Career
She started acting at the age of 12 and ended by the time she was 23, as she later recounted in her noted autobiography, Amar Katha (The Story of My Life) published in 1913. Her career coincided with the growth of the proscenium-inspired form of European theatre among the Bengali theatergoing audience. During a career spanning twelve years she enacted over eighty roles, which included those of Pramila, Sita, Draupadi, Radha, Ayesha, Kaikeyi, Motibibi, and Kapalkundala, among others
She was one of the first South Asian actresses of the theatre to write her own autobiography.
Her sudden retirement from the stage is insufficiently explained. Sri Ramakrishna, a saint of 19th century Bengal, came to see her play in 1884.
During her bygone days of glory, she was referred to as the Flower of the Native Stage and Moon of the Star Theatre. Veteran Bengali actor Soumitra Chatterjee who has written the introduction to the recent reprint of her autobiography, mentions that the chroniclers of the theatre movement in 19th century Bengal make no reference to Binodini.
This may be partly explained as an instance of class-caste divide.
The upper class Brahmin-Brahmo dominated establishment that spearheaded the Bengal Renaissance felt it improper to acknowledge the merits of the talented lowly born. Her contribution to the establishment and enrichment of the organisations she was associated with, has been largely glossed over. Her autobiography is lucid and explores a section of the 19th century Bengali world, at ease with European ideas, but conscious enough to carefully subjugate the female to the domain of the household.
Women who talked of and expressed in their lives the very embodiment of liberated femininity were, surreptitiously viewed from a distance, to be loved and be the object of scorn—and never aspire to respectable notions of femininity.
Nati Binodini, a 1994 Bengali film starring Prasenjit Chatterjee and Debashree Royal Nati Binodini, a play based on her autobiography, "Aamar Kathaa" was first presented by National School of Drama Repertory Company in 1995 with the lead role done by actor, Seema Biswas, then in 2006, noted theatre director Amal Allana directed a play by the same name which premiered in Delhi.
In Abohoman, the 2009 Bengali film by Rituparno Ghosh, the lead character is a filmmaker who makes a film based on the lives of Binodini Dasi and Girish Chandra Ghosh. Several scenes from this film-within-the-film are shown.