Hamideh Kheirabadi

Hamideh Kheirabadi (Persian: حمیده خیر آبادی; December 21, 1924 April 19, 2010) was a celebrated Iranian film and theatre actress. She played in more than 200[1] feature films and in over 20 television series. Inside Iran, she is affectionately referred to as Nādereh[2] and Mother of the Iranian Cinema.[3][4][5]

Hamideh Kheirabadi
حمیده خیر آبادی
Born
Hamideh Kheirabadi

(1924-12-21)December 21, 1924
DiedApril 19, 2010(2010-04-19) (aged 85)
Tehran, Iran
Resting placeBehesht-e Zahra Cemetery
OccupationActress
Height1.54 m (5 ft 1 in)
Spouse(s)Ali Ghasemi
ChildrenSoraya Ghasemi

Life and career

Hamideh Kheirabadi was born in Rasht, the capital of the Gilan Province, Iran. Whereas she married at the very young age of 13, she continued with her studies and completed her secondary-school education. In the middle of the 1950s she divorced from her husband and lived thereafter with her daughter, Soraya Ghasemi (born 1940). Kheirabadi's acting career began in 1947 with theatre.

Hamideh Kheirabadi worked with a large number of celebrated Iranian film directors, such as Ali Hatami, Dariush Mehrjoui, Masud Kimiai, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Sirus Alvand, Sirus Moghaddam and Tahmineh Milani. She was thrice nominated for the Crystal Simorgh Prize. During the second Iranian Celebration of Screen Actors, held on 5 January 2008 at Tehran's Arikeh-ye Iranian Hall, Kheirābādi was honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award.[6]

Kheirabadi with her daughter, Soraya and her granddaughter, Parmida

It has been reported that[7] plans had been made that after six years of absence from acting, Kheirabadi would appear before camera on 23 April 2010, playing the role of herself in a series named The Land of the People (Zamin-e Ensān-hā), directed by Abolhasan Dāvoudi.

Hamideh Kheirābādi died at her home in Tehran on Monday night, 19 April 2010, at the age of 86. The cause for her death has been given as brain stroke.[8] Ms Kheirābādi was buried in Section 66 of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery in Tehran, on Tuesday 20 April 2010.[9][10]

Filmography

A very extensive filmography of Hamideh Kheirabadi can be found on the Gilaki Wikipedia.[11] At present a less extensive filmography of Hamideh Kheirābādi is available at the Persian Wikipedia.[12] What follows is only a selected filmography.

Feature films

  • Amir Arsalān-e Nāmdār (Amir Arsalān the Great), 1955, directed by Shāpour Yāsami.
  • Almās 33 (Diamond 33), 1967, directed by Dariush Mehrjoui
  • Reza Motorcyclist (Reza Motori) (1970) - directed by Masoud Kimiai
  • Wood Pigeon (Toghi) (1970) - directed by Ali Hatami
  • Bābā Shamal (Bābā Shamal), 1971, directed by Ali Hatami
  • Mehdi in Black and Hot Mini Pants, 1972
  • Shab-e Aftābi (The Sunny Night), 1977, directed by Sirus Alvand
  • Ejāreh-neshin-hā (The Tenants), 1986, directed by Dariush Mehrjoui
  • Mādar (Mother), 1989, directed by Ali Hatami
  • Bach'che'hā-ye Talāgh (The Children of Divorce), 1989, directed by Tahmineh Milani
  • Bānu (The Lady), 1991, directed by Dariush Mehrjoui
  • Honarpisheh (The Actor), 1992, directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
  • Soroud-e Tavallod (The Birthday-song), 2004, directed by Ali Ghavitan

Television series

  • Pedar Salar (The Paternalist), 1993, directed by Akbar Khājavi
  • Khaneh Sabz (The Green Home), 1996, directed by Bijan Birang and Masoud Rassām
gollark: Oh no.
gollark: You know, there was something like a 1/5 chance of heavpoot succeeding in his roll to destroy the sun, I think.
gollark: But, canonically, you could have an "electric car" powered by a magic field generator and some electricity.
gollark: And generators are basically the same principle as electric motors.
gollark: But electric motors are already something like 80% efficient; does magic just ignore conservation law?

See also

  • Iranian Cinema

References

  1. According to a this report by Fars News Agency, in Persian, dated Monday 19 April 2010, this number should be 150.
  2. Nādereh appears to have been the artistic name of Ms Kheirābādi before the Iranian Revolution of 1979. Aside from this, and importantly, Nādereh is the feminine form of the noun nāder, meaning rare, exceptional, inimitable, exquisite and precious.
  3. Hamideh Kheirābādi, the valued actress of cinema died yesterday night, in Persian, Official Site of The House of Cinema (Khāneh-ye Cinamā), 20 April 2010: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-04-29. Retrieved 2010-04-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  4. A mother with an unforgettable smile, in Persian, Mehr News Agency, 20 April 2010: .
  5. Hamideh Kheirabadi, the "Nādereh" of the Iranian cinema and television, died, in Persian, Radio Farda, 20 April 2010: .
  6. Mother of Iranian cinema Hamideh Kheirabadi dies at 86, Tehran Times, Wednesday 21 April 2010: .
  7. The sadness as intensive as the ingenious smiles of the mother of the Iranian cinema, in Persian, Khabar Online, Tuesday 20 April 2010: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-04-22. Retrieved 2010-04-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  8. The sadness as intensive as the ingenious smiles of the mother of the Iranian cinema, ibid.
  9. Section 66 is not The Artists' Section of Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery where normally artists are buried. According to the Tehran Times (Wednesday, 21 April 2010), this was in conformity with Kheirabadi's own wish to be buried next to the graves of her departed family members. See: Mother of Iranian cinema Hamideh Kheirabadi dies at 86, Tehran Times, ibid.
  10. "Mother of Iranian cinema Kheirabadi dies at 86". Tehran Times. April 20, 2010. Retrieved October 28, 2017.
  11. Hamideh Kheirābādi, Gilaki Wikipedia.
  12. Hamideh Kheirābādi, Persian Wikipedia.
  • Filmography at irancinema.ir
  • Hamideh Kheirabadi, IMDb: The Internet Movie Database.
  • Mother of Iranian cinema Hamideh Kheirabadi dies at 86, Tehran Times, Wednesday 21 April 2010: .
  • Some photographs, published by Iranian Students' News Agency, ISNA, taken in Behesht-e Zahra cemetery on Tuesday 20 April 2010: (1), (2), (3). Photograph (1) shows the graveside immediately after the burial. Photograph (2) shows Sorayyā Ghāsemi (r) in conversation with Ali Nasirian (l); the person in the middle is not identified. Photograph (3) shows the graveside of Ms Hamideh Kheirābādi, with Ali Nasirian sitting on the right.
  • A photo-reportage, by Fars News Agency, of the memorial service of Ms Hamideh Kheirābādi, held in Vali-yye Asr Mosque in Tehran, on Thursday 22 April 2010: .
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