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Geeta Khanna

Geeta Khanna is an Indian shashikala, best known for Tamil cinema. Geeta Khanna began their career in 1979. With 30 credits to their name, Geeta Khanna remains one of the most prolific and celebrated talents in the industry. Spanning 40+ years, Geeta Khanna's career remains one of the longest and most celebrated in Tamil cinema.

30+Known Credits
4.8Avg Rating
veteranCareer Phase

Career Stats

2Films
4.8Avg Rating
0%Hit Ratio?
26Yrs Active
1/10Versatility?
5/10Critical?
veteran?

Personal Info

Known Credits30+

Career Milestones

1979

Film debut

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1979

Highest rated: Aangan Ki Kali (5.5)

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Career Analytics

Language Distribution

Hindi
100%

Films by Decade

1
1970s
1
2000s

Legacy & Influence

Geeta Khanna's contribution to Indian cinema remains a subject of limited documentation, with her filmography primarily anchored by her role in the 1979 film 'Aangan Ki Kali'. The scarcity of biographical details and verifiable career milestones presents a challenge in constructing a comprehensive narrative of her impact. Her appearance in 'Aangan Ki Kali', a film that garnered a modest audience rating, suggests a career that may have been brief or focused on supporting roles within the cinematic landscape of the late 1970s. Without a substantial body of publicly archived work or widely recognized performances, her direct influence on film styles, genres, or subsequent generations of actors is not clearly established in mainstream film historiography. The absence from major award ceremonies and industry annals indicates a career that likely operated outside the sphere of widespread critical acclaim or popular stardom. Her legacy, therefore, resides in the collective, often unrecorded, participation of numerous artists who formed the essential fabric of the industry during that era, contributing to the completion of cinematic projects without necessarily attaining individual fame. This underscores the reality of the film industry where many performers' contributions, while vital to the final product, remain peripheral in historical narratives dominated by leading figures.

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