National Film Award For Best Supporting Actress
The winner is given a "Rajat Kamal" (Silver Lotus) certificate and a cash prize of ₹50,000 (US$780). Including ties and repeat winners, the DFF has presented a total of 41 Best Supporting Actress awards to 35 different actresses. Although Indian cinema produces films in more than 20 languages, the performances of films that have won awards are of ten languages: Hindi (19 awards), Malayalam (7 awards), Bengali (4 awards), Tamil (4 awards), English (2 awards), Meitei (1 award), Marathi (1 award), Urdu (1 award), Haryanvi (1 award), Odia (1 award).
The first recipient was Rohini Hattangadi, who was honoured at the 32nd National Film Awards for her performance in the Hindi film Party (1984). As of 2019, Surekha Sikri have been honoured thrice for her Hindi films – Tamas (1987), Mammo (1994) and Badhaai Ho (2018). K. P. A. C. Lalitha won the award two times for her work in the Malayalam films Amaram (1990) and Shantham (2000) along with Pallavi Joshi for her work in Hindi films The Tashkent Files (2019) and The Kashmir Files (2021). Egyptian actress Aida El-Kashef, who was honoured at the 61st National Film Awards for her performance in the English-Hindi film Ship of Theseus (2013) is the only non-Indian actress to win the award. Urvashi and Kalpana are the only siblings to receive the honour. Ties between two actresses have occurred in the years 1999, 2012 and 2013. Sharmila Tagore, Konkona Sen Sharma and Kangana Ranaut are the three actresses to receive honours in both acting categories: Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress. The most recent recipient is Pallavi Joshi , who was honoured at the 69th National Film Awards for her performance in the Hindi film The Kashmir Files (2022).
Recipients
Key
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
† | Indicates a joint award for that year |
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8b/Rohini_Hattangadi_in_2010.jpg/170px-Rohini_Hattangadi_in_2010.jpg)
![A picture of Surekha Sikri.](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5b/Surekha_Sikri.jpg/170px-Surekha_Sikri.jpg)
See also
Footnotes
- ^ Before the 54th National Film Awards (2006), the cash prize was ₹10,000 (US$120).
- ^ Year in which the film was censored by the Central Board of Film Certification.
- ^ The reference cites the winner and the role played by them in the film. While there are some sources that are written in both English and Hindi, other references are entirely in Hindi.