Shashi Kapoor

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Shashi Kapoor
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

The person

Highlights

Career in films

December 5, 2017: The Times of India

Siddhartha (1972), based on a Haerman Hesse novel, was a US production co-starring Simi Garewal
From: December 5, 2017: The Times of India
Shashi Kapoor in Jab Jab Phool Khile (1965)
From: December 5, 2017: The Times of India

Unit hand-turned-star

Before he became a matinee idol, Shashi Kapoor was an assistant director for three years. Later he assisted elder brother Shammi Kapoor on his directorial debut, Manoranjan (1974), a remake of the Jack Lemmon classic, Irma La Douce

Rich pedigree

His father and father-inlaw were titans of theatre. Prithviraj was among founding members of Indian Peoples Theatre Association and known for trail-blazing social drama under the Prithvi Theatres banner. The Kendals too had a company called Shakespearana which toured the subcontinent in the 40’s and 50’s, staging the Bard’s works

The comeback

After a series of failures in the late 60’s, he had no work. When the offers returned, Kapoor swore he would never be unemployed again. By the early 80’s, he was the busiest of actors if not the most bankable. Raj Kapoor started calling him a “taxi” because he was shuttling from one set to another, doing 6 shifts a day

The artist

His multi-faceted personality was best expressed through collaborations outside the mainstream. The star ploughed back his earnings to create movies as diverse as Junoon (based on a Ruskin Bond story on the 1857 mutiny), Vijeta (on the life of an air force pilot), Kalyug (a modern take on Mahabharata), and Utsav

A profile

India Today

Madhu Jain

March 27, 2015

Theatre remains the first love of Dadasaheb Phalke Award-winner Shashi Kapoor, Indian cinema's first real crossover actor

Shashi KapoorShashi KapoorSometimes, extreme good looks can be a handicap. Shashi Kapoor would have been right up there in the pantheon of legendary thespians in Hindi cinema had he been a little less handsome, a little less picture-perfect. Producers took him for his looks; and, he was predominantly cast as a romantic star. The Dadasaheb Phalke Award for 2014, announced days after his 77th birthday, for his contribution to Indian cinema may set the record right-prodding film critics and historians to reevaluate not only his considerable and versatile acting skills but his role as a risk-taking film producer and his unstinting contribution to theatre.

Shashi Kapoor was a reluctant film star. Barely 15, he became an employee of his father Prithviraj Kapoor's Prithvi Theatres for a monthly salary of Rs.75, remaining there until 1960, when it closed down. He wanted to learn all facets of theatre from acting, lighting and arranging props to management. He oscillated between Prithvi Theatre and his brother Raj Kapoor's RK Studios where he wanted to study the technical aspects of cinema. Raj Kapoor sent him to the top of the studio to study lighting, with the words, "Garmi mahsus karo (Feel the heat)."

It was more than heat that Shashi experienced with the elder Kapoors, both hard taskmasters. He performed the hand-me-down roles his brothers Raj and Shammi had already essayed-often standing in as an extra in the touring Prithvi Theatres productions-and sat on top of trucks guarding stage props and costumes when he was an assistant stage manager. He also had child stardom thrust on him: playing the younger Raj Kapoor in Aag (1948) and Awara (1951).

Double shifts defined Shashi's early career. He went back and forth between Prithvi Theatres and Shakespeareana, also a touring theatre company managed by Geoffrey Kendal, the father of his future wife Jennifer Kendal whom he met when he was 18. He also moved between two worlds: the Hindi theatre of the time (with the exception of Shakuntala) and Shakespeare-he acted as Gratiano in The Merchant of Venice and as Cassio in Othello. The years with Shakespeareana, where he stayed informally until 1963, set him apart. Perhaps, this is where he honed his acting skills, was groomed into the perfect gentleman and metamorphosed into somewhat of an angrez. Shashi Kapoor told me about a telling incident which took place in a Penang restaurant. While ordering rice, he asked for a "bowel of rice". An amused Geoffrey Kendal, who was not on the best of terms with him, "spluttered" out his beer and came up to him and said, "Bowl, not bowel, you silly bugger." Apparently, the ice was broken between the two.

