Agha Jani Kashmiri
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Agha_Jani_Kashmiri an entity of type: Thing
Syed Wajid Hussain Rizvi (Urdu: سيد واجد حسین رضوی, born 16 October 1908 – 27 March 1998), better known by his film screen name, Agha Jani Kashmiri (Urdu: آغاجانی کشمیری), was an Indian screenwriter, former actor and Urdu poet. He worked in Bollywood films, as a writer for a number of classics, from the first Indian cinematic blockbuster Kismet (1943), to the Palme d'Or nominated Mujhe Jeene Do (1963), to Naya Zamana (1971). He was known for writing his dialogues in literary Urdu, which eventually went out of vogue after Salim–Javed popularized a more colloquial style in the 1970s.
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Agha Jani Kashmiri
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Aghajani Kashmeri
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Aghajani Kashmeri
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Toronto, Ontario, Canada
xsd:date
1998-03-27
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Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
xsd:date
1908-10-16
xsd:integer
23319344
xsd:integer
1116448189
xsd:date
1908-10-16
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Syed Wajid Hussain Rizvi
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Zuhair Kashmeri and Sarwar Kashmeri
xsd:date
1998-03-27
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Screenwriter, Urdu Poet
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Khursheed Kashmeri
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1938
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Syed Wajid Hussain Rizvi (Urdu: سيد واجد حسین رضوی, born 16 October 1908 – 27 March 1998), better known by his film screen name, Agha Jani Kashmiri (Urdu: آغاجانی کشمیری), was an Indian screenwriter, former actor and Urdu poet. He worked in Bollywood films, as a writer for a number of classics, from the first Indian cinematic blockbuster Kismet (1943), to the Palme d'Or nominated Mujhe Jeene Do (1963), to Naya Zamana (1971). He was known for writing his dialogues in literary Urdu, which eventually went out of vogue after Salim–Javed popularized a more colloquial style in the 1970s.
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7777
xsd:gYear
1938
xsd:gYear
1938
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Syed Wajid Hussain Rizvi
xsd:gYear
1908
xsd:gYear
1998