K. L. V. Vasantha

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Born1923 (1923)
Kundrathur, Ramanathapuram district, Tamil Nadu
Died2008 (aged 8485)
Chennai, Tamil Nadu
CitizenshipIndian
OccupationsActress, singer, dancer
K. L. V. Vasantha
A young Indian woman wearing jewelry on her head, ears, and neck, and a dark sari
Vasantha, from a 1945 newspaper advertisement for Subadra
Born1923 (1923)
Kundrathur, Ramanathapuram district, Tamil Nadu
Died2008 (aged 8485)
Chennai, Tamil Nadu
CitizenshipIndian
OccupationsActress, singer, dancer
Spouse(s)K. K. Vasu
T. R. Sundaram

Kundrathur L. V. Vasantha (1923–2008) was an Indian actress, singer and dancer who worked mainly in Tamil language films.[1]

Vasantha was born in 1923 in Kundrathur, then based in Ramanathapuram district. As a young girl, she was actively involved in singing and dancing. According to actress S. D. Subbulakshmi, Vasantha played in a minor, uncredited role in Pavalakkodi (1934). After becoming a teenager, she appeared in B. N. Rao's Rambaiyin Kaathal (1939), a box-office success that catapulted Vasantha into stardom. Rao later cast her in Bhooloka Ramba (1940), also a hit.[1]

When Gemini Studios opened in 1941, Vasantha portrayed the lead female character in its debut production Madanakamarajan, financed by Gemini founder S. S. Vasan. The success of this film further enhanced Vasantha's reputation. When Vasan planned Chandralekha in 1943, he announced that Vasantha would star as the lead female, but she was eventually replaced by T. R. Rajakumari. Vasantha shifted to Salem where she joined T. R. Sundaram's Modern Theatres, and played the female lead in many of Sundaram's films such as Rajarajeswari (1944), Burma Rani (1945) and Sulochana (1947).[1]

Vasantha was already an accomplished dancer and singer, so she did both in most of her films. Her dance-drama sequence in Madanakamarajan became notable. In 1946, she played the lead roles in two Modern Theatres films: the Wahab Kashmiri-directed Chitra which was not successful, and Subhadhra. After acting in a few more films, she returned to Chennai (then known as Madras) and lived there till her death in 2008.[1]

Personal life

Partial filmography

References

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