Shashi Kapoor married at 20, and his first child, Kunal, was born when he was 21. Broke, he reluctantly joined Hindi films. However, his first few films, beginning with Char Diwari (1961) and later Dharmputra (1961), directed by Yash Chopra, tanked at the box office. The jinx was broken with the resounding success of Jab Jab Phool Khile (1965), with Nanda as his leading lady; they acted in seven films together. Apparently, Raj Kapoor asked the actress to "watch" over his youngest brother.

The good times had come. The latter half of the '60s saw a series of romantic comedies that were box-office hits, including Haseena Maan Jayegi (1968) and Pyar Ka Mausam (1969). The lucky streak continued in the '70s, marked by a string of successful films including Aa Gale Lag Jaa (1973), Kabhie Kabhie (1976), Trishul (1978), Suhaag (1979), and Deewaar (1975), with Amitabh Bachchan as a co-leading man. In fact, the duo worked together in films into the early '80s, including popular films such as Silsila (1981) and Namak Halaal (1982). Rather unfairly, industry insiders joked that Shashi Kapoor was Bachchan's favourite heroine. Had it not been for Shashi's nuanced performance in Deewaar, the film may not have been such a milestone in Hindi cinema. Underplaying the role, he was a perfect foil for his more melodramatic screen bad brother Bachchan. His histrionic skills are more evident in the films in which he explores the complexities of human nature, particularly in the two films produced by him and directed by Shyam Benegal. In Junoon (1978) he inhabits obsession. In his masterful portrayal of a modern-day Karna from the Mahabharata, Shashi interprets both the manipulative nature of his character as well as his pain and vulnerability.

Shashi Kapoor is probably Indian cinema's first real crossover actor, with the exception of Sabu Dastagir who played Mowgli in Hollywood. He acted in six Merchant Ivory films, beginning with Householder in 1963, Shakespeare-Wallah two years later, followed by Bombay Talkie in 1970 and Heat and Dust in 1983, the film that definitively catapulted him to international fame, and in which he was a romantic but shady nawab.

Shakespeare-Wallah may not have been a commercial success but international directors began to notice him: he played the romantic lead opposite Hayley Mills in Pretty Polly in 1967, directed by Oscar winner Guy Green. American director Conrad Rooks cast him as the title character in Siddhartha in 1972. James Ivory told me Shashi Kapoor could have been the Indian Cary Grant with the right directors. The American director also believed that the actor was good at exploring the dark side of human nature. Discussing Bombay Talkie, he said: "We all have our own dark sides, and Shashi is able to bring up his."

International directors explored his dark side: as a wily nobleman who is also a thuggee in The Deceivers (1988), starring Pierce Brosnan before his Bond days, as a compromised Pakistani businessman in Stephan Frears's Sammy and Rosie Get Laid (1987), based on a Hanif Kureishi screenplay. The late film critic Pauline Kael, known for her acidic pen, had only praise for Shashi Kapoor, specially the wit in his performance in a film she panned. Other international roles included a fading Bollywood actor in New York in Tony Gerber's Side Streets (1998), as angel Gabreel in Jamil Dehlavi's Jinnah (1998); he also acted in Gulliver's Travels, a TV series for NBC, which also included Sir John Gielgud and Peter O' Toole.

Perhaps, Shashi Kapoor's most memorable role is as a producer. Unlike most players, he financed the six films he produced. It must be a Kapoor trait: Raj Kapoor sold his wife's jewellery, the younger sibling sold 18 acres of land near Panvel on the outskirts of Mumbai to make 36 Chowringhee Lane (1981).

But theatre has remained his first love. Frail and bound to a wheelchair, he seldom leaves his flat opposite Prithvi Theatre, which he set up with Jennifer, and has nurtured ever since. If you are lucky you can spot him sitting there, watching a play. Especially if children are taking part in it.

Some traits of personality

December 4, 2017: The Times of India


Dadasaheb Phalke award winner

Actor-filmmaker, Shashi Kapoor was presented with the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke award by Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Arun Jaitley. The veteran actor was unable to attend the award ceremony in Delhi because of his ill-health, therefore, he was handed over the award at a function at Prithvi Theatre in suburban Mumbai. Shashi Kapoor acted in many films and has contributed immensely to Hindi cinema.

