| Neetu Singh: Charming, ebullient, unforgettable |
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Dinesh Raheja Neetu Singh and Rishi Kapoor were our very own Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in the 1970s. Gifted with golden toes and energy, they shared the symphony of the surf and wind.
There was more to the sprightly Neetu than being half of this winsome twosome. Though she was never allowed to crest histrionic heights, her bags-of-fun personality and naturalness made her (even in multi-starrers like Kabhi Kabhie and Kaala Patthar) one of the quietest yet most effective scene-stealers ever.
Neetu was the seventies' emblem of teenage aspirations. She lived their dreams and spoke their themes at a time when contemporary leading heroines like Hema Malini, Zeenat Aman, Raakhee and Rekha were well past the spring chicken phase.
Neetu enjoyed a head start over other heroines because she stepped into the studios while still at school. Egged on by an ambitious mother, the Delhi-born Baby Sonia debuted in films with a tiny role as Rajendra Kumar's sister in Suraj (1966). She lent lip sync to the famous beggar song Gareebon ki suno, in Dus Lakh (1967). But it was the huge success of Do Kaliyan that assured her a home and career in Mumbai. Based on The Parent Trap (1961, starring Hayley Mills, Brian Keith, Maureen O'Hara, Joanna Barnes), Do Kaliyan (1968) offered Neetu a dream double role. She played twin sisters who plot a reconciliation between their estranged parents (Mala Sinha and Biswajeet).
Interestingly, five years later, Mala Sinha played a pivotal role, albeit as a character artiste, in Neetu Singh's (Baby Sonia rechristened) first break as leading lady, Rickshawala (1973). A Randhir Kapoor-starrer, the film did not travel far. But the bold young actress' dance in a kerchief-sized mini in 1973's Yaadon Ki Baarat (Lekar hum deewana dil), made her the pin-up du jour. Neetu Singh's landmark films | Year | Film | Costars | 1968 | Do Kaliyan | Mala Sinha, Biswajeet | 1975 | Khel Khel Mein | Rishi Kapoor, Rakesh Roshan | 1976 | Kabhi Kabhie | Amitabh Bachchan, Raakhee, Rishi Kapoor, Shashi Kapoor, Waheeda Rahman | 1977 | Dharamveer | Jeetendra, Dharmendra, Zeenat Aman | 1977 | Amar Akbar Anthony | Amitabh Bachchan, Vinod Khanna, Rishi Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Parveen Babi | 1977 | Priyatama | Jeetendra, Rakesh Roshan | 1977 | Doosra Aadmi | Rishi Kapoor, Shashi Kapoor, Raakhee | 1977 | Parvarish | Amitabh Bachchan, Vinod Khanna, Shabana Azmi | 1979 | Kaala Patthar | Shatrughan Sinha, Amitabh Bachchan, Shashi Kapoor, Sanjeev Kumar, Raakhee, Parveen Babi |
Still a starlet, Neetu's career got a windfall when the new superstar of the day, Rishi Kapoor, found he desperately needed a young actress to pair opposite him after his Bobby costar Dimple Kapadia left films to marry Rajesh Khanna. Neetu effortlessly slid into the slot and signed a slew of films with the hot new Kapoor, though they yet had to have a single release together. The Rishi-Neetu team lived up to their producers' expectations. And how! When Neetu and Rishi danced to the duet Ek main aur ek tu in the campus caper Khel Khel Mein (1975), they held the audience spellbound as their feet tapped and twirled across the screen.
Neetu, who had never been to college, effortlessly played the peppy collegian in Khel Khel Mein and became a star. The hit pair were further fortified by Rafoo Chakkar, Kabhi Kabhie and Amar Akbar Anthony. During the course of making so many films together, they soon declared on and off-screen Humko tumse ho gaya hai pyar kya kare.
Hugely popular with the public and within the industry, a sweet-tempered Neetu signed many films opposite marquee names like Amitabh Bachchan (Adalat, Parvarish, The Great Gambler, Yaarana), Rajesh Khanna (Chakravyuh), Vinod Khanna (Yuvraj), Randhir Kapoor (Kasme Vaade), Shatrughan Sinha (Kaala Patthar) and Jeetendra (Dharamveer, Priyatama).
If one did not feel the void left by Mumtaz, it was because Neetu proved to be a contemporary, albeit younger and classier, incarnation of the senior actress.
Neetu's biggest asset was her surrender to her role, however inane. Her face never mirrored any anguish she felt at the length of her roles in multi-starrers or at the illogical aspects of her characters. Not surprisingly, she fitted in perfectly with Manmohan Desai's unerring sense of pulp in films like Dharamveer, Amar Akbar Anthony and Parvarish. Neetu Singh's famous songs | Song | Film | Singer | Bachhe man ke sachhe | Do Kaliyan | Lata Mangeshkar | Keh doon tumhe ya chup | Deewar | Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar | Tumko mere dil ne | Rafoo Chakkar | Kanchan, Shailendra | Ek main aur ek tu | Khel Khel Mein | Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar | Tere chehre se nazar nahin | Kabhi Kabhie | Lata Mangeshkar, Kishore Kumar | O tumse door reh ke | Adalat | Lata Mangeshkar, Mohammed Rafi | Hum banjaron ki baat | Dharamveer | Lata Mangeshkar, Kishore Kumar | Aaiye shauq se kahiye | Parvarish | Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar | Mile jo kadi kadi | Kasme Vaade | Asha Bhosle, Mohammed Rafi, Kishore Kumar | Jhootha kahin ka | Jhootha Kahin Ka | Asha Bhosle | Tere haathon mein | Jaani Dushman | Lata Mangeshkar, Mohammed Rafi | Meri dooron se aaye baraat | Kaala Patthar | Lata Mangeshkar | Jeena kya aji pyar bina | Dhan Daulat | Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar |
The spanner in the works proved to be the 1970s inclination for hero-dominated multistarrers which, for Neetu, translated into a paucity of roles that covered a spectrum of emotions. But the determined actress snatched moments of glory from the slim pickings offered to her. Yash Chopra gave her the author-backed role of an abandoned daughter seeking her mother's love in Kabhi Kabhie (1976). Neetu not only revelled in the romantic portions, projecting elation with customary ease but, surprisingly, also brought a lump to your throat with her tangibly expressed angst at being rejected by a loved one.
Neetu followed this with a class act as the suspicious wife in another Yash Chopra production, Doosra Aadmi (1977). Director Ramesh Talwar captured a slice of Rishi-Neetu's offscreen relationship in the film. In a scene where the couple breaks into a fight while in bed, he gave Rishi and Neetu a free hand to make changes at will. After viewing this sequence, it proves difficult to decide who tops whom in the natural acting sweepstakes. Truly, Rishi and Neetu were amongst the last in the dwindling breed of dream star pairs.
In Basu Chatterjee's Priyatama, about a married couple's struggle with the maladies of stressful city life, Neetu squeezed the role for all it was worth. In Yash Chopra's Kaala Patthar, she stole every scene she was in with her performance as the ebullient but emotionally vulnerable chudiwali who loses her man and has to perforce break her own bangles at the end. On the clout metre, Neetu was always in the top five but never in the top three. She would have nine or 10 releases a year in the late 1970s, almost always playing the sweet heartwarmer.
Neetu's prolonged adolescence onscreen was abruptly interrupted when beau Rishi Kapoor proposed marriage in 1979. Ironically, the early starter hung her boots much before her time had run out. Neetu Singh was only 21 when she retired.
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