Litreray genius Wajahat Mirza was a dialogue writer, screenwriter, story writer, and film director, best known for his work in films like Shaheed (1948), Shikast (1953), the Academy Award nominee, Mother India (1957), Yahudi (1958), Kohinoor (1960), Mughal-e-Azam (1960), Gunga Jamuna (1961), Leader (1964), Love and God (1986), and many more.
Wajahat Mirza was born as “Mirza Vajahat Hussain Quizilbash Changezi” on April 20, 1908, in Sitapur, United Provinces (Uttar Pradesh), in the Zamindaar family, where taking up a job for others was a big taboo, which Mirza broke as soon as he left the Government Jubilee Inter College in Lucknow.
On the pretext of getting a higher education, he moved to Calcutta and joined the world of cinema as an assistant to cinematographer Krishan Gopal. Later, he became an assistant to the filmmaker “Debki Bose.”
In 1933, Wajahat Mirza moved his base to Bombay and wrote the dialogue for Yahudi Ki Ladki, produced by New Theatres. After some time, he met with legendary filmmaker Mehboob Khan and started working with him on films like “Hum Tum Aur Woh (1938),” “Ek Hi Raasta (1939), “Aurat” (1940),” “Behen (1941),” and “Roti(1942).”
In 1942, Mirza directed his first film, “Swaminath,” followed by “Jawani (1942),” “Shahenshah Babar (1944),” “Prabhu Ka Ghar (1945),” and “Nishana (1950).” He also wrote successful films like “Zeenat (1945)” starring Noor Jehan, “Shaheed (1948)” starring Dilip Kumar and Kamini Kaushal, “Chilman (1949),” “Shikast (1953),” and “Aawaz (1956).”
In the mid-50s, Mehboob Khan started working on a remake of his earlier film “Aurat,” and he requested Mirza to write it. The film was “Mother India (1957),” which became a huge blockbuster and the first Indian film to receive an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film. It lost to “The Nights of Cabiria” from Italy by just one vote.
After Mother India comes the magnum opus of K. Asif, “Mughal-e-Azam” (1960), which has the exact opposite requirements. The setting was historical, with dialogue in chaste, literary Urdu. People thought that the heavy language of the film would hamper its box office, but in reality, the language gave the film its authenticity and believability. The dilauge became so famous that today people easily quote it in everyday situations.
For his exceptional dialogue writing in “Mughal-e-Azam,” he and other writers “Aman, Kamal Amrohi, and Ehsan Rizvi” received the Filmfare Best Dialogue Award in 1960. The following year, he won the same award for Dilip Kumar’s “Ganga Jamuna,” which was directed by Nitin Bose and also starred Vyjayanthimala and Nasir Khan. Ganga Jamuna’s dialogues were unique for their language, which was the theth “Awadhi dialect,” the first of its kind in Hindi cinema.
Mirza wrote for a few more films like “Yahudi” (1958), “Kohinoor” (1960), “Leader” (1964), “Palki” (1967), Yeh Gulistan Hamara (1972), Ganga Ki Saugandh (1978), and K. Asif’s delayed film “Love and God” (1986).
Wajahat Mirza married Shamsunissa, with whom he had two children: a boy and a girl. He also had three younger siblings named Asghar, Mehdi, and Murtaza. Murtaza migrated to Pakistan as a young man and worked in the Pakistani film industry.
Wajahat Mirza died on August 4, 1990, aged 82. his legacy is not just confined to his awards and nominations. He inspired generations of writers and filmmakers, influencing the narrative style and dialogue delivery that became a hallmark of Hindi cinema. His contributions have been acknowledged by contemporaries and successors alike, cementing his status as a stalwart of the industry.
Courtesy : Tasweer Mahal – All About Cinema

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