J. Jayalalithaa

Actress

Birthday February 24, 1948

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Mysore, Mysore State, Dominion of India (present day Karnataka, India)

DEATH DATE 2016-12-5, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India (68 years old)

Nationality India

#3328 Most Popular

1948

Jayaram Jayalalithaa (24 February 1948 – 5 December 2016) was an Indian politician and actress who served as Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu for more than fourteen years over six terms between 1991 and 2016.

Jayalalithaa was born on 24 February 1948 to Jayaram and Vedavalli (Sandhya) in a Tamil Brahmin Iyengar family at Melukote, Pandavapura taluk, Mandya district, then in Mysore State (now Karnataka).

She had a brother named Jayakumar.

Her paternal grandfather, Narasimhan Rengachary, was in the service of the Mysore kingdom as a surgeon and served as the court physician to Maharaja Krishna Raja Wadiyar IV of Mysore.

Her maternal grandfather, Rangasamy Iyengar, moved to Mysore from Srirangam to work with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited.

He had one son and three daughters—Ambujavalli, Vedavalli, and Padmavalli.

Vedavalli was married to Jayaram, son of Narasimhan Rengachary.

The couple Jayaram-Vedvalli had two children: a son Jayakumar and a daughter, Jayalalitha.

Her mother, her relatives and later co-stars and friends referred to her as Ammu.

The name Jayalalithaa was adopted at the age of one for the purpose of using the name in schools and colleges.

1960

Jayalalithaa rose to prominence as a leading film actress in the mid-1960s.

Though she had begun her acting career reluctantly at her mother's behest to support the family, Jayalalithaa was a prolific actor.

1961

She appeared in 140 films between 1961 and 1980, primarily in the Tamil, Telugu and Kannada languages.

Jayalalithaa received praise for her versatility as an actress and her dancing skills, earning the sobriquet "Queen of Tamil Cinema".

Among her frequent co-stars was M. G. Ramachandran, popularly known as 'M.G.R.', a Tamil cultural icon who leveraged his immense popularity with the masses into a successful political career.

1982

In 1982, when M.G.R. was chief minister, Jayalalithaa joined the AIADMK, the party he founded.

Her political rise was rapid; within a few years she became AIADMK propaganda secretary and was elected to the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of India's Parliament.

1987

After M.G.R.'s death in 1987, Jayalalithaa proclaimed herself as his political heir and, having fought off the faction headed by M.G.R.'s widow, V. N. Janaki Ramachandran, emerged as the sole leader of the AIADMK.

1988

From 1 January 1988 to 5 December 2016, she was the 5th and longest-serving general secretary of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), a Dravidian party whose cadre revered her as their "Amma" (Mother) and "Puratchi Thalaivi" (Revolutionary leader).

1989

Following the 1989 election, she became Leader of the Opposition to the DMK-led government led by M. Karunanidhi, her bête noire.

1991

In 1991, Jayalalithaa became chief minister for the first time and Tamil Nadu's youngest.

She earned a reputation for centralising state power among a coterie of bureaucrats; her council of ministers, whom she often shuffled around, were largely ceremonial in nature.

The successful cradle-baby scheme, which enabled mothers to anonymously offer their newborns for adoption, emerged during this time.

1995

Despite an official salary of only a rupee a month, Jayalalithaa indulged in public displays of wealth, culminating in a lavish wedding for her foster son V. N. Sudhakaran (Sasikala's elder sister son) on 7 September 1995.

1996

In the 1996 election, the AIADMK was nearly wiped out at the hustings; Jayalalithaa herself lost her seat.

The new Karunanidhi government filed several corruption cases against her, and she had to spend time in jail.

1998

Her fortunes revived in the 1998 general election, as the AIADMK became a key component of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's 1998–99 government; her withdrawal of support toppled it and triggered another general election just a year later.

2001

The AIADMK returned to power in 2001, although Jayalalithaa was personally disbarred from contesting due to the corruption cases.

Within a few months of her taking oath as chief minister, in September 2001, she was disqualified from holding office and forced to cede the chair to minister O. Panneerselvam.

Upon her acquittal six months later, Jayalalithaa returned as chief minister to complete her term.

Noted for its ruthlessness to political opponents, many of whom were arrested in midnight raids, her government grew unpopular.

2006

Another period (2006–11) in the opposition followed, before Jayalalithaa was sworn in as chief minister for the fourth time after the AIADMK swept the 2011 assembly election.

Her government received attention for its extensive social-welfare agenda, which included several subsidised "Amma"-branded goods such as canteens, bottled water, salt and cement.

Three years into her tenure, she was convicted in a disproportionate-assets case, rendering her disqualified to hold office.

2015

She returned as chief minister after being acquitted in May 2015.

2016

In the 2016 assembly election, she became the first Tamil Nadu chief minister since M.G.R in 1984 to be voted back into office.

That September, she fell severely ill and, following 75 days of hospitalisation, died on 5 December 2016 due to cardiac arrest and became the first female chief minister in India to die in office.

Jayalalithaa never married and had no children.

2020

On 29 May 2020, her nephew J. Deepak and niece Deepa Jayakumar were declared as her legal heirs by Madras High Court.

Her critics in the media and the opposition accused her of fostering a personality cult and of demanding absolute loyalty from AIADMK legislators and ministers, who often publicly prostrated themselves before her.