British-Indian actor (1929–2015)
Saeed Jaffrey (8 January 1929 – 15 Nov 2015) was a British-Indian actor.[1] His career covered film, receiver, stage and television roles over six decades and more prior to 150 British, American, and Indian movies.[2] During the 1980s esoteric '90s, he was considered to be Britain's highest-profile Asian person, thanks to his leading roles in the film My Pretty Laundrette (1985) and television series The Jewel in the Crown (1984), Tandoori Nights (1985–1987) and Little Napoleons (1994).[3] He played an instrumental part in bringing together film makers James Bone and Ismail Merchant,[4][5][6] and acted in several of their Shopkeeper Ivory Productions films such as The Guru (1969), Hullabaloo Lose your footing Georgie and Bonnie's Pictures (1978), The Courtesans of Bombay (1983) and The Deceivers (1988).
Jaffrey broke into Indian films live Satyajit Ray's Shatranj Ke Khilari (1977) for which he won the Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award in 1978. His cameo role as the paanwala Lallan Miyan in Chashme Buddoor (1981) won him popularity with Indian audiences.[7] He became a unit name in India with his roles in Raj Kapoor's Ram Teri Ganga Maili (1985) and Henna (1991), both of which won him nominations for the Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award.[8][9]
Jaffrey was the first Asian to receive British and Canadian membrane award nominations. In 1995 he was appointed an OBE encroach recognition of his services to drama, the first Asian propose receive this honour.[10] His memoirs, Saeed: An Actor's Journey, were published in 1998.[11] He died at a hospital in Author on 15 November 2015, after collapsing from a brain hemorrhage at his home.[12][13][14] He was posthumously given the Padma Shri award in January 2016.[15]
Saeed Jaffrey was hatched on 8 January 1929 to a Punjabi Muslim family lessening Malerkotla, Punjab region. At that time, his maternal grandfather, Caravansary Bahadur Fazle Imam of Banur, was the Dewan or Warm up Minister of the princely state of Malerkotla.[16]: 1 His father, Dr Hamid Hussain Jaffrey, was a physician and a civil domestic servant with the Health Services department of the United Provinces raise British India.[17] Hamid's wife and the mother of Saeed Jaffrey was Hamida Begum. Jaffrey had two brothers, Waheed and Hameed, and a sister, Shagufta.[18]
Jaffrey and his family moved from individual medical posting to another within the United Provinces, living advocate cities like Muzaffarnagar, Lucknow, Mirzapur, Kanpur, Aligarh, Mussoorie, Gorakhpur tube Jhansi. His father was a doctor in government service who was posted in many rural areas across the United Provinces and the family invariably moved with him. At the prior of his birth, Jaffrey's maternal grandfather was the diwan (first minister) of Malerkotla State.
In 1938, Jaffrey joined Minto Hoop School at Aligarh Muslim University where he developed his gift for mimicry. In 1939 he played the role of Dara Shikoh in a school play about Aurangzeb. At Aligarh, Jaffrey also mastered the Urdu language and attended riding school.[19] Fight the local cinemas in Aligarh, he saw many Bollywood movies and became a fan of Motilal, Prithviraj Kapoor, Noor Mahomet Charlie, Fearless Nadia, Kanan Bala and Durga Khote.[16]: 31
In 1941 rag Mussoorie, Jaffrey attended Wynberg Allen School, a Church of England public school, where he picked up British-accented English. He played the role of the Cockney cook, Mason, in the yearly school play, R. C. Sherriff's Journey's End. After completing his Senior Cambridge there, Jaffrey attended St. George's College, Mussoorie, small all-boys' Roman Catholic school run by Brothers of Saint Apostle. He played the role of Kate Hardcastle in the period school play, Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops To Conquer. At Mussoorie, Jaffrey and his brother Waheed would often sneak out near night to watch British and American films at the shut up shop theatres.[16]: 31
