
AMJAD KHAN - Film Actor
Amjad Khan (12th November 1940 – 27th July
1992) was born in Peshawar, British India,
the son of legendary actor Jayant. He was the brother of fellow actor Imtiaz
Khan and Inayat Khan who acted in one film. In 1957, he was cast in the movie Ab Dilli Dur Nahin.
Khan was educated at St Theresa's High School, in
Bandra,
Mumbai, Mumbai. He attended R D National College, and was the
general secretary – the highest elected student body representative.
Before Amjad came to films he was a theatre
actor. His first role was in the film Nazneen (1951). His next role was at
the age of 17 in the film Ab Dilli Dur Nahin (1957). He made
appearances in minor roles with father Jayant in a few
films. He assisted K. Asif in Love and God in the
late 1960s and had made a brief appearance in the film. The film was left
incomplete after Asif's death in 1971, and it ended up releasing in 1986. In
1973 he made his debut as an adult in Hindustan Ki Kasam.
In 1975 he was offered the role of dacoit Gabbar Singh for the film Sholay
(literally meaning flames) by Salim
who was one of its writers. In preparation for the role, Amjad read Abhishapth
Chambal, a book on Chambal dacoits written by Taroon Kumar Bhaduri
(actress Jaya Bhaduri's father). Amjad shot to stardom
with the movie. His portrayal of Gabbar Singh is considered by many to be the
first depiction of pure evil on the screen in Indian Cinema:
a totally evil character that doesn't make excuses for his evil. His mannerisms
and dialogues have become an integral part of Bollywood lexicon and spawned
numerous parodies and spoofs. Sholay went on to become a blockbuster.
Although it boasted an ensemble cast of superstars including Dharmendra,
Amitabh
Bachchan and Sanjeev Kumar, he stole the thunder with his
unorthodox and eerie dialogue delivery that was perfectly apposite to the total
lack of empathy his character was supposed to convey. Even today people fondly
remember his dialogues and mannerisms. He later appeared in advertisements as
Gabbar Singh endorsing Britannia Glucose Biscuits (popularly known as "Gabbar
Ki Asli Pasand"), and it was the first incidence of a villain being used
to sell a popular product.
After the success of Sholay, Khan
continued to play villain roles in many subsequent Hindi films in the 1970s,
1980s and early 1990s – superseding, in terms of popularity and demand, the
earlier Indian actor, Ajit — portraying more sophisticated and urbane
criminal bosses, mastermind of bank robberies, murders and conspiracies to
seize power. He often acted as villain opposite Amitabh
Bachchan as the hero.
Khan was also acclaimed for playing many
unconventional roles. In the critically acclaimed film Shatranj Ke Khiladi (1977) (based on the
novel of the same title) by Munshi
Premchand and directed by Satyajit Ray,
Khan played the helpless and deluded monarch Wajid Ali
Shah, whose kingdom, Avadh, is being targeted by British colonialists from the British East India Company. It is the only
movie in which he dubbed a song. He played many positive roles in films such as
Yaarana (1981) and Laawaris
(1981) as Amitabh's friend and father respectively. In the art film
Utsav
(1984), he portrayed Vatsayana, the author of the Kama Sutra.
In 1988 he appeared in the Merchant-Ivory English film The Perfect Murder as an underworld
don. He excelled at playing comical characters in films such as Qurbani (1980), Love Story, and Chameli Ki
Shaadi (1986). In 1991, he reprised his role as Gabbar Singh in Ramgarh Ke
Sholay, a parody of the legendary film which included look-alikes of Dev
Anand and Amitabh Bachchan.
He ventured into directing for a brief period in
the 1980s directing and starring in Chor Police
(1983), which was a success, and Ameer Aadmi Gareeb Aadmi
(1985) which failed to do well at the box office.
Amjad was the president of the Actors Guild
association. He was respected in the film industry. He would intervene and
negotiate disputes between actors and directors/producers. One such dispute
occurred when Dimple Kapaddia agreed to
play a mother role and later backed down. The entire film producer community
tried to boycott her. Amjad intervened on behalf of the Actors Guild.
In 1972, he married Shehla Khan; the following
year, she gave birth to their first child, Shadaab Khan,
who acted in a few films. He also had a daughter Ahlam Khan and another son
Seemaab Khan. Her daughter Ahlam married popular theater actor Zafar
Karachiwala in 2011.
In 1986, Khan had a near-fatal accident on the
Bombay-Goa road, when he drove his car into a tree while trying to avoid a
boulder. The drugs administered to him caused a serious weight problem for the
rest of his life. As a result of his increasing weight, he died in 1992 after
suffering from heart failure at the age of 51. Several of the films he
completed were released after his death, right until 1996.
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