National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress

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National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress
Type National
Category Indian cinema
Description Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
Instituted 1984
First awarded 1984
Last awarded 2014
Total awarded 34
Awarded by Directorate of Film Festivals
Cash award β‚Ή50,000 (US$740)
Medal Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus)
First awardee(s) Rohini Hattangadi
Recent awardee(s)  β€’ Baljinder Kaur

The National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress (also known as the Rajat Kamal Award for the Best Supporting Actress) is an honour presented annually at the National Film Awards of India since 1984 to an actress for the best performance in a supporting role within Indian cinema.[1][2] The National Film Awards were established in 1954 and are presented by the Directorate of Film Festivals, the organization set up by Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, India.[1] The National Film Awards instituted the "Best Supporting Actress" category in 1984 as the "Rajat Kamal Award for the Best Supporting Actress".[2]

It is one of several awards presented for feature films and the winners are awarded with a "Rajat Kamal" (Silver Lotus), certificate and a cash prize that amounted to β‚Ή50,000 (US$740). Throughout the years, accounting for ties and repeat winners, the Government of India has presented a total of 33 Best Supporting Actress awards to 31 different actresses. Although the Indian cinema produces films in more than 20 languages,[3] the actresses whose performances have won awards have worked in eight major languages: Bengali, English, Hindi, Manipuri, Marathi, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil, and Urdu.

The first recipient was Rohini Hattangadi, who was honoured at the 32nd National Film Awards (1984) for her performance in the Hindi film Party.[4] The actresses who have won the most number of awards are Surekha Sikri and K. P. A. C. Lalitha with two. Surekha Sikri won the awards for her performances in the Hindi films Tamas (1987) and Mammo (1994),[5] while Lalitha won the awards for her performances in the Malayalam films Amaram (1990) and Shantham (2000).[6] The most recent recipients are Amruta Subhash and Aida El-Kashef, who were honoured at the 61st National Film Awards for their performances in the Marathi film Astu and the English-Hindi film Ship of Theseus respectively.[7] Kalpana and Urvashi (who won the award in 2005, seven years before her sister) are the only siblings to win the National Film Award in this category.[8]

Recipients

Key

Symbol Meaning
dagger Indicates a joint award for that year
File:Rohini Hattangadi.jpg
Rohini Hattangadi was the first recipient of the award.
File:Surekha Sikri.jpg
Surekha Sikri is one of the two actresses to win the honour twice.
Konkona Sen Sharma
Konkona Sen Sharma is one of the three actresses to receive honours in both acting categories: Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress, the other two being Sharmila Tagore and Kangana Ranaut.
List of award recipients, showing the year, role(s), film(s) and language(s)
Year[I] Recipient(s) Role Work Languages Refs.[II]
1984
(32nd)
Rohini Hattangadi Mohini Bharve Party Hindi [2]
1985
(33rd)
Vijaya Mehta Mausi Rao Saheb Hindi [9]
1986
(34th)
Manjula Kanwar Unknown Bhangala Silata Oriya [10]
1987
(35th)
Surekha Sikri Unknown Tamas Hindi [11]
1988
(36th)
Uttara Baokar Neeta's mother Ek Din Achanak Hindi [12]
1989
(37th)
Manorama Unknown Pudhea Paadhai Tamil [13]
1990
(38th)
K. P. A. C. Lalitha Bhargavi Amaram Malayalam [14]
1991
(39th)
Santha Devi Unknown Yamanam Malayalam [15]
1992
(40th)
Revathi Panchavarnam Thevar Magan Tamil [16]
1993
(41st)
Neena Gupta Geeta Devi Woh Chokri Hindi [17]
1994
(42nd)
Surekha Sikri Fayyazi Mammo Hindi [18]
1995
(43rd)
Aranmula Ponnamma Unknown Kathapurushan Malayalam [19]
1996
(44th)
Rajeshwari Sachdev Sakina Sardari Begum Urdu [20]
1997
(45th)
Karisma Kapoor Nisha Dil To Pagal Hai Hindi [21]
1998
(46th)
Suhasini Mulay Maltibai Hu Tu Tu Hindi [22]
1999
(47th)
dagger
Sudipta Chakraborty Malati Bariwali Bengali [23]
1999
(47th)
dagger
Sohini Sengupta Khuku Paromitar Ek Din Bengali [23]
2000
(48th)
K. P. A. C. Lalitha Unknown Shantham Malayalam [24]
2001
(49th)
Ananya Khare Deepa Pandey Chandni Bar Hindi [25]
2002
(50th)
Raakhee Gulzar Ranga Pishima Shubho Mahurat Bengali [26]
2003
(51st)
Sharmila Tagore Aparna Abar Aranye Bengali [27]
2004
(52nd)
Sheela Margaret D'Costa Akale Malayalam [28]
2005
(53rd)
Urvashi K. P. Vanaja Achuvinte Amma Malayalam [29]
2006
(54th)
Konkona Sen Sharma Indu Omkara Hindi [30]
2007
(55th)
Shefali Shah Vandana The Last Lear English [31]
2008
(56th)
Kangana Ranaut Shonali Gujral Fashion Hindi [32]
2009
(57th)
Arundathi Nag Vidya's mother Paa Hindi [33]
2010
(58th)
Sukumari Ammini Amma Namma Gramam Tamil [34]
2011
(59th)
Leishangthem Tonthoingambi Devi Tonthoi Phijigee Mani Manipuri [35]
2012
(60th)
dagger
Dolly Ahluwalia Mrs. Arora Vicky Donor Hindi [36]
2012
(60th)
dagger
Kalpana Razia Beevi Thanichalla Njan Malayalam [36]
2013
(61st)
dagger
Amruta Subhash Channama Astu Marathi [7]
2013
(61st) dagger
Aida El-Kashef Aliya Kamal Ship of Theseus English-Hindi [7]
2014
(62nd)
Baljinder Kaur Pagdi - The Honour Haryanavi [37]

See also

Notes

^[I] Year in which the film was censored by the Central Board of Film Certification.
^[II] The "Refs." cites the winner and the role played by them in the film.

References

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  34. ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  35. ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  36. ↑ 36.0 36.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  37. ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links