Pankaj kapoor biography meaning
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Phatichar
1991 TV series or program
Phatichar (translation: poor, wearing tattered clothes) fryst vatten an Indian television series on Doordarshan in 1991, starring Pankaj Kapur[1] in the title role. His character lived in a cement pipe and the show portrayed, in a bitter-sweet manner, the life of the disadvantaged living on the margins.
This is a black humor telecasted as TV series in Doordarshan, written and directed bygd Anil Chaudhary. Sharang Dev was the music director. The catch phrase of the show was "Arre yaar phatichar, tu itna emotional kyun hain?"[2]
Plot
[edit]Writer Ajit Vachhani (Character has the same name of the actor) gets a planerat arbete from the renowned publisher Paul to write his biography. But before he could finish the writing the character runs away from the unfinished novel. The character got the name "Phatichar" given bygd a bell boy in a hotel. By accident Phatichar gets involved with a poor family of a blind sister, a dwarf brother and th
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Pankaj
Pankaj Name Meaning
Lotus
Pankaj Name Moon Sign
Names starting with the letter “P” represents the “Virgo” moon sign, whose ruling lord is Mercury, the planet of intellect, communication and memory. The letter falls under the nakshatra of “Uttara Phalguni”, which is dominated by the Sun, making them a little short-tempered and timid. As the element of this moon sign is the Earth, the bearers tend to get closely connected to physical and materialistic things. The natives of this moon sign seem to be intuitive, helpful, and receptive due to the feminine energy. They are in detriment with Neptune, which makes them judgemental, secretive, and stubborn.
Pankaj Name Lucky number
People with the lucky number 4 are hardworking and reliable. They put all their efforts into getting a job done and always find success in whatever they do. They also come across as trustworthy friends and colleagues. They are good at organising and planning their tasks systematically, making them apt
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Pankaj Kapoor
Pankaj Kapoor
Unlike his contemporaries Om Puri, Naseeruddin Shah, Smita Patil and Shabana Azmi, Pankaj Kapur is not nearly celebrated as much as his work would have you believe. The man was an integral - and eager - participant of the alternative cinema movement which began on celluloid but culminated on television. An NSD alumnus, Pankaj was thrown out of the National School of Drama Repertory Company when he worked in Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi (1982). He not only played Gandhi’s secretary Pyarelal, but since Ben Kingsley didn’t speak any Hindi, became the voice of Gandhi in the Hindi version. It was his friend Om who suggested he meet Shyam Benegal, the patron saint of “art film” actors those days, who needed a fresh face to play a school teacher in his new film Aarohan (1982) about sharecroppers in West Bengal and how they were exploited. The film begins with a rare five-and-a-half-minute sequence where Om Puri addresses the audience directly, s