Tarun Kumar Chatterjee

Tarun Kumar Chattopadhyay (24 February 1931 - 27 October 2003) was an Indian actor who is known for his exclusive work in Bengali cinema. In most of his films, his role as a supporting actor gave him huge appreciation from critics and audience.

Tarun Kumar Chatterjee
Born(1931-02-24)24 February 1931
Kolkata, Bengal Presidency, British India
Died27 October 2003(2003-10-27) (aged 72)
NationalityIndian
OccupationActor
Spouse(s)
    Subrata Devi
    (
    m. 1962, his death)
    ChildrenJhimli Banerjee (née Chatterjee)
    Parents
    • Satkari Chatterjee (father)
    • Chapala Debi (mother)
    RelativesUttam Kumar (brother)
    Barun Chatterjee (brother)

    Personal life

    Tarun Kumar was born on 24 February 1931 in Kolkata. He was the youngest brother of actor Uttam Kumar. Tarun Kumar passed Matriculation from South Suburban School. Although he joined Ashutosh College, but he could not continue his studies. In his professional life, he used to work in Maclyod Company, Metro Cinema and then at Burn Company for few days. In 1962, he married fellow actress Subrata Devi and had a daughter.[1] Tarun Kumar was also known by his nick name 'Buro' among film industry people. His grandson Sourav Banerjee is also an actor.[2]

    Career

    Kumar acted in over 500 films since making his debut with Hrod in 1954. In Jhinder Bandi, he played the rival, Udit, the brother of Shankar played by Uttam Kumar. In Se Chupi Chupi Aase and Sonar Harin, he played the antagonist. However, in most Uttam Kumar starred films, he either played the role of a friend in Saptapadi, Chhadmabesi, Jeeban Mrityu, Deya Neya to name a few or that of an associate or well-wisher in films like Raja Saja, Dhanyi Meye, Mon Niye, Sanyasi Raja, Kayahiner Kahini and Brajabuli. Tarun Kumar's acting skill may well be underrated by the tall shadow of his elder brother, Uttam Kumar but probably he was one of the finest character actors ever worked in Bengali film industry, who performed with equal ease in all types of roles irrespective of comic (e.g. Haat Baralei Bandhu, Basanta Bilaap, Mouchak and Personal Assistant), negative (e.g. Joradighir Choudhuri Paribaar, Dui Purush and Kalankita Nayak) and intense (e.g. Sonar Khancha and Stree etc.) characters, including cameo (e.g. Sesh Anka and Rajkanya). He received the President's award for his performance in the film Dadathakur in 1966. Apart from films he acted on quite a few professional theatres. His play Nahabat, in which he had one of the main roles, ran for about seven years.[3]

    Other Works

    He was chiefly instrumental to establish the Uttam Mancha, an auditorium in South Kolkata, named after his elder brother, the iconic Uttam Kumar whom he loved and adored. Presently, this hall is under the supervision of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation.

    Death

    Tarun Kumar died on 27 October 2003 at the age of 72.[4]

    Selected filmography

    gollark: I wouldn't mind if you could just make a whole computer easily from a gold block and some diamonds but you can't.
    gollark: They're not slow or massively expensive, just really annoying.
    gollark: When I do OC I just spent half an hour having to program recipes into my AE2 autocrafter for the myriad OC components and subcomponents, which is not fun.
    gollark: CC computers are non-evil enough to craft that you can use them as "microcontrollers" to, say, move items around.
    gollark: I too enjoy crafting something like 20 different components and recipe items to make a basic computer.

    References


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