Well
yes, actually, we do need to say more about Fearless Nadia, one of—if not the—most badass stuntwomen in Bollywood
history. Born Mary Evans in Perth, Australia, she moved to India in 1913 at the
age of 5, and learned how to ride a horse on the
North-West Frontier Province (modern-day Pakistan). She would go on to study
ballet, and later toured with the Zarko Circus. When a fortune-teller told her
that a robust career was in store for her on the condition she change her name
to something that began with an “N,” Evans promptly baptized herself “Nadia.”
First
cast in a film by the prominent filmmaker and founder of Wadia Movietone, J.B.H
Wadia, Nadia received rave reviews and with her multitude of skills soon became
Movietone’s leading stuntwoman, reaching the height of her fame in 1935 with
the iconic film Hunterwali, or “Lady of the Whip,” a roll that turned
her into a somewhat curious populist symbol in pre-independence India—the
white, blond-haired, blue-eyed woman rallying the Indian people against British
imperialism. She would go on to star in many a J.B.H. production, including Diamond Queen, where she was joined by
several notable actors, a “stunt car” named “Rolls-Royce ki Beti” (“Daughter of
Rolls Royce”) and a dog named “Gunboat.” A woman of many love affairs, Nadia
ended up marrying J.B.H.’s brother, Homi Wadia, in 1961. She died in Mumbai in
1996.
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