Wajida Tabassum

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wajida_Tabassum an entity of type: Thing

Wajida Tabassum (16 March 1935 – 7 December 2011) was an Indian writer of fiction, verses and songs in the Urdu language. She wrote 27 books. Some of her stories have been made into movies and Indian television serials. Her controversial 1975 story titled "Utran" (translated as 'Cast-Offs' or 'Hand-Me Downs') was made into a popular soap opera on Indian television in 1988. "Utran" was reprinted in English translation as part of an anthology of 20 short stories titled Such Devoted Sisters in 1994, and from there was made into a movie in 1996 under the title Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love, with a script by Mira Nair and . rdf:langString
rdf:langString Wajida Tabassum
rdf:langString Wajida Tabassum
rdf:langString Wajida Tabassum
rdf:langString Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
xsd:date 2011-12-07
xsd:date 1935-03-16
xsd:integer 50107170
xsd:integer 1065108577
xsd:date 1935-03-16
xsd:date 2011-12-07
rdf:langString Indian
rdf:langString Writer
rdf:langString Wajida Tabassum (16 March 1935 – 7 December 2011) was an Indian writer of fiction, verses and songs in the Urdu language. She wrote 27 books. Some of her stories have been made into movies and Indian television serials. Her controversial 1975 story titled "Utran" (translated as 'Cast-Offs' or 'Hand-Me Downs') was made into a popular soap opera on Indian television in 1988. "Utran" was reprinted in English translation as part of an anthology of 20 short stories titled Such Devoted Sisters in 1994, and from there was made into a movie in 1996 under the title Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love, with a script by Mira Nair and .
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6512

data from the linked data cloud