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Three film personalities passed away this year, all stalwarts in
their respective domains - Bollywood's gentleman actor Sunil Dutt,
the king of romance in Tamil films, Gemini Ganesan, and director
Ismail Merchant of the famous Ivory-Merchant duo and MIP films.
Sunil Dutt (June 1930 - May 2005): Actor-filmmaker-activist-politician
Sunil Dutt's demise a week shy of his 75th birthday robbed nation's
cinema and its public life of a stellar personality. He sought -
and surmounted -- challenges all his life. In an acting career that
spanned all of five decades, Duttsaab, as he was fondly called,
demonstrated his talent in 100-odd films made by some of India's
greatest directors -- Mehboob B.R. Chopra, Bimal Roy, Hrishikesh
Mukherjee, Tapan Sinha, Raj Khosla and Yash Chopra, among others.
Sunil Dutt was last seen in the role of the protagonist's father
in the Sanjay Dutt-starrer, Munnabhai M.B.B.S. He was due to reprise
the role in the film's sequel, Munnabhai Meets Mahatma Gandhi. The
under-production venture has lost one of its lynchpins.
Gemini Ganesan Gemini Ganesan ( November 1930 - March 2005):
He was one of the "Big Three" of Tamil cinema of yesteryear,
the other two being late MG Ramachandran and Sivaji Ganesan. But
unlike the other two, he kept away from politics, though he was
friendly with many of the top leaders. Fondly known as "Kadal
Mannan" (King of romance), Ganesan had acted in several box-office
hits during his heydays between 1950 and 1970 and paired with then
top heroines such as Savithri, whom he later married, Saroja Devi,
former Rajya Sabha member Vaijayanthi Mala, "Sowkar" Janaki
and Devika. Prominent among his hit films are Vanjikottai Valiban,
Kalyana Parisu, Missiamma, Pasamalar, Panama Pasama and Iru Kodugal.
Ismail Merchant (December 1936 - May 2005): In a career
lasting over four decades, he proffered a goldmine of universal
stories that are destined to survive the ravages of time. Two things
made Merchant special. One, filmmaking and feasting were two sides
of the same coin for the man who would make movies designed like
sumptuous gastronomic spreads and rustle up meals during shoots
with the flair and passion of a full-time chef. And two, he had
a way with funding agencies. He would raise finances for his projects
without losing much sweat. It was 30 years after MIP made its first
film that Merchant made his debut as a director with In Custody,
based on a novel by Anita Desai and shot in Bhopal. It was as good
a film as any that the company had ever produced. The V.S. Naipaul
adaptation, The Mystic Masseur, and Cotton Mary, based
on a play by Alexandra Viets, were among the other films that Merchant
directed. At the time of his death, Merchant was working on The
Goddess, with Tina Turner playing a personification of Shakti,
the embodiment of female energy.
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