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Filmfare Awards South

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TheFilmfare Awards South are annual awards that honour artistic and technical excellence in theTelugu cinema,Tamil cinema,Malayalam cinema andKannada cinema. They are presented byFilmfare magazine ofThe Times Group. When it was introduced in 1954, theFilmfare Awards initially only recognized achievements in theHindi cinema. In 1964 the awards were extended toTelugu,Tamil,Bengali andMarathi languages.[1]Malayalam cinema was included in the awards in 1967 andKannada cinema followed in 1970.

Filmfare Awards South
Current:69th Filmfare Awards South
The trophy presented to winners
Awarded forBest inSouth Indian cinema
Sponsored byMultiple
LocationIndia
CountryIndia
Presented byFilmfare
First award1963
Final award2024
Most winsA. R. Rahman,Kamal Haasan
Most nominationsShreya Ghoshal
WebsiteFilmfare Awards
Television/radio coverage
NetworkStar India (2000–19, 2024–present)
Zee Entertainment Enterprises (2022)
RelatedFilmfare Awards
Filmfare Awards East
Filmfare Marathi Awards

Each industry is given its own set of creative awards in annual ceremonies that have predominantly been held inChennai andHyderabad. Before 1976, the ceremony was held inMumbai along withHindi segment. From 1976, the southern region segment were separated from Hindi and moved to Chennai and later to Hyderabad.

History

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The awards were first given in 1953 and the ceremony used to be held along with BollywoodFilmfare Awards. The awards were being held in the Kalaivanar Arangam,Chennai in the early days.[2] Later the ceremony was shifted to the distinctive Music Academy.

In 1953, initially only the Hindi film industry was recognized.[3] In 1963 Awards extended to Best Picture in Telugu, Tamil, Bengali & Marathi, for the awards and from 1966 Malayalam films were added.[2] Kannada films became a part of the event in 1969.[2] In 1972 the awards were extended to Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Director categories in all south Indian films.[4] The categories for Special Awards were introduced in the 1980s and Best Music Direction in 1990s. Lifetime Achievement Award – South was first given in 1983. Award for Best Male debut and Female debut were given irregularly during the same period. Categories for Best Male Playback Singing and Best Female Playback Singing were introduced in 1997.

In 2002, awards for Best Supporting actors were given for Telugu and Tamil films. Since 2005, these awards were extended to the Malayalam and Kannada film industries. In the same year, additional categories such as Best Lyricist, Best Playback Singing were also introduced. Awards for Best Comedian were given from 2002 till 2006 and was discontinued later.

Statuette

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The statuette, depicting a woman whose arms uprise in a dance number with her fingers touching, is commonly referred to as "Black Lady" (or "The Lady in Black"). Originally designed by N.G. Pansare under the supervision ofThe Times of India's art director Walter Langhammer, it is generally made of bronze, its height is 46.5 cm and it weighs around five kg.[5]

To celebrate the 25th year of the awards, the statues were made insilver and to celebrate the 50th year the statues were made ingold.[6]

The Red Carpet

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The Red Carpet is a segment that takes place before the beginning of the actual ceremony.[7] This is where actors, actresses, producers, directors, singers, composers, and others that have contributed to Indian cinema are introduced. Hosts question the celebrities about upcoming performances and who they think deserves to take the Black Lady home.[8]

Superlatives

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SuperlativeArtistRecord
Most individual winsA. R. Rahman18 awards
Kamal Haasan
Most individual nominationsShreya Ghoshal48 nominations
Most direction awardsK. Viswanath8 awards
K. Balachander
Most music direction awardsA. R. Rahman18 awards
Most acting awards – MaleKamal Haasan17 awards
Most acting awards – Female Lakshmi8 awards
Most playback singer awards – MaleKarthik6 awards
Most playback singer awards – FemaleK. S. Chithra10 awards
Shreya Ghoshal

Records

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Most Awards for a film

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No. of AwardsFilm
9Nuvvostanante Nenoddantana
RRR
8Anniyan
Baahubali 2: The Conclusion
Soorarai Pottru

Most Awards for Best Director

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
8K. Viswanath 
K. Balachander 

Most Awards for Best Actor

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
17Kamal Haasan
 

Most Awards for Best Actress

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
7Lakshmi 

Most Awards for Best Actor – Critics

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
3Dulquer Salmaan 

Most Awards for Best Actress – Critics

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
2Nithya Menon 
Sruthi Hariharan 
Sai Pallavi 
Jyothika 
Aishwarya Rajesh 

Most Awards for Best Supporting Actor

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
4Jagapathi Babu 
Achyuth Kumar

Most Awards for Best Supporting Actress

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
5Saranya Ponvannan 

Most Awards for Music Direction

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
18A. R. Rahman 

Most Awards for Lyricist

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
6Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry 

Most Awards for Male Singer

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
6Karthik 

Most Awards for Female Singer

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
10K. S. Chithra 
Shreya Ghoshal 

Most Awards for Cinematographer

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
4K. K. Senthil Kumar 

Most Awards for Choreographer

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
6Prem Rakshith

Most Awards for Production Designer

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No. of AwardsRecipientImage
4Sabu Cyril 

Award Categories

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Creative awards

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Technical awards

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Special awards

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Retired awards

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Ceremonies

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References

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  1. ^"11th Annual South Filmfare Awards Winners". 6 August 2024.
  2. ^abc"Magadheera,Nadodigal,Josh bag top honours at the Filmfare awards".The Times of India. Archived fromthe original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved7 July 2011.
  3. ^"1st National Film Awards"(PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals.Archived(PDF) from the original on 25 July 2020. Retrieved2 September 2020.
  4. ^Film world, Volume 9. T.M. Ramachandran. 1973.
  5. ^Pinto, Jerry (April 1997)."Tangy titbits from the Filmfare past".Filmfare. Archived fromthe original on 5 July 1998. Retrieved13 January 2012.
  6. ^"A golden glow for Filmfare".The Hindu.PTI. 28 January 2005. Archived fromthe original on 2 March 2005. Retrieved26 January 2011.
  7. ^"66th Yamaha Fascino Filmfare Awards South 2019: These ladies scorched the red carpet in their stunning ensembles – Times of India".The Times of India. 23 December 2019. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  8. ^"66th Yamaha Fascino Filmfare Awards South: Ravishing Divas on the Red Carpet (PHOTOS)".The Times of India. 21 December 2019. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  9. ^"Winners: 64th Jio Filmfare Awards 2017 (South)". Times of India. 19 June 2017.
  10. ^"Winners of the 63rd Britannia Filmfare Awards (South)".filmfare.com. Archived fromthe original on 2 July 2016.
  11. ^"Filmfare awards for South India – Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam & Kannada – Telugu Cinema".www.idlebrain.com.
  12. ^"38th Annual Filmfare Awards Winners South Tamil". 11 July 2021.
  13. ^https://archive.org/download/34th-annual-filmfare-south-ceremony/34th%20Annual%20Filmfare%20south%20Ceremony.jpg[bare URL image file]
  14. ^https://archive.org/download/34th-filmfare-south-winners/34th%20Filmfare%20South%20winners.jpg[bare URL image file]
  15. ^Archived atGhostarchive and theWayback Machine:"Rare Video of 27th Annual Film Fare Awards – 1980 (Voice Over – Radhika Sarathkumar)".YouTube. 23 February 2014.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toFilmfare Awards South.

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