The boss's
wife and leading actress of a leading Film
Company runs off with her lead man. She
is caught and taken back but not the lead
man who is unceremoniously dismissed. So
now the company needs a new hero. The boss
decides his laboratory assistant would be
the Film Company's next leading man. A bizzare
film plot??? Hardly. This real life story
starred the Bombay Talkies Film Company,
it's boss Himansu Rai, lead actress
Devika
Rani and lead man Najam-ul-Hussain and
last but not least its laboratory assistant
Ashok Kumar. And thus began an extremely
successful acting career that lasted six
decades!
Ashok Kumar aka Dadamoni was
born Kumudlal Kunjilal Ganguly in Bhagalpur
and grew up in Khandwa. He briefly studied
law in Calcutta, then joined his future
brother-in-law Shashadhar Mukherjee at Bombay
Talkies as laboratory assistant before being
made its leading man.Ashok Kumar made his
debut opposite Devika Rani in Jeevan
Naiya (1936) but became a well known
face with Achut Kanya (1936). Devika
Rani and he did a string of films together
- Izzat (1937), Savitri (1937),
Nirmala (1938) among others but she
was the bigger star and chief attraction
in all those films. It was with his trio
of hits opposite Leela Chitnis - Kangan
(1939), Bandhan (1940) and Jhoola
(1941) that Ashok Kumar really came
into his own. Going with the trend he sang
his own songs and some of them like Main
Ban ki Chidiya, Chal Chal re Naujawaan
and Na Jaane Kidhar Aaj Meri Nao Chali
Re were extremely popular!
Ashok Kumar initiated a more natural style
of acting compared to the prevaling style
that followed theatrical trends. He absorbed
and learnt a lot from the Hollywood films
of the day and learnt that acting was not
merely standing and saying one's dialogue
but reacting as well. According to Film
Director Tapan
Sinha..."He is the man who showed
that film acting is something else. He began
to speak and to behave normally."
In his early Bombay Talkies films, Ashok
Kumar played the good clean-cut hero in
a series of romantic films
but Kismet (1943) changed all that.
His role as perhaps the Indian Screen's
first cigarette smoking anti-hero with the
heart of gold remains his most famous screen
role and the film ran for over three years
in a theatre in Calcutta! That year, along
with Shashadhar Mukherjee, Gyan Mukherjee
and Rai Bahadur Chunilal he left Bombay
talkies to set up a rival Film Company,
Filmistan. He did return to Bombay Talkies
as Production Chief and starred in one of
their biggest ever hits, Mahal
(1949), but the days of the studio were
numbered.
The 1950s saw Ashok Kumar score in a series
of crime films with his trademark cigarette
- Sangram (1950), Inspector (1956),
Howrah Bridge (1958), Night Club
(1958) to name some. This, balanced
with the sensitive Naubahar (1952), Parineeta
(1953) and Ek hi Raasta (1956)
and the riotous Chalti ka Naam Gaadi
(1958) ensured that he was the one actor
who effortlessly withstood the Trimurthi
of the 1950s - Dev Anand, Dilip Kumar
and Raj
Kapoor and more than held his own in
the films they did together - Badbaan
(1954), Deedar (1951) and Bewafaa
(1952) respectively. His success continued
into the 1960s with strong performances
in Aarti (1962), Gumrah (1963)
and an absolutely flawless one in Bandini (1963),
matching Nutan's
brilliant performance scene for scene.
In the late 1960s after Mamta (1966)
and Hatey Bazarey (1967), he effortlessly
settled down to playing character roles.As
a character artiste, Ashok Kumar took on
all sorts of characters - the villain in
Jewel
Thief (1967), the sympathetic parent
in Mili (1975), the lovable old man
in Aashirwad (1968) (where his songs
predated the rap phenomenon by decades!)
and Choti si Baat (1975), the old
comic conman in Victoria no. 203 (1972),
the rapist in Jawaab (1970),
the henpecked head of the family - Khubsoorat
(1980). He was by now lovingly called
Dadamoni by one and all.
In the 1980s, Ashok Kumar cut down his
work and apart from films, was seen occassionally
on Television anchoring the vastly popular
soap Hum Log or playing the title
role in Bahadur Shah Zafar. However
by the mid 1990s with age and ill-health
he cut down on all work. Today his daughter
Priti runs an acting school on his name.Besides
acting, Ashok Kumar was a fine painter and
also an active practitioner of homeopathy
even solving certain complex cases that
regular doctors couldn't solve!Dadamoni
passed away in Mumbai on December 10, 2001
due to cardiac arrest. |