Shafi Inamdar (1949 - 13
March 1996) was an
Indian actor. He started his film career with film
Vijeta and continued in
Ardh Satya. He acted in a number of television serials which includes
Yeh Jo Hai Zindagi.
Shafi married actress
Bhakti Barve. He died on 13 March 1996. A few years later, his wife Bhakti Barve died on
12 February 2001 in a road accident.
Filmography
Year
Film Role
1982 Vijeta Parulkar
1983 Ardh Satya
Inspector Hyder Ali
1985 Saagar Vikram
Awards and Nominations
* 1985:Nominated:Filmfare
Best Supporting Actor Award-Aaj Ki
Awaaz
Bhakti Barve or Bhakti Barve Inamdar (
10 September 1948 12 February 2001) was a noted
Indian film, theatre and television actress in
Marathi, Hindi, and
Gujarati. She is most known for her role in
Kundan Shah's comedy classic
Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro (1983), where she acted alongside
Naseeruddin Shah,
Satish Shah and
Ravi Basvani.
"Aayee Retire Hote Aahe" and "
Hands Up". She was awarded the
Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in
Marathi theatre Acting in
1990, by
India's
National Academy of Music,
Dance and
Drama , apart from
Maharashtra Gaurav
Puraskar, and
Abhinay Puraskar. She was married to actor, Shafi Inamdar, who had died in
1996 .
Personal life
Barve was born in 1948,
Sangli, Maharashtra.
All India Radio,
Bombay (now
Mumbai) and later as a news reader on Bombay Doordarshan (India's
National broadcaster), and presenter of `coming-next-week' programme, Saptahiki, while with Doordarshan she also performed the role of Ahirnani, the poetess-saint, in critically acclaimed DD produced telefilm,
Bahinabai, Rakesh`s Adhe-adhure, Ti Phul
Rani (
Flower Queen) (
1975),
P.L. Deshpande's noted
adaptation of
GB Shaw's
Pygmalion and in Jay
Lerner's My Fair Lady. Kundan Shah's Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro (1983) and
Govind Nihlani's
Hazaar Chaurasi Ki Maa (
1998). She was also the chairperson of the
Akhil Bharatiya Marathi
Natya Sammelan .
Later in career she performed a solo act,
Pu La Fulrani
Aani Mee, which she had incidentally gone to perform at Wai when died on 12 February 2001, in a car accident. Her car rammed on an electric pole near
Panvel on the
Mumbai-Pune Expressway, while returning to Bombay from Wai in
Satara district after performing at a stage show.
http://www.indiantelevision.com/headlines/y2k1/feb/feb28
.htm
http://www.indianexpress.com/ie/daily/20010213/ina13041
.html
February 12: The aai has retired forever.
Bhakti Barve-Inamdar, 56, the well-known stage, television and film actress died in a macabre accident on the
Mumbai Pune Expressway while on her way to Mumbai. She was returning from Wai in Satara district along with her secretary Dayanand Manjrekar when the accident happened at 5
.45 am at the
Pune end of the New Bhatan tunnel. Manjrekar was injured and is recuperating in a
Vashi hospital.
Barve-Inamdar who was sitting behind the driver in her 118NE died on the spot as the driver lost control of the vehicle and rammed into a lamp-post. The driver also died on the spot. ``The driver must have been doing around
120 kms an hour. In all possibility, he may have become drowsy and lost control,'' said assistant police inspector V Dhom of the
Highway Police supervising the panchanama. Eye-witness accounts of the constables on duty at the
MSRDC control room nearby confirm this.
``The driver applied brakes when he was barely three feet from the light pole but it was too late and the vehicle slammed into the pole killing both him and Barve immediately,'' explained Dhom.
The right side of the car was completely mangled. The vehicle then seems to have swerved around
180 degrees before coming to a stop facing the direction of Pune. Barve-Inamdar's chappals lay in a pool of blood on the car floor.
THERE IS NO
GOD.
Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati (February 12, 1824
October 31, 1883) a
Hindu reform movement, founded in 1875. He was the first man who gave the call for Swarajya - "India for
Indians" in 1876 .
Dayananda was born on on February 12 in 1824, in the village of
Tankara near
Morvi (
Morbi) in the
Kathiawar region (present
Rajkot district),
Krishna Lal Tiwari and Yashodabai. Since he was born under Mul
Nakshatra, he was named Dayananda Mulshankar Still a young child on the night of
Shivratri (literally: the night for God
Shiva) when his family went to a temple for overnight worship, he stayed up waiting for God to appear to accept the offerings made to idol of God Shiva. While his family slept, Dayananda saw a mouse eating the offerings kept for the God. He was utterly surprised and wondered how a God, who cannot even protect his own "offerings," would protect humanity. He argued with his father that they should not be worshiping such a helpless God.
Swami Dayanand — A
Critical Study of his
Life and Teachings by FK
Khan Durrani
http://web.archive.org/web/20050301-20050530re_/http://delhihighcourt.nic.in
http://aaiil.org/text/books/others/durrani/swamidayanand/swamidayanand
.shtml
- published: 23 Apr 2010
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