
Widely regarded as one of Indian cinema’s most accomplished performers, Rekha has featured in over 200 films across languages. Honoured with the National Film Award and the Padma Shri, she built a legacy defined by versatility and reinvention. Yet, behind the glamour lies a startling truth: acting was never her childhood dream. She was pushed into the profession at a very young age.

Rekha was born to celebrated South Indian actors Pushpavalli and Gemini Ganesan. Growing up around film sets exposed her to the industry early, but she had no intention of becoming an actor herself. However, family expectations particularly from her mother changed that path dramatically.

In an old video of the actress’s interview with the BBC, Rekha recalled how filmmakers approached her in Madras when she was only a teenager. Despite her disinterest and inability to speak Hindi, she was pursued for a role. She remembered, “I was 13 years old. Then Kuljeet Pal and Shatrujeet Pal came to Madras in search of a heroine. Someone told them about me.” She added, “They asked if I wanted to become an actress. I said ‘no’. They asked if I knew Hindi. I said ‘no’. Still, they said they would come back tomorrow to sign me.”

According to Rekha, the decisive push came from her mother, who believed acting was the right path for her daughter. The young girl had little say in the matter. “I never wanted to be one. But I was made into one with great effort,” she revealed, describing how circumstances overpowered her personal choice.

Rekha also spoke about a deeply distressing incident during the filming of ‘Anjana Safar’, when she was around 15. She said she was unexpectedly asked to perform a kissing scene without prior notice. “It was inserted without informing me beforehand.” The sequence reportedly went on for several minutes and left the young actress overwhelmed. “I fainted after the shot,” she recalled, highlighting how little agency young performers often had at the time.

Before entering Hindi cinema, Rekha appeared as a child artist in Telugu films like ‘Inti Guttu’ and ‘Rangula Ratnam’. Her first major lead role came in the Kannada film ‘Operation Jackpot Nalli C.I.D. 999’ (1969). That same year, she worked on ‘Anjana Safar’, though its release was delayed for a decade due to censorship issues.

Rekha’s true breakthrough arrived with ‘Sawan Bhadon’ (1970), which catapulted her to instant stardom. Through the 1980s and early 1990s, she balanced commercial successes such as ‘Khubsoorat’, ‘Baseraa’, ‘Silsila’, and ‘Ek Hi Bhool’ with critically acclaimed films like ‘Kalyug’, ‘Umrao Jaan’, ‘Vijeta’, and ‘Utsav’.

Known for portraying complex, independent women on screen, Rekha won the National Award for Best Actress for ‘Umrao Jaan’. Decades later, she was honoured with the Padma Shri for her immense contribution to Indian cinema. She was last seen in the satirical comedy ‘MLA’ (2018), directed by Manju Maurya, which also featured Pratham and Sonal Monteiro and followed an ordinary man’s unlikely rise in politics.