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Other namesRamanand ChopraRamanand BediRamanand KashmiriOccupationFilm producer, director, writerSpouse(s)LeelavatiChildrenSarita SagarRamanand Sagar (29 December 1917 – 12 December 2005) (born Chandramauli Chopra) was an Indian film director. He is most famous for making the television series, a 78-part TV adaptation of the ancient Hindu epic of the same name, starring as and as.
This TV serial was then widely watched and liked across the country. The Government of India awarded him the civilian honour of in 2000.
Contents.Early life Ramanand Sagar was born at Asal Guru Ke near. His great-grandfather, Lala Shankar Das Chopra, migrated from Peshawar to Kashmir. Ramanand was adopted by his maternal grandmother, who had no sons, at which point his name was changed from 'Chandramouli Chopra' to 'Ramanand Sagar'. After Sagar's biological mother died, his father remarried and had further children with her, including, who is thus Sagar's half-brother, albeit thirty-five years younger than him, and younger than even his children.
Sagar worked as a peon, truck cleaner, soap vendor, goldsmith apprentice etc. During the day and studied for his degree at night.He was a gold medalist in Sanskrit and Persian from the in 1942. He was also editor of newspaper Daily Milap. He wrote many short stories, novels, poems, plays, etc.
Under names like 'Ramanand Chopra', 'Ramanand Bedi' and 'Ramanand Kashmiri'. In 1942 when he caught he wrote a subjective column 'Diary of a T.B. Patient' about his fight. The column was published in series in the magazine Adab-e-Mashriq in Lahore. Career In 1932, Sagar started his film career as a in a silent film, Raiders of the Rail Road.
He then shifted to Bombay in 1949 after.In the 1940s, Ramanand Sagar started out as an assistant stage manager in of. Also, directed a few plays under the fatherly guidance of Kapoor.Along with other films that Sagar himself directed, he wrote the story and screenplay for 's superhit. He founded the film and television production company known as a.k.a. Sagar Arts in 1950. He produced and directed many films. He won the 1960 for which was directed by and starred, and in lead roles. His successful directorial ventures in 1960s included Ghunghat and Arzoo.
In 1964 he directed the classic starring,. In 1968 he won the for. Ankhen was a spy-thriller starring. It was amongst the Top 10 Hindi films of the 1960s.
His films like in early 70s were not successful like Geet and Laalkar. In 1976, he directed Charas starring Dharmendra and Hema Malini which was among top grosses of that year. In 1979, his directorial venture starring, and was successful commercially. However his next venture Armaan and Hum Tere Aashiq Hai were flops. In 1982, his film Bhagavat starring Dharmendra, Hema Malini and Reena Roy turned out to be huge hit.In 1985 Sagar turned towards television. His Sagar Arts began producing serials based on Indian history. His aired its first episode on 25 January 1987.
His next mythological tele-serials were. He made fantasy dramas like and.Based on his experiences of Indo-Pak partition, Sagar published a - book Aur Insaan Mar Gaya (English: And Humanity Died) in 1948.The government of India honoured Sagar with the in 2000. Retrieved 13 September 2017. (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Retrieved 13 September 2017. ^.
Archived from on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
Archived from on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
![Serial Serial](/uploads/1/2/7/3/127348646/384306530.jpg)
Retrieved 13 September 2017. Anuj Kumar (25 July 2012). Retrieved 7 May 2013. Archived from on 3 January 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2011. Lutgendorf, Philip (1991). The Life of a Text: Performing the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas.
Berkeley, California: University of California Press. Archived from on 19 February 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2011.External Links. on.
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