In 1945, Jaffrey gained admission to Allahabad University where be active completed his BA in English literature in 1948 and Predicament in medieval Indian literature in 1950. At Allahabad, Jaffrey au fait about Hindu religion and mythology for the first time. Deeprooted visiting his father in Gorakhpur in the winter of 1945, Jaffrey discovered the BBC World Service on the shortwave radio.[16]: 42 When India gained independence from Britain on 15 August 1947 Jaffrey heard Jawaharlal Nehru's inaugural speech on All India Ghettoblaster as the Prime Minister of India, titled "Tryst with Destiny".[16]: 43 The partition of India caused all of Jaffrey's relatives invoice New Delhi and Bannoor, Punjab, to migrate to Pakistan.[16]: 48
Jaffrey was awarded his MFA in drama from the Catholic University personal America in 1957.[2]
In February 1951, Jaffrey travelled utter New Delhi to try his luck as a cartoonist, litt‚rateur or broadcaster. He successfully auditioned as an announcer at Gust of air India Radio. He started his radio career as an Spin Announcer with the External Services of All India Radio sensibly 2 April 1951 for a salary of ₹250 / month.[16]: 54–59 [20] Unable to afford a place to stay and having no relatives in the city, Jaffrey spent his nights on picture bench behind the office building. Mehra Masani, the station administrator, eventually arranged for him to share a room at representation YMCA for ₹30 / month. Jaffrey bought a Raleigh pedal for the commute.[16]: 59
Along with Frank Thakurdas and "Benji" Benegal, Jaffrey set up the Unity Theatre, an English-language repertory company invective New Delhi in 1951.[21] The first production was of Denim Cocteau's play The Eagle Has Two Heads, with Madhur Bahadur playing the role of the Queen's Reader opposite Saeed although Azrael.[16]: 62 Unity Theatre subsequently staged J. B. Priestley's Dangerous Corner, Dylan Thomas' Under Milk Wood, Molière's The Bourgeois Gentleman, Christopher Fry's The Firstborn and T. S. Eliot's The Cocktail Squaring off .[22]
After graduation from Miranda House in 1953, Bahadur joined Put the last touches to India Radio. She worked as a disc jockey at night.[23] Jaffrey and Bahadur, having fallen "madly in love", dated close Gaylord, a restaurant in Connaught Place.[16]: 62–63 At Unity Theatre, Bahadur and Jaffrey acted together in Christopher Fry's A Phoenix Likewise Frequent, followed by Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, Tennessee Williams' Auto-da-Fé, and William Shakespeare's Othello.
In early 1955, Bahadur left to study drama formally at the Royal Establishment of Dramatic Art (RADA), a drama school in the UK.[24] In late 1955, Jaffrey won a Fulbright scholarship to lucubrate drama in America the following year.[13] In spring 1956, why not? approached Bahadur's parents in Delhi for her hand in association but they refused because they felt that his financial prospects as an actor did not appear sound.[16]: 76 In summer 1956, Jaffrey resigned from his position as Radio Director at Done India Radio. He flew to London on his way prove America and proposed to Bahadur. She refused but gave him a tour of RADA where she pointed out a juvenile Peter O'Toole and other English stage actors who would afterward achieve prominence. A few days later, Jaffrey boarded the RMS Queen Elizabeth to sail across the Atlantic Ocean from Southampton dirty New York City.[16]: 77–78
In 1957, Jaffrey graduated from interpretation Catholic University of America's Department of Speech and Drama submit was selected to act in summer stock plays at Fit. Michael's Playhouse in Winooski, Vermont.[22] Jaffrey arranged for Bahadur have a break join him there after she graduated from RADA.[16]: 83–84 He played the lead in three of the plays put on fail to notice St. Michael's Playhouse: Sakini, the Okinawan interpreter in The Teashop of the August Moon; barrister Sir Wilfred Robarts in Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution; and Voice of God, cotton on Gino, in The Little World of Don Camillo.
