The traditional
concept of a comedian has always been one
of lowly stature, that of a sidekick. It
was Kishore Kumar who successfully became
Hindi cinema's comic hero whose popularity
relied primarily on his comic talents. Add
to that his phenomenal acting talent and
amazing singing voice and you have a performer
who bordered on the genius. And like most
geniuses he was notoriously eccentric!
He was born Abhas Kumar Ganguly
in Khandwa. At the age of 18, he came to
Bombay where elder brother Ashok Kumar was a
major star. He got his first opportunity
as a singer in Bombay Talkies Ziddi (1948)
where he sang the song Marne ki Duayen
Kyon Mangu for Dev
Anand. Being an ardent admirer of KL Saigal, the
song was sung in the style of the legend.
But in spite of Ziddi's success,
Kishore found few offers forthcoming and
did the odd singing assignment with bit
roles making a rather tepid acting debut
as hero in the forgettable Andolan (1951).
After his marriage to Ruma Devi resulted
in a split in the family, Kishore approached
SD Burman who
had given him an opportunity in Pyar
(1950) where interestingly he had sung
for Raj
Kapoor for more singing work. Burmanda
gave him the song Qusoor Aapka in
Bahar (1951) which became a raging
hit. As he got more singing assignments,
he also began being offered leading roles
in films.
Kishore was initially taken quite lightly
as a singer and was given mainly lighter
songs by Burmanda and other music directors.
But with his soulful rendering of Dukhi
Man Mere from Funtoosh (1956),
Kishore was now taken seriously as a singer.
Though he was formally untrained, he assimilated
jazz-scat fragmented musical notes into
a rhythmic sequence and once its beat was
established, departed from the pattern and
combined notes and words/ syllables into
new kinds of musical harmony. And none could
yodel better than he could!
On the acting front, by now Kishore was
becoming a major star acting opposite all
the top heroines of the day. He of course
sang for himself and outside that he gave
playback only for Dev Anand. Though it is
said he loathed acting and did everything
to make himself a failure, it must be said
that Kishore was in fact an extremely competent
actor and not just in comedy. He could handle
roles with elements of tragedy as well with
ease.
An early film where Kishore made his mark
as an actor was Bimal
Roy's Naukri
(1954). Since his madcap comic persona
had not yet developed totally and he was
working with a director like Bimalda, Naukri
sees an extremely sincere, sensitive
and restrained performance from him. Kishore
Kumar is totally at home be it the more
serious scenes in the film or even in the
comic scenes. The comic scenes however are
not the typical slapstick Kishore scenes
but lighthearted and gentle like most Bimal
Roy scenes and bring a smile to one's lips
rather than uproarious laughter. The germs
are obviously there for Kishore's developing
personality as a madcap comedian. The scene
where he sings out his dialogue is apparently
something he often did in real life himself!
With hit films like Baap re Baap (1955),
New Delhi
(1956), Miss Mary (1957) and
Asha (1957), Kishore reached his
peak as an actor with the zany comedy Chalti
ka Naam Gaadi (1958), directed by Satyen
Bose, which starred all
the three Ganguly brothers along with Madhubala. Kishore
and Madhubala matched each other step for
step brilliantly in this comic caper with
SD Burman composing such wonderful lighthearted
ditties as Haal Kaisa Hai Janaab Ka,
Ek Ladki Bheegi Bhaagi si and Paanch
Rupaiya Barah Anna.
After Kishore's marriage to Ruma Devi disintegrated,
he married Madhubala. The two starred in
Jhumroo (1961), which Kishore produced
and directed. He also composed the music
of the film. The film had some lovely songs
like Main Hoon Jhum Jhum Jhum Jhum Jhumroo,
Thandi Hawa Yeh Chandni Suhani,
Koi Hamdam Na Raha among others.
The riotous Half Ticket (1962) with
the two of them saw Kishore at his madcap
best impersonating a 12 year old! The duets
Chand Raat Tum ho Saath and Aankhon
Mein Tum became extremely popular from
the film.
Door Gagan ki Chaon Main (1964)
further confirmed Kishore's acting talent
as he scored heavily in a rather serious
film. But the 60s also saw Kishore fall
from grace as beset by tax problems he was
reduced to doing B-films with the likes
of Kum Kum though films with the pair like
Mr. X in Bombay (1964) still did
well at the box office. He scored heavily
in Pyar Kiye Ja (1966) and Padosan
(1968) but they were supporting roles
rather then the lead. He had the odd singing
assignment for Dev Anand in Guide
(1965) and Jewel
Thief (1967) but that was all. He did
work with the great Satyajit
Ray in this period in perhaps the maestro's
greatest film, Charulata
(1964). In thre film Amal (Soumitra
Chatterjee) serenades Charu (Madhabi
Mukherjee) with the famous Tagore song
Aami Chini-Go-Chini, sung brilliantly
by Kishore.
The turning point came with Shakti Samanta's
Aradhana (1969).Though Burmanda used
Kishore for what he called his second service,
his songs for Rajesh
Khanna - Mere Sapnon ki Rani
and Kora Kagaz Tha Yeh Man Mera proved
super duper hits ahead of the Mohd. Rafi songs Baaghon
Mein Bahar Hai and Gun Gunarahein
Hain Bhawrein for the same film. It
was a second coming and there was no turning
back now.
Kishore formed a solid hit pairing with
Rajesh Khanna post Aradhana and in the early
70s the duo churned out hit after hit -
Kati Patang (1970), Safar (1970),
Amar Prem (1971), Andaaz (1971),
Namak Haram (1973) and Aap
ki Kasam (1974) to name some. Even
the Rajesh Khanna films that flopped in
the period had some extremely popular songs
like Chala Jaata Hoon (Mere
Jeevan Saathi (1972)), Ek Ajnabee
Haseena se (Ajnabee (1974))
and Mere Naina Saawan Bhadon (Mehbooba
(1976)). In the 1970s, Kishore overtook
all competition and was the undisputed number
one male playback singer of Hindi films,
his voice pulsing with verve and exuberance.
He was now the undisputed voice for all
the top heroes of the day - Rajesh Khanna,
Amitabh Bachchan,
Dharmendra,
Jeetendra, Shashi Kapoor, Randhir Kapoor
and Rishi Kapoor.
As his fame grew so did stories of his
eccentricities. He put up a board outside
his house saying 'THIS IS A LUNATIC ASYLUM.'
He reportedly spoke to his trees in his
backyard addressing each by a special name.
He zipped through a marriage with Yogita
Bali which lasted just about a month and
then married his fourth wife Leena Chandavarkar
who was two years older than his son, Amit!
As a singer Kishore remained at the top
till the very end succumbing to a major
heart attack in 1987.
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