National Awards for 2023: SRK, Rani Mukerji, Vikrant Massey win big, Hindi rules
As the recipient of the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke, Mohanlal was the only awardee who spoke.
PTI
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Stars conferred with the National Award for best acting in 2023, with Mohanlal. (PTI)
New Delhi, 23 Sept
President Droupadi Murmu on Tuesday conferred National
Awards for acting to Shah Rukh Khan, Vikrant Massey and Rani Mukerji while
Malayalam superstar Mohanlal was honoured with the Dadasaheb Phalke lifetime
achievement award in a ceremony that doffed its hat to mainstream popular
cinema.
Filmmakers Vidhu Vinod Chopra, who took home the best film
prize for ‘12th Fail’, and Karan Johar and Apoorva Mehra, who received the
award for ‘Rocky Aur Rani Kii Kahaani’ for best popular film providing
wholesome entertainment, completed the starry ensemble at the 71st National
Film Awards.
The best director award went to Sudipto Sen for ‘The Kerala
Story’.
The National Awards for 2023 were announced in August. It's
the first National Award for friends and frequent collaborators Shah Rukh and
Rani as well as for Vikrant. While Shah Rukh got it for his role in ‘Jawan’,
sharing his win with ‘12th Fail’ star Vikrant, Rani bagged it for ‘Mrs
Chatterjee vs Norway’.
There were whistles and loud cheers as Rani and Shah Rukh
went up to receive their awards at the traditionally sober ceremony. Mohanlal,
recognised for a remarkable career spanning five decades and more than 360
films, got a standing ovation from the crowd gathered at the city's Vigyan Bhawan.
‘I got to know that when Mohanlal's name was announced for
Dadasaheb Phalke, there was wave of happiness among people. It shows that he
has made a space for himself in countless people's heart,’ the president said
in her address after the award ceremony.
‘He has presented the softest of the soft and toughest of
the tough emotions quite naturally,’ Murmu added in a speech in which she
congratulated all the winners and touched on various issues, including the
plurarity of Indian cinema, Indian sensibility and women-centric films.
‘Now we see women in many places in cinema like actors and
producers. I have seen films about mothers, women uniting against societal
wrongs, and strong women who raise their voices. I salute these filmmakers on
behalf of sisters and daughters.
Please thank your crews for your success, they are behind
it,' she said.
Just like Indian literature is created in various Indian
languages, the president said, Indian cinema is advancing in so many languages,
dialects, regions and local environments.
Information and Broadcasting Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw spoke
of the Make in India initiative of the government.
‘Equipment used in the film industry such as big cameras...
should be made in India. We will be started a programme on this soon,’ he said.
The minister also stressed on the need to create a live concert economy with
proper policy support, uniform guidelines and easy permissions.
As the recipient of the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke,
Mohanlal was the only awardee who spoke.
He said he was deeply humbled to be the youngest recipient,
and ‘only the second ever’ from the state to be bestowed with this national
recognition.
‘This moment is not mine alone. It belongs to the entire
Malayalam cinema fraternity. I see this award as a collective tribute to our
industry, legacy, creativity and resilience,’ added the 65-year-old movie
legend known for landmark films such as ‘Iruvar’, ‘Vanaprastham’, ‘Pulimurugan’
and ‘Drishyam’.
Hindi cinema dominated the awards in the main categories.
Among those presented awards were Meghna Gulzar and Ronnie
Screwvala for the biopic on Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw ‘Sam Bahadur’, the best
film promoting national, social and environmental values.
Vaibhavi Merchant won the best choreography award for ‘Rocky
Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani’ song ‘Dhindhora Baaje’. Shilpa Rao was named best
female playback singer for ‘Jawan’ track ‘Chaleya’.
Sanya Malhotra-starrer ‘Kathal: A Jackfruit Mystery’ was
named the best Hindi film.
Regional movies were recognised in categories such as best
supporting actor and actress and in technical segments.
The best supporting actor trophy was shared by
Vijayaraghavan for Malayalam film ‘Pookalam’ and Muthupettai Somu Bhaskar for
Tamil film ‘Parking’.
The best supporting actress honour went to Urvashi for the
Malayalam movie ‘Ullozhokku’ and Janki Bodiwala for Gujarati title ‘Vash’. Both
movies won best films in their respective language segments.
Ashish Bende bagged the award for best debut film of a
director for Marathi film ‘Aatmapamphlet’.
The best film in AVGC (animation, visual effects, gaming
& comic) went to Telugu film ‘Hanu-Man’, which also won the best action
direction award.
‘Animal’, another Hindi blockbuster of 2023, won awards for
best sound design, best music director (background music) and a special mention
for re-recording mixer.
The National Award for best screenplay was shared between
Telugu movie ‘Baby’ and Tamil film ‘Parking’. ‘Baby’ singer PVN S Rohit was
recognised as the best male playback singer for the song Premisthunna.
The best music director for songs went to G V Prakash for
Tamil movie ‘Vaathi’. Kasarla Shyam was named best lyricist for Telugu movie ‘Balagam’
song 'Ooru Palleturu’.
Deepak Kingrani was named best dialogue writer for the Manoj
Bajpayee-fronted Hindi film ‘Sirf Ek Bandaa Kaafi Hai’. The best editing prize
went to Malayalam title ‘Pookkaalam’ and production design to another Malayalam
movie ‘2018’.
Sukriti Veni Bandreddi (‘Gandhi Tatha Chettu’), Kabir
Khandare (‘Gypsy’) and ‘Naal 2’ cast members Treesha Thosar, Shrinivas Pokale,
and Bhargav Jagtap were recognised in the best child artists category. ‘Naal 2’
was also named best children's film.
In the language film categories, the winners were -- ‘Rongatapu
1982’ (Assamese), ‘Deep Fridge’ (Bengali), ‘Parking’ (Tamil), ‘Kandeelu’
(Kannada), ‘Shamchi Aai’ (Marathi), ‘Puskara’ (Odia), ‘Godday Godday Chaa’
(Punjabi) and ‘Bhagavanth Kesari’ (Telugu).
The winners for various non-feature categories were also
announced with Hindi movie ‘Flowering Man’ being named the best film, while the
best documentary went to ‘God Vulture and Human’.
The best director award was bagged by Piyush Thakur for ‘The
First Film’ and the best script went to Chidananda Nayak's Kannada short film ‘Sunflowers
were the First Ones to Know’.
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