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Gulzar (born Sampooran Singh Kalra; 18 August 1934) is an Indian Urdu poet, lyricist, author, screenwriter, and film director known for his works in Hindi cinema. [1] He is regarded as one of greatest Urdu poets of this era. [2]
Selected Poems: Gulzar (Penguin) a translated collection of the poems of Gulzar into English, one of India's best-known poets, came out in April 2008. Neglected Poems, Pavan K. Varma's second volume of the English translations of Gulzar's poems was launched at the Jaipur Literary Festival in January 2012.
on YouTube "Bhuj Gaya Tha Kyu Diya" on YouTube Gulzar in conversation with Tagore is a 2016 album of Tagore 's 6 poems and 1 song translated into Hindi by Gulzar with music by Shantanu Moitra and sung by Shaan (singer) and Shreya Ghoshal .
Triveni is a form of Hindi/Urdu poetry initiated by the poet Gulzar. Unlike sher, a triveni consists of three "hemistichs" (misras). The first two are complete in themselves but the addition of the third misra gives a new dimension. Rupa & Co. has published his poetry book Triveni.
Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana (1556 – 1627) Wrote poetry primarily in Persian, but also in Hindavi: Ali Adil Shah I: 1558–1579: Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah (1565–1611) Kulliyat-e-Quli Qutub Shah wrote poetry primarily in Persian, but also in Hindavi: Ibrahim Adil Shah II: 1571 – 12 September 1627: Chandar Bhan Brahman: unknown – 1662
Gulzar's (pictured in 2008) first meeting with Nasreen Munni Kabir occurred in 1986, during the production of the latter's television documentary Movie Mahal. In 1986, during the production of Movie Mahal (a 49-part television documentary on Bollywood aired on Channel 4), Kabir asked for journalist Khalid Mohamed's help to invite people with "significant" contributions to Bollywood.
The teaser of the single was released on Shemaroo Entertainments official YouTube channel on 25 December 2013 [7] [8] with the full video being release on the next day. [6] The song, the fifth single from the soundtrack succeeding Hamari Atariya Pe , Dil Ka Mizaah Ishqiya , Jagaave Saari Raina and Zabaan Jale Hai was released on the digital ...
Gulzar had travelled extensively in Rajasthan (around 5,000 kilometers) looking for shooting locations. [11] To make Kapadia's character more truthful to its ghost-like nature, Gulzar forbade Kapadia to blink during filming in order to capture an "endless, fixed gaze" that would give her "a feeling of being surreal". [12]