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One of the songs on Salma's soundtrack, Zindagi Tere Dar Pe Fanaa, was sung by leading actress Salma Agha. Composer Bappi Lahiri was responsible for the music of other Bollywood classics of the 1980s such as Disco Dancer, and in 1985 he won the Filmfare Award in the "Best Music Director" category for the film Sharaabi. Salma was Sagar's last feature film, after which he only shot for television and worked as a producer. The model for director Sagar was the Pakistani drama Anjuman from 1970. This Film Salma 1985 Is All Time Blockbuster Super Hit Film At Box Office Collection And Acting ,Songs And Script Was Very Nice This Film Stars Cast Like, Raj. At the end of her song she sinks dead to the ground Aslam then dies of grief and sinks down dead on Salma's corpse. He rushes to the wedding ceremony that has started, but is too late: Salma has already started her wedding dance and singing. Immediately before the wedding, Aslam confronts Iqbal about the alleged affair and learns that it was only staged, that Salma still loves him and that she may never sing again. Shortly before the wedding she suffers poisoning which, according to the doctor she consulted, would lead to death if she sang again to see Aslam one last time, she still decides to go on with her planned appearance. To humiliate Salma, he hires her to dance and sing with Mumtaz at the wedding. The angry Aslam breaks up with Salma and agrees to marry Mumtaz. To dissuade Aslan from their love, she plays him an affair with his best friend Iqbal. Salma therefore decides to forego her lover and thus her own happiness in order to enable him to live a carefree life. While Aslam is recovering from an emergency operation in the hospital, his mother visits Salma and successfully persuades her that holding on to the relationship would lead to long-term disaster for both Aslam and his entire family. When Aslam insists on his love for Salma, his father Bakar shoots him in a fit of anger and injures him badly. Aslam falls in love with Salma Banarasi, a singer and dancer who is rejected by his parents as not befitting. His parents plan for him to marry Mumtaz, a cousin of Aslam who has lived abroad for a long time and has recently returned to Lucknow. He lives in the house of his father, Nawab Bakar Ali, a successful, conservative businessman. It's a shame the film is so hard to find on DVD or even VHS as it should be seen by more than the few who remember it.Nawabzada Aslam is the only son of a wealthy family in Lucknow in northeast India. The performances are all good, especially by the leading players. (it had not the same sophistication or grip of Salma's debut, "Nikaah") but it gives an interesting look into the world of Aristocratic India. The film works well enough as a narrative, but its stand-out moments are the brilliantly sung and choreographed QAWAALIS, of which there are three: the introductory "Adab Apne Dil Ko Sikhaane Parega", the competitive "Kaahe Bethe Ho", and the suicidal finale "Zindagi Tere Dar Pe" which is hauntingly rendered by Salma. There is much melodrama typical of 80s Bollywood. Because she is a lowly singer, Salma is put upon by Aslam's family who desires him to marry the spoilt Mumtaz, and even attempt to poison Salma. The story is a love triangle revolving around a singer from Lucknow (Salma) whose affections are sought by two best friends, played by Raj Babbar (Aslam) and Farooq Sheikh. It is a remake of a Pakistani classic from the 50s called "Anjumana". "Salma" is the second film featuring Pakistani singer and actress Salma Agha opposite Raj Babbar.