Shashi Kapoor never took work home

Shashi Kapoor was a very popular actor of his time and has acted in several hit films like 'Kabhie Kabhie' and 'Jab Jab Phool Khile', which were shot in Kashmir. According to a report, the actor never brought work home. The report further quoted his son Kunal Kapoor as saying that his father would try to schedule his outdoor shooting schedules to coincide with the kids' school holidays. And since most of the actor's films were shot in Kashmir, the family often holidayed there. The report further quoted Kunal as saying that, "If he packed up early, we'd go out for lunches, long walks, shikara rides and even picnics."

Shared a great rapport with son Kunal

Shashi Kapoor apparently shared a very good rapport with his son, Kunal Kapoor. His son revealed that they would often have long talks on movies and theatre. Speaking to a daily, Kunal Kapoor said, "After I became an actor and a producer, we often discussed cinema and theatre, but more of other people's work than our own. He admired his older brother Raj Kapoor and respected Satyajit Ray. I recall meeting Sohrab Modi whose Sikander he was impressed by, a couple of times. We played father and son in Vijeta which he produced. I was really nervous but he made it easy for me, never saying, 'Don't do this.' On the contrary he'd say that if you don't fall down, how'd you learn to pick yourself up."

Never been a big fan of awards

Shashi Kapoor was associated with several blockbuster films and some critically acclaimed ones as well. When it was announced that the veteran actor will be conferred with the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke Award, his son, Kunal Kapoor revealed that his father had never been a fan of awards. Speaking to a daily, Kunal said, "Dad never gave much importance to awards. For him the only two serious recognitions were the President's Golden Medal and the Dadasaheb Phalke Award which he's just received. When he heard the news, he smiled and laughed a little."

The perfect co-star

Shashi Kapoor was a heartthrob back in the '70s and like many others, Shabana Azmi too was a huge fan of the actor. Speaking to a daily, the actress revealed that she would save her pocket money and buy posters of Shashi Kapoor from Grant Road and get them autographed by him. The actress later on romanced Shashi Kapoor in Fakira, sharing her experience Shabana said, "I was a crazy fan and to suddenly land a role opposite my childhood idol in Fakira was unbelievable! On the first day, we were shooting the song 'Dil mein tujhe...' During rehearsals when the dance director, Satyanarayan, demonstrated the moves, I was aghast! I couldn't get so intimate with Shashi Kapoor, I told my hairdresser, and burst into tears in my make-up room. Minutes later, my hero was banging on the door wanting to know what the problem was. When I tearfully explained, he mocked, 'Mummy, mummy mujhe actor banna hai!' Calling me a silly girl, he told me to come out when the shot was ready. When I arrived on the set, I found that he had changed all the moves so I'd be more comfortable."

Never wanted the media glare

Shabana Azmi had more kind words to share about her co-star Shashi Kapoor. In an interview, the actress revealed how Shashi Kapoor never came in the media glare. Shabana Azmi stated that when she and several others from the industry were demanding alternate housing for several slum-dwellers in Colaba, it was Shashi Kapoor who put their word forward to the Chief Minister. The actress revealed, "Shashi Kapoor turned up wanting to know our demands. He left soon after and went straight to the Chief Minister, Shankarrao Chavan, telling him that the film industry had always supported the government in a crisis and he couldn't let the demands of one of its members go unheard. I was on stage, about to thank Shashi Kapoor for negotiating the deal for us, when I saw him step away from the media glare, slip away into an alley and disappear. He didn't want any accolades and never spoke about it, ever. That's the kind of person he is."

Began acting at the age of 4

According to a report, Shashi began his tryst with acting at the tender age of four. He was reportedly a part of several plays that were directed and produced by his father Prithviraj Kapoor. Apparently, he worked as a child artist in four films. Interestingly, he acted as a child artist with Pran in 'Sanskar' and later on as he grew up, the two shared the screen in nine films. And later marked his big screen debut as a hero in 1961 with the film 'Dharmputra'.  

Preferred to invest money only in theatre and cinema

Shabana Azmi, in her interview with a leading daily also revealed that Shashi Kapoor put his money only in theatre and cinema, over other commercial businesses. Sharing an anecdote Shabana said, "When we went for the Moscow Film Festival, with just eight dollars in foreign exchange, we were all trapped for cash. But despite the presence of bigwigs like FC Mehra and Raj Kapoor, Shashi Kapoor footed every bill." The report further quoted Shabana Azmi as saying that Shashi Kapoor had done a lot to build an institution like Prithvi Theatre.

