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MUMBAI: Bollywood dominated the 54th National
Film Awards with as many as 13 awards.
Rajkumar Hirani's Lage Raho Munnabhai
swept the National Film Awards for 2006, bagging
four prizes. The Sanjay Dutt starrer which brought
to fore 'Gandhigiri' by invoking the values
of Mahatma Gandhi, won the best popular film
"for providing wholesome entertainment",
best screenplay, best lyrics.
Lage
Raho also brought the best supporting actor
award to Dilip Prabhavalkar. Konkona Sen Sharma
was declared the best supporting actress for
Omkara.
The
best feature film award, however, went to Malayalam
film Pulijanmam. Malayalam and Bengali
feature films, in fact, got five awards each.
Three
awards each went to films in Kannada, Telugu,
and Tamil.
While
the best feature film award in Hindi was given
away by Khosla Ka Ghosla, the best feature
film award in English went to Quest.
While
Bengali film Podokkhep brought veteran
actor Soumitra Chatterjee award for the best
actor, Tamil cinema's Priyamani was honoured
with the best actress title for Paruthi Veeran.
The
award for the best animation feature film, introduced
this year, went to the Telugu film Kittu,
directed by B Satya and animated by Kodavanti
Bharaj. Another award introduced this year,
best make-up artist, went to Anil Motiram Palande
for Traffic Signal.
Additionally,
Madhur Bhandarkar was named the best director
for Traffic Signal. Anthony Joseph and
Aditya Chopra received the best producer award
for Eakantham and Kabul Express respectively.
Divya
Chahadkar was given the best child artist award
for Antarnad, a Konkani film. Also, the
best children's film went to Kannada film Care
of Footpath, made by nine-year old Kishan
S and produced by his mother Shylaja Shrikanth.
All
the four awards for Punjabi films went to the
same film Waris Shah Ishq da Waaris,
directed by the late Manoj Punj and starring
pop star Gurdas Mann.
The
best male playback singer was Gurdas Mann for
the same. The best female playback singer was
Aarti Anklekar Tikekar for Antarnad,
which bagged all the four prizes for Konkani.
The
best non-feature award went to Bishar Blues
by Amitabh Chakraborty. The film also received
the audiograohy (Partha Barman) and editing
(Amitabh Chakraborty and Amit Debnath) awards.
The
first non-feature film of a director went to
Andhiyum by Jacob Varghese. The renowned
Aribam Syam Sarma, who has won numerous awards,
shared the best biographical film award for
Guru Laimayum Thambalnagoubi Devi with
Minukku by M R Rajan.
The
children's film Nokpokliba, directed
and animated by Meren Imchen, won the best animation
award for non-feature film while the best short
fiction film award went to Ek Aadesh
Command for Choti by Ramesh Asher who also
won the best director award.
Also,
the Indira Gandhi award for best first film
was taken home by Malayalam film Eakantham
and Hindi film Kabul Express.
The
best book on cinema award was given to Helen:
the life and times of an H-Bomb by Jerry
Pinto, published by Penguin Books.
Assamese,
Marathi, Oriya, English and Tulu films won one
award each.
The
feature film jury was chaired by renowned filmmaker
Buddhadeb Dasgupta with 13 other members, while
the non-feature jury was headed by K Bikram
Singh with five other members. The book jury,
with three members, was headed by Madhu Jain.
The
decision of the awards had been delayed because
of a court case by a member of the jury of the
53rd National Film Awards for 2005, but the
High Court had vacated the stay last year. Directorate
of Film Festival sources told indiantelevision.com
that the selection of awards for 2007 were expected
to be set in motion within the next few days,
and the award-ceremony would be fixed depending
upon the convenience of the President.
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