HomeNewsIndiaThe greatness of Irrfan Khan — ‘An actor who didn’t need lines’

The greatness of Irrfan Khan — ‘An actor who didn’t need lines’

Irrfan Khan, who essayed a wide repertoire of roles, made acting look easy.

April 29, 2020 / 16:23 IST
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Udita Jhunjhunwala

Few Indian actors straddled Bollywood and Hollywood with the grace and impact of Irrfan Khan. A graduate of the National School of Drama, Irrfan, who dropped his last name and was referred to simply by his first name with an extra ‘r’, began his acting career with television roles, getting his first movie break in Mira Nair’s Salaam Bombay in 1988.

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The story of his disappointment on learning that his part—as a letter writer—had been cut, to just a cameo, is well documented. His unconventional looks, which didn’t fit into the mould of a Bollywood romantic hero, made it difficult for him to land lead roles in an industry where biceps carried more weight than acting chops. But Irrfan broke the trend. His bulging eyes conveyed so much. With his lean frame, dialogue delivery punctuated by slow deliberations and long pauses, here was an actor that believed less is more.

Just as he was on the verge of giving up his movie dreams, British director Asif Kapadia cast him as a soldier in ‘The Warrior’ (2001). Smaller roles followed before the actor, whom the San Francisco Chronicle described as “a rugged man with sad eyes,” got his big break with Tigmanshu Dhulia’s Haasil in 2004. Dhulia was among his closest collaborators, along wth Mira Nair and Vishal Bhardwaj.