In an industry often obsessed with youth and box office numbers, a career of 300 films suggests not merely survival but strategic evolution. Shabana Azmi (b. 1950) debuted in 1974 with Ankur (Shyam Benegal) and has since worked with virtually every major director—from Satyajit Ray to Mira Nair, from Yash Chopra to Rohit Shetty. Her 300 films are not a random accumulation but a curated archive of Indian social history.
By the 1990s, leading roles for women over 40 were scarce. Azmi transitioned seamlessly into character parts—mothers, judges, activists. Fire (1996) broke the taboo on elder female desire and same-sex love. Hazaar Chaurasi Ki Maa (1998) critiqued Naxalite politics. This phase added nearly 150 films to her count, proving that longevity belongs to actors who serve the story, not the camera. shabana 300 films
Approximately 40% of her 300 films belong to the Indian New Wave. In Arth (1982), she played a betrayed wife, giving voice to female anger without melodrama. Mandi (1983) used a brothel as a microcosm of political corruption. These films were low-budget, festival-bound, and character-driven. Azmi’s willingness to play rural labourers ( Ankur ), sex workers ( Mandi ), and political rebels ( Godmother , 1999) broke the heroine mold. In an industry often obsessed with youth and