Tried his hand at direction too

Shashi Kapoor was not just an exceptional actor but had also tried his hand at direction. In 1991, he had directed a film called Ajooba that starred Amitabh Bachchan in the lead role. Sharing a story from the sets, Amitabh Bachchan said in an interview, "He moved around the set with a stick in his hand, with the intention of using it on anyone who misbehaved. But he never used it! He was one director who cared immensely for his artistes and technicians, on an equal plane."

Family

See The Kapoors of Filmistan

Filmography

As an actor

1945 Tadbir

1948 Aag

1950 Samadhi

1950 Sangram

1951 Awaara

1961 Char Diwari

1961 Dharmputra

1962 Mehndi Lagi Mere Haath

1962 Prem Patra

1963 Holiday in Bombay

1963 Jab Se Tumhe Dekha Hai

1963 The Householder

1963 Yeh Dil Kisko Doon

1964 Benazir

1965 Jab Jab Phool Khile

1965 Mohabbat Isko Kahete Hain

1965 Shakespeare-Wallah

1965 Waqt

1966 Biradari

1966 Neend Hamari Khwab Tumhare

1966 Pyar Kiye Jaa

1967 A Matter of Innocence

1967 Aamne - Saamne

1967 Dil Ne Pukara

1968 Haseena Maan Jayegi

1968 Juaari

1968 Kanyadaan

1969 Ek Shriman Ek Shrimati

1969 Jahan Pyar Mile

1969 Pyar Ka Mausam

1969 Raja Saab

1970 Abhinetri

1970 Bombay Talkie

1970 My Love

1970 Rootha Na Karo

1970 Suhana Safar

1971 Patanga

1971 Sharmeelee

1972 Chori Chori

1972 Jaanwar Aur Insaan

1972 Siddhartha

1973 Aa Gale Lag Jaa

1973 Naina

1974 5 Rifles

1974 Chor Machaye Shor

1974 Insaaniyat

1974 Jeevan Sangram

1974 Mr. Romeo

1974 Paap Aur Punya

1974 Roti Kapada Aur Makaan

1974 Vachan

1975 Chori Mera Kaam

1975 Deewaar

1975 Prem Kahani

1975 Salaakhen

1975 Anari

1976 Aap Beati

1976 Deewaangee

1976 Fakira

1976 Kabhie Kabhie

1976 Koi Jeeta Koi Haara

1976 Naach Uthe Sansaar

1976 Naag Champa

1976 Shankar Dada

1977 Chakkar Pe Chakkar

1977 Doosara Aadmi

1977 Farishta Ya Qatil

1977 Hira Aur Patthar

1977 Immaan Dharam

1977 Mukti

1978 Aahuti

1978 Amar Shakti

1978 Apna Khoon

1978 Atithee

1978 Do Musafir

1978 Heeralal Pannalal

1978 Muqaddar

1978 Phaansi

1978 Rahu Ketu

1978 Satyam Shivam Sundaram: Love Sublime

1978 Trishna

1978 Trishul

1979 Ahsaas

1979 Chor Sipahee

1979 Duniya Meri Jeb Mein

1979 Gautam Govinda

1979 Junoon

1979 Kaala Patthar

1979 Suhaag

1980 Do Aur Do Paanch

1980 Ganga Aur Suraj

1980 Kala Pani

1980 Kali Ghata

1980 Neeyat

1980 Shaan

1980 Shiv Shakti

1980 Swayamvar

1981 Baseraa

1981 Ek Aur Ek Gyarah

1981 Kalyug

1981 Kranti

1981 Krodhi

1981 Maan Gaye Ustaad

1981 Silsila

1982 Bezubaan

1982 Do Guru

1982 Namak Halaal

1982 Vakil Babu

1982 Vijeta

1982 Sawaal

1983 Bandhan Kuchchey Dhaagon Ka

1983 Gehri Chot: Urf - Door-Desh

1983 Ghungroo

1983 Heat and Dust

1984 Bandh Honth

1984 Chakma

1984 Ghar Ek Mandir

1984 Pakhandi

1984 Utsav

1984 Yaadon Ki Zanjeer

1984 Zameen Aasmaan

1985 Aandhi-Toofan

1985 Alag Alag

1985 Bepanaah

1985 Bhavani Junction

1985 Pighalta Aasman

1986 Aurat

1986 Ek Main Aur Ek Tu

1986 Ilzaam

1986 Kissa Kathmandu Kaa (TV serial)

1986 Maa Beti

1986 New Delhi Times

1986 Swati

1987 Anjaam

1987 Ghar Ka Sukh

1987 Ijaazat

1987 Naam O Nishan

1987 Pyaar Ki Jeet

1987 Sammy and Rosie Get Laid

1987 Sindoor

1988 Akhri Muqabla

1988 Commando

1988 Hum To Chale Pardes

1988 Kaun Hai Khooni

1988 The Deceivers

1989 Bandook Dahej Ke Seenay Par

1989 Clerk

1989 Farz Ki Jung

1989 Gair Kaanooni

1989 Jaaydaad

1989 Meri Zabaan

1989 Oonch Neech Beech

1989 Touhean

1990 Raeeszada

1991 Akayla

1993 Aag Ka Toofan

