By M H Ahssan | INN Live
Renowned Veteran film actor Farooq Sheikh passed away after massive sudden heart attack. Born on 25 March 1948, he died at the age of 65. His body will be brought to Mumbai later in the day after completing the formalities in Dubai. He was on a holiday in Dubai with his family.
From Satyajit Ray to Hrishikesh Mukherjee, Farooque Shaikh worked with some of the best directors of Bollywood of his era, leaving behind a body of work stands out for sheer quality. In a career spanning over three decades, Shaikh was last seen in Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani but will be remembered more for classics such as Shatranj Ke Khiladi, Garam Hawa, Katha, Noorie and Umrao Jaan.
Shaikh was in fact trained to be a lawyer but felt disillusioned by the way the police and legal system worked and chose acting instead, having done several successful plays as a college student, some of them with Shabana Azmi.
Having done his first film Garm Hawa, he got called up for a key role in Satyajit Ray's Shatranj ke Khiladi, following that up with several radio shows, television serials and then more films, all the while continuing to keep his passion for theatre alive. His Tumhari Amrita, directed by Feroz Abbas Khan, remains one of the best known and longest running theatre productions, its original star cast including Shaikh and Shabana Azmi.
It is an Indian context adaptation of A R Gurney's American play, Love Letters (1988), staged first in 1992. Born on March 25, 1948, Sheikh is renowned for his immense contribution to parallel cinema, low-budget high quality movies, theatre and television. Once in his writings, Shaikh said he remembered being offered 40 films after Noorie, but didn't accept any -- they were all remakes of Noorie.
"I have never been commercially viable: People recognise me, smile and wave at me —but I have never received marriage proposals written in blood. In his heyday, when Rajesh Khanna drove down a street, the traffic stopped —I don't mind not receiving this kind of adulation. But I do miss not having been able to command the kind of work I wanted. I miss not being 100 per cent commercially viable," he wrote.
His later work for television included Jeena Isi Ka Naam Hai, still popular on Youtube. His co-star of several films Deepti Naval told INN Live she met him two months ago at the Sharjah book fair. She recalled the promise she and the late actor had made, and said: "After our last film Listen Amaya, Farooque and I had promised to each other that we will work together again and there were many films in the pipeline.
We had decided to be in touch in terms of work." Naval said it was Shaikh who had encouraged her to work. She was in Himachal but returning to Mumbai immediately, she told INN Live. Actor and activist Shabana Azmi, who worked with him on stage right from their college days and on many occasions through their Bollywood careers, told INN Live that Shaikh was also a religious man, offering namaaz five times a day.
"But he was a liberal, a truly sane Muslim voice," she said, adding that she had spoken to him barely three days back. Actor Satish Shah told INN Live he was constantly in touch with Shaikh, having spoken two days ago to the actor. "We were constantly in touch with each other through SMS. I spoke to him day before yesterday. In fact, I am also close friends with his wife Rupa as we were all in the same college," Shah said.
Shaikh is survived by his wife Rupa and two daughters.
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