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Pran was the actor who made badness his chief occupation for a career spanning over five decades and more than 350 films, to scare the audience witless. Here’s a look at some of the interesting aspects of the real and reel life of the villain extraordinaire on his death anniversary.
Pran never set out to be an actor. Photography was the career he vied for, and took it up as a profession in Delhi, and later moved to Lahore. There was a paan shop he used to frequent after dinner with his friends. This is the place where writer Wali Mohammed Wali spotted him and approached him for acting.
The following Saturday when he went for a matinee show at Plaza cinema, he bumped into Wali again, who showered him with the choicest of expletives for Wali had relied on Pran and actually told his producer not to sign anyone else. Guilt-ridden, Pran told him that he would come the next day for sure. But Wali wasn’t the man who wanted to take another chance. He noted down his address, and picked him up the next day.
Pran’s third film, Khandaan (1942) was remarkable for many reasons. It was his first film in Hindi, and also the first film in which he played the role of the main protagonist, the hero. It was also Noorjehan’s debut as the lead actress opposite him. Since the future Malika-e-Tarannum was barely 12-13, the filmmakers made her stand on bricks so that she could match the height of Pran in close-ups.
India was about to gain Independence, the air smacked of riots and communal conspiracies. Pran sent his wife Shukla, his sister-in-law, and his almost one-year-old son to Indore for safety as soon as he got a whiff of riots in Lahore. He stayed back. But his wife refused to celebrate their son’s first birthday, which fell on August 11, 1947 unless Pran turned up in Indore. Despite wanting to stay in Lahore, he relented to his wife’s demands, and reached Indore on August 10.
Out of work for more than six months, he started shifting to smaller hotels, and finally had to sell his wife’s jewellery to make ends meet.
When Pran became a household name in malevolence, a few journalists conducted a survey in schools and colleges in Bombay, Delhi, Punjab and UP, and found out that not a single boy was named Pran post his rise. After Raavan, the antagonist in Ramayana, Pran was Hindi cinema’s evil incarnate.
In 1973, Sohanlal Kanwar’s Be-Imaan swept the Filmfare awards, winning seven awards, including Best Supporting Actor for Pran. But the actor refused to accept the award because he felt the judging committee was unfair in giving the Best Music Director award to Shankar-Jaikishan for Be-Imaan and not to Ghulam Mohammed for his exquisite score in Pakeezah.
Pran was very close to Dilp Kumar and Raj Kapoor owing to their long association in the film industry. Pran cherished his turn in Dil Diya Dard Liya (1966), in which Dilip helped him to shape his role.
Pran was known for adding personal touches to his characters by creating interesting gestures, and being very particular about his look in films. Whenever he saw an interesting character in real life, books or magazines, he kept his observation in mind to use it later. He modelled himself after many real life personalities such as Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Adolf Hitler, Sam Pitroda and Abraham Lincoln among others in many films to give his performance a distinctive touch.
(The writer is a journalist and a screenwriter who believes in the insanity of words, in print or otherwise. Follow him on Twitter: @RanjibMazumder)
(This story is from The Quint’s archives and was first published on 12 February 2016, to mark Pran’s birthday)
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