1994 Muhafiz/ In Custody

1994 Saboot Mangta Hain Kanoon

1994 Vivekananda

1995 Faisla Main Karungi

1996 Gulliver's Travels (Television film)

1998 Ghar Bazar

1998 Jinnah

1998 Side Streets

As a producer

1979 Junoon

1981 36 Chowringhee Lane

1981 Kalyug

1982 Vijeta

1984 Utsav

1991 Ajooba

As a director

1991 Ajooba

2015: Dadasaheb Phalke award

The Times of India

Mar 24 2015

Avijit Ghosh

Dadasaheb Phalke award for Shashi Kapoor

The birthday gift came five days late. But actorproducer Shashi Kapoor, who turned 77 last week, wouldn't mind. For, the gift is very special. On Monday , a jury named him for this year's Dadasaheb Phalke Award, India's most prestigious award in cinema. Shashi will be the third of the Kapoors, widely regarded as Bollywood's first family , to receive the honour. His father Prithivraj (1971) and elder brother Raj (1987) were the other two. The award consists of a golden lotus, a cash prize of Rs 10 lakh and a shawl.

In the 1960s, Shashi formed a popular box-office pair with Nanda, with whom he delivered his first jubilee hit, `Jab Jab Phool Khile' 1965, reworked three decades ater as Raja Hindustani starring Aamir Khan).

But, Shashi's most profitable collaboration happened with Amitabh Bachchan in the 1970s and 80s. In times when every second Hindi film revolved around brothers -either warring or separated at birth or both -the two were associated n a bunch of box-office biggies: Deewar', `Trishul', `Suhaag', Kabhi Kabhie' and `Namak Halaal'. Big B stole the show in Deewar but Shashi not only de ivered the iconic dialogue -Mere paas maa hai -but also claimed a Filmfare Award for he best supporting actor.

This was the era of multistarrers. Most top directors of he time had roles for Shashi. But during this phase, he also acted in dozens of humdrum flicks that few remember today.It is said, he had once signed nearly 100 films. Many of these were never made. The actor worked three shifts. His broth er, Raj, once famously equated him with a taxi. His `Satyam Shivam Sundaram' (1978) was one of Shashi's biggest solo hits. A rare performance of heft came much later in `New Delhi Times' (1986) in which he played a conscientious newspaper editor. It won him a National Award for best actor.

Perhaps Shashi's insecurity was rooted in the lean patch he underwent in the late 1960s and early 1970s before he found his feet again with `Chor Machaye Shor' (1974). But the truth is he poured most of his earnings in producing some of the finest in alternative cinema and in building Prithvi Theatre, his father's dream of an exclusive space for the performing arts which gave a huge fillip to quality Hindi theatre in Bombay .

It is Shashi's contribution to meaningful cinema as a producer that makes him stand apart from other actors.Two of these films were based on literary works: `Junoon' from Ruskin Bond's `A Flight of Pigeons' and `Utsav' from `Mrichakatika' by ancient India dramatist Sudraka. He also promoted talent; Aparna Sen made her debut as director in `36 Chowringhee Lane'.

Urbane, stylish and charming, Shashi was dangerously good-looking. Girls and their mothers would swoon over his crooked teeth, twinkling eyes and irresistibly mischievous smile. That sparkle seemed to vanish after he lost his wife Jennifer Kendal in 1984. Health issues have troubled him since.Hopefully, the award will bring back, even for a few moments, the famed impishness of Shashi Kapoor.

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