Muhammad Ali Biography and Filmography

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Muhammad Ali Biography and Filmography
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Mohammad Ali (مُحمّد علی) (April 19, 1931 – March 19, 2006) was a Pakistani actor. He was known as Shahenshah-e-Jazbaat (شہنشاہِ جذبات‎), meaning The Emperor of Emotions. A versatile performer, he acted in dramatic, romantic, and historical movies. He was voted among 25 of the greatest actors in Asia in a 2010 CNN poll.
Mohammad Ali was born in Rampur, British India on 19 April 1931. He was the son of Maulana Syed Murshid Ali, who was an Islamic scholar. He was the youngest of two brothers and two sisters. After his birth, the family migrated from Rampur to Rohtak, and from there to Multan finally settling in Hyderabad shortly after the independence of Pakistan in 1947.
He attended Millat High School, Multan. He further studied at Government Emerson College, Multan. In 1954, he moved to Hyderabad to pursue higher studies and obtained a BA from City College, Hyderabad.
Muhammad Ali joined Radio Pakistan Hyderabad station as a broadcaster in 1956, where his elder brother Irshad was already working as a drama artist. After a while, he moved to Radio Pakistan, Karachi.
Mohammad Ali started his film career with Fazal Ahmad Karim Fazli's film Chiragh Jalta Raha (1962). Chiragh Jalta Raha was premiered by Fatima Jinnah on 9 March 1962 at Nishat Cinema, Karachi. He then appeared as a villain in director Munawwar Rasheed's film Bahadur, director Iqbal Yusuf's film Daal Mein Kala, and director Javed Hashmi's film Dil Ne Tujhay Maan Liya. His first film as a hero was Mr. X but Movie Shararat (1963) was released earlier than Mr. X. Later, he moved to Lahore and worked in the movie Khandan (1964). But his breakthrough was in the film Khamosh Raho (1964). In 1989, he had an extended cameo in the Hindi film Clerk.
Mohammad Ali was the lead actor and 'hero' in 94 films. His first lead actor movie was Shararat (1963) and his last movie as a lead actor was Aaj Ki Raat (1983). Another movie was Mohabbat Ho To Aisi (1989) and the last movie of his career was titled Dum Mast Qalander (1995).
Ali was most often voiced by Mehdi Hassan and Ahmed Rushdi. Mehdi Hassan sang 115 songs for Ali in his 88 movies. Rushdi sang 100 songs in 57 movies for Ali. Masood Rana sang 34 songs for Ali in his 23 films. Others who provided his voice were Akhlaq Ahmed, Ghulam Abbas, Rajab Ali, and Mujeeb Aalam.
Ali met Zeba for the first time in 1962 during the filming of their debut film "Chirag Jalta Raha (1962)". The couple married four years later during the filming of Tum Mile Pyar Mila on 29 September 1966 and remained married until Ali died in 2006.
They did not have any children together. However, Mohammad Ali legally adopted Samina, Zeba's daughter from her previous marriage, giving her the name Samina Ali.
Mohammad Ali and his wife Zeba both had close relations with different political regimes in the country. He protested by putting up a black dress at the International Moscow Film Festival against India for holding 93,000 POWs after the 1971 war. In Nawaz Sharif's government, he also served as Cultural Minister and introduced new policies to improve the condition of the Pakistani film Industry.
Muhammad Ali and Shahid Ali Zaidi founded the Ali-Zaib Foundation in 1995 to help the Thalassemia patients. The foundation built hospitals in Sargodha, Sahiwal, Jhang, Gujranwala, and Okara with the Foundation's Head office in Faisalabad.
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