Saran made a special appearance in a scene in the Kannada film
Arasu. In all she appeared in six films in
2007, in four different languages.
In 2008, Saran acted in the Hindi film Mission
Istanbul with Zayed Khan, Vivek Oberoi
and Shabbir Ahluwalia. She played the character of
Anjali Sagar which was inspired by the character of Romila Dutta played by Preity Zinta
in the film Lakshya; a journalist who desires to have a
child with her husband, which leads to their separation, since he is reluctant.
Bollywood Hungama critics said that her
character was wasted, as again she gets very little screen time. However, she
did pick up the Stardust Exciting New Face Award.
Saran then made her Hollywood debut in Ashok
Amritraj's The Other End of the Line. She played
the role of Priya Sethi who works as a telephone operator in an Indian call
centre, while acting alongside Jesse
Metcalfe, Anupham Kher and Tara Sharma.
Shriya's performance was praised by critics, particularly her on-screen
chemistry with Jesse Metcalfe.
Her most important 2009 release was the
commercially successful Tamil film Kanthaswamy, alongside Vikram.
She earned a nomination at the Vijay Awards.
Vikram himself said in an interview that her role was on par with his, and she
easily stole the show on most occasions. Of her character in the film, Saran
said that it was the best she has done so far. Also that year she appeared as
the female lead in Thoranai. A reviewer said that her glamour and the songs
were the only high points of the film. For Thoranai and Kanthaswamy
together, she received her third award win, the Amrita Mathrubhumi
Award for Best Actress. She then appeared in another English film, Cooking with Stella, which is a comedy, but
also takes a look at the serious nature of relationships between servants and employers.
It was selected to the Toronto International Film Festival, which Saran
attended.
In 2010, Saran made her Malayalam
debut with Pokkiri Raja, in which she appeared
opposite Mammootty
and Prithviraj. The film was declared a super
hit in the first week, breaking the record in Malayalam cinema for opening week
gross income, though it was not received well critically, and it was said of
Saran that all she had to do was look pretty. She then enacted her first lead
role in a Telugu film after five years, in the commercially successful
action-comedy film Don Seenu opposite Ravi Teja,
where she plays the sister of a mobster. In the opinion of some critics, she
stole the show with her dances and romantic scenes. The year 2010 was her
second busiest after 2005, having appeared in eight films in all, this time in
four languages.
In 2011, Saran appeared in Rowthiram,
where she worked with Tamil actor Jeeva
for the first time. The film received fairly low reviews. Although some reviews
said that Saran was not given much opportunity to show her acting skills,
mainly just adding a romantic touch to a mostly violent film, she was referred
to by another as the pivot around which the film revolves. Her performance
earned her Best Actress Award at the International Tamil Film Awards.
Her only other film in 2011 was a special appearance in a song for Tamil film Rajapattai.
Saran's first release of 2012 was her second
Malayalam project, Casanovva, co-starring Mohanlal
and directed by Rosshan Andrrews. The movie was delayed many
times, and it was rumored that Saran would leave the project, but in October
2010, the producer of the film announced that shooting would commence in Dubai with Saran among the
cast. It was released on 26 January. Her next release was in Gali Gali Mein Chor Hai, from director
Rumy Jafry, which began shooting in September 2011, and released on 3 February.
She then was seen in the comedic Telegu film Nuvva Nena
with actors Allari Naresh and Sharwanand,
followed by Sekhar Kammula's much delayed Life is Beautiful.
Saran has starred in Deepa Mehta's
long delayed English project Midnight's Children, which is based on
Salman
Rushdie's highly acclaimed novel of the same name. It was filmed under
the working title of Winds of Change. It was screened at several film
festivals in late 2012, and will finally make a general release in India on
February 1, 2013.
In early 2013 Saran will be seen doing an item number
in the film Zilla Ghaziabad. This will be her first
item number in a Hindi film. She will be enacting the title role as a sex
worker in the film Pavitra. Also in the making is her
bi-lingual film Chandra directed by Roopa Iyer
and simultaneously made in Kannada
and Tamil
languages. She plays the role of a princess in the film opposite Kannada actor Prem Kumar.
Shriya Saran is not married. She is Hindu, but has been known
to celebrate Muslim
holidays as well. Saran is well known for her charity work. She describes
herself as someone used to "sharing time and resources with the
underprivileged since childhood." She says that "celebrities can show
the way by sensitising people to social issues, campaigning for causes or being
part of fund-raisers." Her family has always encouraged her to think of
the needy. She is fluent in Hindi, English, and can understand Tamil and Telugu
well.
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