Dhalia | |
---|---|
Dhalia in Lewat Djam Malam
|
|
Born |
Dhalia 10 February 1925 Medan, Dutch East Indies |
Died | 14 April 1991 Jakarta, Indonesia |
(aged 66)
Occupation | Actress |
Awards | 1 Citra Award |
Dhalia (10 February 1925 – 14 April 1991) was an Indonesian actress active for over fifty years. She was nominated for three Citra Awards at the Indonesian Film Festival, winning one.
Dhalia was born in Medan, northern Sumatra, on 10 February 1925, to Tengku Katam. Her father, a stagewriter, named his theatrical troupe Dhalia Opera after her. For her formal education, she studied at a Muhammadiyah-run elementary school then at a Muhammadiyah-run junior high school. In her spare time she focused on acting for her father's troupe. By the 1940s she was already recognised for her singing prowess, although her father intended for her to continue her studies in Islam at Al-Azhar University, Cairo.
In 1941 Dhalia made her feature film debut in Njoo Cheong Seng's musical Pantjawarna, produced by Oriental Film. Her next two appearances saw her playing an orphan in Sutan Usman Karim's drama Panggilan Darah and alongside Rd Mochtar in Moestika dari Djemar, an adaptation of the One Thousand and One Nights. Dhalia's last two films before Indonesia's independence were completed during the Japanese occupation (1942–45): Berdjoang and Hoedjan. Both were works of pro-Japanese propaganda.
During the Indonesian National Revolution (1945–1949), film production almost stopped. Dhalia only returned to the screen in 1952, completing three films that year. By 1955 she had completed eighteen films, taking such roles as the title character in Chandra Dewi (1952) and the prostitute Laila in Lewat Djam Malam (1955). Between 1956 and 1972 Dhalia made no films. After she returned to the industry, she was no longer offered leading roles, instead taking supporting roles. She made her last film in 1990, with the 1980s as the most productive period in her career.