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          New Delhi, May 7 (IANS) The always tired woman in white slaving   over a sewing machine, the sacrificing one wracked by coughs but lifting load   after load at a construction site or the doughty worker who won't stop at even   murder to save her child. The mother figure was for long an enduring cornerstone   of Hindi cinema, but not any more. |  
  
      
	  
	  
	  From Nargis and Nirupa Roy to Rakhee and Jaya Bachchan, actors down the ages   have played powerful mother roles in hallmark films. Can anyone forget cop   Shashi Kapoor's famous "Mere pas maa hai" to his smuggler brother Amitabh   Bachchan in "Deewar", where Nirupa Roy as mother was the pivot the film revolved   around.
 The most iconic film till date is perhaps Nargis in Mehboob   Khan's "Mother India" (1957) as the fiery single mother who brings up two sons   in the face of near impossible odds and doesn't hesitate to fire a bullet when   she finds the younger one, now grown up, going astray.
 
 In the 1950s and   1960s, Leela Chitnis and Durga Khote were amongst those who reigned. In the   1970s, actors like Nirupa Roy and Kamini Kaushal took on the mantle, their   characters being central to the plot. In the 1980s and 1990s, Raakhee and   Waheeda Rehman evolved from lead actors to mother roles. A memorable film from   that era is "Hazaar Chaurasi Ki Maa" (1998) that saw Jaya Bachchan in the   lead.
 
 "Maa" (1952), "Chiraag Kahan Roshni Kahan" (1959), "Aradhana"   (1961), "Gharana" (1961) and "Beta" (1992) are amongst the mother-centric films   that became hits.
 
 Now, in most films, mothers have become marginalised,   mere props instead of propelling the story on.
 
 Filmmaker Onir says that   with the advent of nuclear families, the importance of the mother as an   individual has decreased.
 
 "The viewership pattern in our country is very   democratic. There is a lack of women-centric or mother- centric films in   specific because not many people want to watch such films. The trend of catering   films on mothers has seen a drastic dip," Onir told IANS.
 
 Divya Dutta,   who played the role of a surrogate mother in last year's "Life Express", feels   the glamour quotient has taken over the industry.
 
 "Such films are not   being made now. The cliched mother syndrome has died. Due to the high glamour   quotient in the industry, actresses today are hesitant to play mothers on   screen. They need a lot of guts to do it," Divya told IANS.
 
 Film critic   Omar Qureshi feels with the small screen flooded with family- oriented shows,   filmmakers are experimenting with other important subjects.
 
 "The films   that were made at that time (yesteryear era) had family values as the focus. But   today all of it can be seen on the small screen. That's why there is a shift and   filmmakers are moving away and trying new subjects on the big screen," said   Qureshi.
 
 He further added that filmmakers are hesitant to make   mother-centric films because they fail to set the cash register   ringing.
 
 "Recently, women-centric films have not done very well on the   box-office; so filmmakers are shying away. But I am sure if they get a good   subject they would definitely make it because the importance of a mother can   never die," said Qureshi.
 
 Onir feels the film industry has much more to   offer to men.
 
 "The roles are demanding and strong in comparison to women,   who are somehow sidelined in the script. There are very few filmmakers and very   few films that try to work it out around mothers."
 
 Amongst the newest lot   of films where the mother-child relationship is in focus is "Paa" (2009), where   Vidya Balan is seen as a mother to a progeric child, played by Amitabh Bachchan.   In some way, Supriya Pathak's sympathetic portrayal of a mother trying to   understand and keep up with her wayward son Ranbir Kapoor in "Wake Up Sid"   (2008) also attempts to explore the relationship.
 
 A breakaway film was   "Kya Kehna" (2000) in which Preity Zinta is the young unwed mother who takes on   society to protect her unborn child.
 
 These are films that have tried to   break the stereotype, instead of conforming to the traditional role that our   cinema has given mothers.
 
 
      
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