Meena Shorey

Meena Shorey (13 November 1921 3 September 1989) was a Pakistani film actress who worked first in Indian cinema and later Pakistani cinema. She appeared in Hindi/Urdu and Punjabi films. Credited in films by her mononym, Meena, her real name was Khurshid Jehan. She started her acting career playing a character role, as Ambhi, Raja of Taxila's sister in Sohrab Modi's Sikandar (1941). Married to her third husband, Roop K. Shorey, by the mid-1940s, she found fame when she acted in her husband's film Ek Thi Larki (1949), opposite actor Motilal. The story was written by I. S. Johar, who also starred in the film. The "foot-tapping" music composed by Vinod became a "huge hit", with Meena becoming an "icon" for the "new liberated" young women. Meena was acclaimed as the "Lara Lappa Girl", from the song of same title in the film. She was one of the first women to be recognised in Indian cinema as a "comedienne of calibre". She was also popularly known as The Droll Queen of Partition as she worked in both in India and Pakistan.

Meena Shorey
Shorey in Actress (1948)
Born
Khurshid Jehan

13 November 1921
Died3 September 1989(1989-09-03) (aged 67)
Resting placeLahore
Other namesThe Droll Queen of Partition
Lux Lady of Pakistan
The Lara Lappa Girl
The Comedienne of Calibre
OccupationActress
Years active1941 - 1983
Spouses
(m. 1941; div. 1942)
  • Al Nasir
  • Roop K. Shorey
(m. 1946; div. 1947)
  • Asad Bukhari
Children3
AwardsSpecial Nigar Award for 30 years of excellence in Pakistani film industry in 1982

In 1956, she went to Lahore, Pakistan with her husband, where they were invited by Pakistani producer J.C. Anand to make a film there following her mass popularity with the public in both India and Pakistan. The film Shorey made was Miss 56, a copy of the Guru Dutt-Madhubala starrer Mr. & Mrs. '55. Instead of returning to India when her husband did, she decided to stay back in Pakistan, continuing her acting career there. Some of her best films in India included the Punjabi film Chaman (1948), Actress (1948), Ek Thi Ladki (1949), Dholak (1951), and Ek Do Teen (1953).

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