Misplaced Pages

Dinshaw Billimoria

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Dinshaw Bilimoria) Indian actor and film director
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Dinshaw Billimoria" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Dinshaw Billimoria (1904 in Kirkee – 1942) was an Indian actor and director.

Dinshaw Billimoria
Born1904
Died1942 (aged 37–38)
NationalityIndian
Other namesD. Billimoria
Occupation(s)Actor and Director

He has been referred to as the John Barrymore of Indian cinema.

Life

Dinshaw Billimoria made his debut in 1925 in N. D. Sarpotdar's mythological-historical film Chhatrapati Sambhaji. In 1927, he moved to the film company Imperial Films Company and partnered with Sulochana in Mohan Bhavnani's Wildcat of Bombay (1927) and R. S. Choudhury's Anarkali (1928), which were his first big successes.

At the end of the silent film era from 1927 to 1929 and in the early talkies in India from 1933 to 1939, Billimoria and Sulochana formed a popular romantic lead, which delighted a broad audience, especially in romantic dramas by R. S. Choudhury. Billimoria was considered the highest paid silent movie star in India. After 1932, they shot talkies remakes of several of the silent film hits, among them Anarkali (1935) and Bambai Ki Billi/Wildcat of Bombay (1936).

He appeared in several films for the film company between 1929 and 1932 for Ranjit Movietone under the directors Chandulal Shah, Nanubhai Vakil and Nandlal Jaswantlal.

Billimoria probably directed two films in 1940 and 1942; but Azadi-e-Watan (1940) may be a dubbed version of a US import.

His brother was the actor Eddie Billimoria.

Filmography

Silent films
  • 1925: Chhatrapati Sambhaji
  • 1926: Dha Cha Ma
  • 1926: Tai Teleen
  • 1926: Umaji Naik
  • 1927: Wildcat of Bombay
  • 1927: Daya Ni Devi
  • 1927: Vilasi Kanta
  • 1928: Qatil Kathiyani
  • 1928: Anarkali
  • 1928: Madhuri
  • 1928: Rajrang
  • 1929: Khwab-e-Hasti
  • 1929: Mewad Nu Moti
  • 1929: Heer Ranjha
  • 1929: Punjab Mail
  • 1929: Rajputani
  • 1929: Hawai Swar
  • 1930: Pahadi Kanya
  • 1930: Rasili Radha
  • 1930: Diwani Dilbar
  • 1931: Baghdad Nu Bulbul
  • 1931: Mojili Mashuq
  • 1931: Noor-e-Alam
  • 1931: Premi Jogan
Sound films
  • 1931: Devi Devayani
  • 1932: Sati Madalasa
  • 1933: Daku Ki Ladki
  • 1933: Saubhagya Sundari
  • 1933: Sulochana
  • 1934: Gul Sanobar
  • 1934: Indira MA
  • 1934: Khwab-e-Hasti
  • 1934: Piya Pyare
  • 1934: Devaki
  • 1935: Anarkali
  • 1935: Do Ghadi Ki Mauj
  • 1935: Pujarini
  • 1936: Bambai Ki Billi
  • 1936: Jungle Queen
  • 1936: Shaan-e-Hind
  • 1937: Jagat Kesari
  • 1937: New Searchlight
  • 1937: Wah Ri Duniya
  • 1939: Prem Ki Jyot
  • 1942: Jawani Ki Pukar
Directed
  • 1940: Azadi-e-Watan
  • 1942: Jawani Ki Pukar

Literature

  • The entry of Dinshaw Billimoria in Ashish Rajadhyaksha, Paul Willemen: Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema, S. 66

References

  1. Whether the sound engineer Dinshaw Billimoria, who was active from the 1950s to the 1970s and received a Filmfare Award in 1964 for his work on Bandini, is the same person, is not certain.
  2. Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema, p. 66

External links

Categories: