I meant to write this about the fabulous Padmini Kolhapure when she turned 60 on November 1, but got side tracked with other work, so here's a later-post on an underrated actress of genteel, natural talent and gifts acknowledged not only by her critics but her contemporaries and actresses across the board.
Sridevi with Padmini Kolhapure were more affable contemporaries than sparring competitors in the 1980s. Sridevi was older by just two years, but both were child stars turned leading ladies, who eventually married film producers and made mini-comebacks post children with award-winning performances! Their cine-career trajectory however was so differing. One was the charming girl-next-door, and the other, a dazzling superstar. A mini dive into the past of precocious Padmini.In the early 1980s, two gifted actresses navigated Bollywood’s competitive landscape with grace and talent. Padmini Kolhapure, the petite, fresh-faced ingénue born in 1965, embodied the quintessential girl-next-door. Barely out of her teens, she enjoyed a golden streak: Filmfare Best Actress for Prem Rog (1982) at just 17, alongside box-office successes like Vidhaata (1982) with Dilip Kumar and Amitabh Bachchan. She was a favourite of the greats; icon Raj Kapoor and showman Subash Ghai.
Critics hailed her natural acting, emotional depth, and screen innocence. Yet, despite hits and awards, Padmini never quite attained the mythical “Number One” aura. She shone brightly but lacked the larger-than-life magnetism that defined true superstardom - something even her film Star (1982), meant to launch Kumar Gaurav, couldn’t manufacture.
In contrast, Sridevi was destiny’s chosen one. Already a South Indian sensation, she stormed Hindi cinema with hypnotic screen presence, shape-shifting versatility, sensuality, dancing prowess, and an aura that lit up the screen. While Padmini delivered heartfelt roles of contemporary Indian women, Sridevi commanded attention as the definitive female superstar of the era with larger than life costume capers, shape-shifting thrillers, and obvious rain-soacked sexuality. The audience wanted to protect Padmni, but empowered, whip-holding Sridevi was cheered on. Two different paths to the pantheon of Bollywood greats.
The two actresses worked together amicably in Naya Kadam (1984) and Suhaagan (1986), playing sisters in the latter family drama. Contemporaries more than rivals, they maintained cordial relations amid the industry’s demands. Padmini, known for her professionalism, spoke positively of her peers, once noting opportunities like Sridevi’s role in Tohfa that came her way but didn’t materialise - reflecting mutual respect in a crowded field.
Their careers ran parallel through much of the 1980s, with Padmini delivering consistent performances in films like Woh Saat Din and Souten. However, by the late ’80s and into the ’90s, Padmini scaled back, choosing selective work, marriage, and family over the relentless grind. Sridevi’s trajectory soared: blockbuster after blockbuster, title roles, double roles, prohibitive paychecks, 11 nominations for Best actress and several wins... culminating in iconic roles that cemented her as Hindi cinema’s undisputed queen.
Padmini’s legacy remains that of a supremely talented, grounded actress who lit up the decade with authenticity. Sridevi became the phenomenon. Together, they represented two sides of 1980s stardom—one intimate and relatable, the other transcendent.
Unlike the obvious competitive streak between Sridevi and Jaya Prada or the magazine manufactured one with Madhuri Dixit, these two, essentially shy ladies got along just fine. Post Sridevi's self-imposed hiatus, you can see Sridevi and Padmini attend events together - Sridevi was there for Padmini's ventures, and the contemporaries shared a good laugh on stage and off.








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