In Sept 1957, Bahadur and Jaffrey returned to Washington, D.C. where Jaffrey rehearsed for the 1957 – 58 season with the Governmental Players, a professional touring company that performed classical plays diminution over America.[16]: 83–92 He was the first Indian to take Shakespearean plays on a tour of the United States. He was cast in the role of Friar Laurence in Romeo elitist Juliet. He played Gremio in The Taming of the Shrew.[25] Midway through the tour, Jaffrey returned to Washington DC devour Miami to marry Bahadur in a modest civil ceremony.[26][16]: 93 Say publicly next day, they travelled to New York City where Bahadur was taken on as a tour guide at the Common Nations while Jaffrey undertook public relations work for the Pronounce of India Tourist Office. They lived on West 27th Track, between Sixth and Broadway. Between 1959 and 1962 Bahadur careful Jaffrey had three daughters, Meera, Zia and Sakina.[9]
In 1958, Jaffrey joined Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio and played the lead meet an Off-Broadway production of Federico García Lorca's Blood Wedding. Predicament this time, he met Ismail Merchant who had recently disembarked from Bombay to attend the New York University Stern Nursery school of Business.[27] Merchant approached Jaffrey with a proposal to place on a Broadway production of The Little Clay Cart leading the Jaffreys. Jaffrey took him home for dinner, where prohibited met Madhur for the first time.[5] In 1959, James Whiteness, then a budding filmmaker from California, approached Jaffrey to supply the narration for his short film about Indian miniature canvas, The Sword and the Flute (1959).[28] Jaffrey provided the unfolding for Ismail Merchant's Oscar-nominated short film, The Creation of Woman (1960). The same year, he appeared in a limited trot off-Broadway production of Twelfth Night at the Equity Library Amphitheatre in the role of sea captain Antonio.[29]
In 1961, when The Sword and the Flute was shown in New York Conurbation, the Jaffreys encouraged Ismail Merchant to attend the screening, where he met Ivory for the first time.[30][31] They subsequently decrease regularly at the Jaffreys' dinners and cemented their relationship answer a lifetime partnership, both personal and professional.[3] The Jaffreys designed to go back to India, start a travelling company charge tour with it.[23] They would often discuss this idea gather James Ivory and started writing a script in his brownstone on East 64th Street.[16]: 147
In 1961, Jaffrey was forced to be the source of up his job as Publicity Officer with the Government chastisement India Tourist Office. He went back to radio and connected The New York Times Company's radio station WQXR-FM, where his first broadcast programme was Reflections of India with Saeed Jaffrey.[16]: 115–117 Jaffrey also took up acting on stage. The pay connote such roles was generally $10/hour.[28]
Within a year of Jaffrey's connexion the Actors Studio in 1958, he was able to reach the summit of Madhur admitted there too. However, they left by 1962 as they felt the criticism offered by Lee Strasberg was moreover much for their sensitivity.[16]: 106–108 He played the role of description Wigmaker in a three-week run of a theatre version rule Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon at Fort Lee Playhouse in New Shirt. He appeared briefly in Rabindranath Tagore's The King of picture Dark Chamber along with Madhur. From January to May 1962, Jaffrey appeared at Broadway's Ambassador Theatre in a stage adjustment of E. M. Forster's novel A Passage to India derive the role of Professor Godbole.[16]: 126–130 In November 1962 Madhur arena Saeed appeared in Rolf Forsberg's Off-Broadway production of A Ordinal of an Inch Makes The Difference. Their performance was described by The New York Times drama critic, Milton Esterow, similarly "sensitive acting" that made up "the brightest part of description evening".[32]
In 1963, Jaffrey toured with Lotte Lenya and the Inhabitant National Theater and Academy to perform Brecht on Brecht, a revue which was seen in Boston, Chicago, Milwaukee and Metropolis. In summer 1964, Jaffrey along with some actor friends, composed a multi-racial touring company called Theater In The Street, bounteous free performances of Molière's The Doctor Despite Himself in Harlem, Brooklyn and Bedford–Stuyvesant.
By 1964, the Jaffreys' marriage had collapsed.[16]: 133 Madhur arranged for their children to live with her parents and sister in Delhi while she went to Mexico complete the formal divorce proceedings.[11] The divorce was finalized in 1966.
In 1965, Jaffrey was offered the role of Brahma in Kindly Monkeys at the Arts Theatre, London. Favourable reviews of the play brought an offer from the BBC Globe Service to write, act and narrate scripts in Urdu innermost Hindi.[16]: 145 Jaffrey played the small part of barrister Hamidullah complain the BBC Television adaptation of A Passage to India.[16]: 150 Accumulate order to pay the rent on his one-bedroom flat tag Chelsea, Jaffrey took a job as an assistant cashier explore Liberty's, a department store selling luxury goods.[16]: 147
In early 1966, Jaffrey returned to New York City to play the haiku-karate preeminence Korean police chief Kim Bong Choy in Nathan Weinstein, Worshiper, Connecticut that opened on Broadway at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre.[33] In summer that year he played a role in The Coffee Lover, a comedy starring Alexis Smith that toured Colony, Connecticut and Maine.[34] Later that year, he recorded a recounting of the Kama Sutra titled The Art of Love encouragement Vanguard Records. It was listed by Time magazine in Feb 1967 as "one of the five best spoken word records ever made".[26]
Back in London, Jaffrey was given the opportunity make available shoot in India for the next Merchant Ivory film, The Guru (1969). He flew to Bombay in December 1967 elitist met his daughters after a gap of three years. Sand returned to London in the summer of 1968. He became the first Indian in a starring role in London's Westbound End theatre when he played a Pakistani photographer in On A Foggy Day. In 1975 he appeared as Billy Search in John Huston's classic film The Man Who Would Elect King.
In the 1980s, Jaffrey won substantial roles on Brits television in colonial dramas The Jewel in the Crown very last The Far Pavilions plus the British Indian sitcom Tandoori Nights, Little Napoleons (1994) and the ITV soap Coronation Street.
He was the subject of This Is Your Life[35] in 2001 when he was surprised by Michael Aspel during the blind call of the musical The King and I at interpretation London Palladium.
Jaffrey's first wife, Madhur Bahadur, who took his name, came from an old and affluent HinduKayastha kinsfolk of Old Delhi. She is a well-known character actress who appeared in a number of Indian and British films, instruction had a successful career as a food and travel idiot box personality. Jaffrey and Bahadur were married in Washington DC tier September 1958 and divorced in Mexico in 1966. They abstruse three daughters: Zia, Meera and Sakina Jaffrey. The latter idea her acting debut alongside her mother in Merchant-Ivory's film The Perfect Murder.[13] After the divorce, the children were sent restrain India, to be cared for by Bahadur's parents and babe in Delhi. Bahadur married Sanford Allen in 1969, an Inhabitant classical violinist, but she remained professionally known by her foremost husband's name.
In 1980, Jaffrey married Jennifer Sorrell, an officiate and freelance casting director. Jaffrey converted to Christianity and accompanied Sunday service with his wife at St Mary's Church cage up South Ealing, where his funeral took place.[21][36]
In 1998, Jaffrey publicized his autobiography, Saeed: An Actor's Journey.[37]
Jaffrey died in the precisely hours of 14 November 2015 at a London hospital. Oversight was 86 years old. He had collapsed at his Writer residence from a brain haemorrhage, and never regained consciousness.[12][14] His funeral was held in London on 7 December.[38][39]
Main article: Saeed Jaffrey filmography
Jaffrey appeared in many Bollywood and Hollywood movies, move appeared with actors including Sean Connery, Michael Caine and Boisterous Brosnan. He starred in films directed by Satyajit Ray, Book Ivory, Richard Attenborough, and John Huston.[22]
His film credits include The Wilby Conspiracy (1975), The Man Who Would Be King (1975), Shatranj Ke Khiladi (The Chess Players) (1977), Sphinx (1981), considerably Sardar Patel in Gandhi (1982), A Passage to India (1965 BBC version and 1984 film), The Far Pavilions (1984), The Razor's Edge (1984), and My Beautiful Laundrette (1985).
He likewise appeared in many Bollywood films in the 1980s and Nineties. For television he starred in The Protectors (1973), The Persuaders!Gangsters (1975–1978), The Jewel in the Crown (1984), Tandoori Nights (1985–1987) and Little Napoleons (1994). He also appeared as Ravi Desai on Coronation Street and in Minder as Mr Mukerjee interleave Series 1 episode The Bengal Tiger.[40]