J. C. Daniel Award

Kerala's highest cinema award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The J. C. Daniel Award is the highest award in Malayalam cinema, established by the Government of Kerala, India. It is presented annually by the Kerala State Chalachitra Academy, a non-profit autonomous institution operating under the Department of Cultural Affairs, Kerala. Instituted in 1992, the award recognizes individuals for their "outstanding contributions to Malayalam cinema".[1][2] Recipients are selected by a jury suggested by the Kerala State Chalachitra Academy and appointed by the Department of Cultural Affairs.[1][3] As of 2021, the honourees receive a statuette, a citation, and a cash prize of 500,000 (US$5,300). They are honoured at the Kerala State Film Awards ceremony.[4]

LocationKerala
CountryIndia
Quick facts Awarded for, Location ...
J. C. Daniel Award
Awarded forLifetime achievement
LocationKerala
CountryIndia
Presented byKerala State Chalachitra Academy
Reward500,000 (US$5,300)
First award1992
Final award2024
Recent winnerSarada
Highlights
Total awarded31
First winnerT. E. Vasudevan
Close

The Government of Kerala created the award to commemorate the contribution of Indian filmmaker J. C. Daniel, who is often regarded as the "father of Malayalam cinema".[5] The J. C. Daniel Award was managed by the Department of Cultural Affairs until 1997. In 1998, the Government of Kerala constituted the Kerala State Chalachitra Academy, and since that year, the Academy has hosted the award.[1][6] A cash prize of 50,000 (US$530) was granted with the award until 2002.[7] In 2003, the prize money was doubled and, as part of a technical correction to update it, no award was presented that year. Actor Madhu was the first recipient of the award with the increased monetary prize of 100,000 (US$1,100) in 2004.[8][9] Since 2016, the cash prize is 500,000 (US$5,300).[10]

Since its inception up to 2023, the J. C. Daniel Award has been bestowed on 31 individuals. The award was first presented to film distributor and producer T. E. Vasudevan in 1992. Actress Aranmula Ponnamma was the first woman to receive the honour, in 2005. The 2011 recipient, actor Jose Prakash, died before the award ceremony. His son accepted the award on his behalf. The most recent winner is actress Sarada in 2024.

Recipients

More information Year, Image ...
List of award recipients
Year Image Recipient Field of work Ref.
1992   T. E. Vasudevan Distributor, producer [11]
1993   Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair Actor, director, screenwriter, lyricist [12]
1994   P. Bhaskaran Lyricist, director [13]
1995   Abhayadev Lyricist [14]
1996   A. Vincent Cinematographer, director [15]
1997 K. Raghavan Composer [16]
1998 V. Dakshinamoorthy Composer [17]
1999 G. Devarajan Composer [12]
2000   M. Krishnan Nair Director [18]
2001   P. N. Menon Director, art director [7]
2002 K. J. Yesudas Playback singer [9]
2003 No award [19]
2004 Madhu Actor, director, producer [8]
2005   Aranmula Ponnamma Actress [20]
2006   Mankada Ravi Varma Cinematographer, director [21]
2007   P. Ramdas Director [22]
2008 K. Ravindran Nair Producer [23]
2009   K. S. Sethumadhavan Director, screenwriter [24]
2010   Navodaya Appachan Producer, director [25]
2011   Jose Prakash[a] Actor, singer [28]
2012   J. Sasikumar Director [29]
2013 M. T. Vasudevan Nair Screenwriter, director [30]
2014 I. V. Sasi Director, screenwriter [31]
2015 K. G. George Screenwriter, director [32]
2016 Adoor Gopalakrishnan Director, screenwriter [10]
2017 Sreekumaran Thampi Lyricist, director, screenwriter, producer [33]
2018 Sheela Actress, director, screenwriter [34]
2019 Hariharan Director [35]
2020 P. Jayachandran Singer [36]
2021
K. P. Kumaran Director [37]
2022 T. V. Chandran Director [38]
2023 Shaji N. Karun Cinematographer, director [39]
2024   Sarada Actress [40]
Close

See also

Footnotes

  1. Jose Prakash died one day after the award announcement, hence he could not receive the honour.[26] His son accepted the award on his behalf.[27]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI