Ashok Kumar also fondly called Dadamoni in Bengali, was a film actor. Born Kumudlal Ganguly in Bhagalpur, Bengal Presidency he attained iconic status in Indian cinema. The Government of India honoured him with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award and the Padma Bhushan in 1998 for his contributions to Indian cinema.His father Kunjalal Ganguly was a lawyer and his mother Gouri Devi came from a wealthy Bengali Kulin Brahmin family. The “Ganguly family” was based in Khandwa . His brothers Anoop Kumar and Kishore Kumar also acted in films. The three brothers worked together in the comedies Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi and Badhti Ka Naam Dadhi. Ashok, though the eldest of the three by quite a margin, survived them both. In fact, he stopped celebrating his birthday after the youngest brother, Kishore, died on that day in 1987. His sister, Sati Devi, was married to Sashadhar Mukherjee of the Mukherjee-Samarth family.Ashok Kumar married Shobha. They had a troubled marriage due to his wife being an alcoholic. His daughter, Preeti Ganguly acted in numerous Hindi film, during 1970s, later she started the ‘Ashok Kumar’s Academy of Dramatic Arts’, Mumbai in 1993. His other daughter, Rupa Ganguly and son Arun Ganguly never joined films,Rupa is married to actor Deven Verma.Reverently called Dadamoni (affectionate term for elder brother), he was born in (13 October 1911) Bhagalpur and educated at Presidency College of the University of Calcutta, Kolkata). He started his career in Bombay (Mumbai), albeit accidentally, with the Bombay Talkies production Jeevan Naiya in 1936. The male lead, Najam-ul-Hussain, went absconding with the heroine Devika Rani, the director’s wife who returned later on. The director and studio head, Himanshu Rai, in retaliation dismissed the hero and called upon his laboratory assistant Ashok Kumar to take the part and thus began a six-decade-long acting career. However, it was his subsequent venture with Devika Rani in Achhut Kanya in the same year that set him up for the big league. The movie itself stands out as one of the heralding social dramas of pre-independence Indian film. It was the story of a Brahmin boy falling in love with a girl from the so-called untouchables in Indian society. It was a big hit and started the trend of socially committed films.Devika Rani and Ashok Kumar did a string of films after this including Izzat (1937), Savitri (1937) and ‘Nirmala’ (1938). But she was the bigger star and Ashok Kumar was definitely in her shadow. He came into his own with three films opposite Leela Chitnis: Kangan (1939), Bandhan (1940), Jhoola (1941), singing his own songs as was the custom then. He came away with several hits including most famously Main Ban ka Panchhi.He was one of the first anti-heroes of Indian Cinema with his role in Kismet in 1943. This movie went on to create a record for the highest grossing film in India at the time of its release.He produced several films for Bombay Talkies during the final years of the company including the famous Mahal in 1949 in which he co-starred with Madhubala. In the 1950s, he played the suave cigarette-smoking criminal or police officer in several films of what was the Indian film-noir movement. In the late 1960s he switched to character roles playing the parent, grandparent, dirty old man and suave criminal, being careful never to be typecast. He paired up 20 times with the ‘queen of tragedy’ Meena Kumari, in films such as Parineeta, Bahu Begum, Pakeezah, Ek Hi Raasta, Bandish and Aarti and Chitralekha (1964).Ashok Kumar the villain in Jewel Thief (1967),jawab (1970) He acted in fewer films in the 1980s and 1990s and occasionally appeared on television, most famously anchoring the first Indian soap opera Hum Log and appearing as the title character in the unforgettable Bahadur Shah Zafar. His last film role was in Aankhon Mein Tum Ho in 1997. Besides acting, he was an avid painter and a practitioner of homeopathy.Altogether, he starred in over 275 films. He has done more than 30 Bengali dramas in Dhakuria.Ashok Kumar died at the age of 90 in Mumbai on 10 December 2001 of heart failure at his residence in Chembur. The then (EX.)Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee described him as “an inspiration… for many generations of aspiring actors.
Awards and recognition 1959 – Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 1962 – Filmfare Best Actor Award, Rakhi
1963 – Bengal Film Journalists’ Association – Best Actor Award (Hindi), Gumrah 1966 – Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award, Afsana 1969 – Filmfare Best Actor Award, Aashirwaad 1969 – National Film Awards for Best Actor, Aashirwaad 1969 – Bengal Film Journalists’ Association – Best Actor Award (Hindi), Aashirwaad
1988 – Dadasaheb Phalke Award, India’s highest award for cinematic excellence 1994 – Star Screen Lifetime Achievement Award 1995 – Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award 1998 – Padma Bhushan
2001 – Awadh Samman by the Government of Uttar Pradesh 2007 – “Special Award” by Star Screen Awards.
Filmography Some of his most remembered films include: Achhut Kanya (1936) Kismet (1943) Parineeta (1953)-Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi (1958) Dharmputra (1961) Chitralekha (1964) Hatey Bazarey (1967) Aashirwad (1968)-Victoria No.203 (1972) Choti Si Baat (1975) Mili (1975) Khoobsurat (1980) Khatta Meetha (1981) Shaukeen (1982)-Mr. India (1987) Sangram(1993) Aankhon Mein Tum Ho (1997) Last Film
Ashok Kumar As a Singer Jeevan Naya (1936) Achhut Kanya (1936) Vachan (1938) Nirmala (1938)
Kangan (1939) Bandhan (1940) Jhoola (1941) Anjaan (1941) Naya Sansar (1941) Najma (1943)
Chal Chal Re Naujawan (1944) Haar Jeet (1944) Begum (1946) Aashirwad (1968) Kangan (1971)
Khubsoorat (1980).