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Rediff.com  » Movies » Bharat Bhushan, the tragic hero

Bharat Bhushan, the tragic hero

By Dinesh Raheja
April 22, 2003 12:01 IST
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Dinesh Raheja

Bharat Bhushan may have never been a swashbuckling hero, but he was just right as the sensitive, suffering poet-musician in several hit musicals in the fifties and sixties.Bharat Bhushan

It is difficult to imagine any other actor in Bhushan roles (Baiju Bawra, Mirza Ghalib, Basant Bahar, Kavi Kalidas, Barsaat Ki Raat and Sangeet Samraat Tansen), where he portrayed an artiste who was at odds with a cruel world but still retained a song on his lips.

Bhushan's films were often extravagant tragedies. Unfortunately, his offscreen life also underwent many upheavals wherein he lost his wife, stardom and faced diminishing fame and fortune.

Stardom knocked on Bharat Bhushan's door only after he had struggled for over a decade. He began his career in his early twenties, with a supporting role in the controversial Chitralekha (1941). But director Kidar Sharma and heroine Mehtab got most of the attention for the film. Bhushan had to wait till the end of the decade for Sharma's Suhaag Raat (1948) to pull his career out of the basement.

After the young and genial Bhushan had successfully played the bone of contention between two strong women, Geeta Bali and Begum Para, in Suhaag Raat, he was signed for several medium-budget films. The most notable of these were Devendra Goel's directorial debut Aankhen (1950), where Bhushan plays a martyr and sacrifices his love for Nalini Jaywant when he realises his brother is also in love with her; and Bimal Roy's first Bombay Talkies film, Maa (1952).

Bharat Bhushan's landmark films

 Year

 Film

Costars

 1952

 Baiju Bawra

Meena Kumari, Surendra

 1954

 Mirza Ghalib 

Suraiya, Nigar Sultana

 1956

 Basant Bahar

Nimmi

 1958

 Phagun

Madhubala

 1959

 Rani Roopmati

Nirupa Roy

 1960

 Barsaat Ki Raat

Madhubala

 1962

 Sangeet Samrat Tansen

Anita Guha

 1964

 Jahan Ara

Mala Sinha

At this stage, veteran filmmaker Vijay Bhatt was casting for his ambitious project, Baiju Bawra (1952). Composer Naushad shrugged off star names like Dilip Kumar and Nargis and insisted on relative newcomers.

Baiju Bawra became a golden jubilee hit and established two new stars: Meena Kumari and Bharat Bhushan. It crystallised Bhushan's image as an actor of 'note.' In Baiju Bawra, Bhushan played a gifted but obsessed musician propelled by twin compulsions -- a desire to extract revenge on court musician Tansen, which he achieves through his music and a deep love for his village sweetheart Gauri.

In an age of heroes with slicked back hair, Bhushan's unruly mop and simple demeanour caught the attention of women in the audience; his ability to convey anguish went down well with the masses.

Bhushan received much help from Naushad's classical raga-based artistry and Mohammad Rafi's vocals as he became the screen face of evergreen numbers like O duniya ke rakhwale, Man tadpat Hari darshan ko aaj and Tu Ganga ki mauj.

Riding the crest of success, the star-director team of Baiju Bawra collaborated once again for Shri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1953), for which Bhushan bagged the Filmfare Best Actor Award.

Sohrab Modi's Mirza Ghalib (1954) saw Bhushan playing a poet (the eponymous Ghalib) whose wife and lover were played by Nigar Sultana and Suraiya respectively; in Basant Bahar (1956), he played a singer once again. Basant Bahar was intended to rival Baiju Bawra. It had the same initials and was a musical success, with songs like Duniya na bhaye mohe, Bhay bhajana vandana sun and Sur na saje picturised on Bhushan.

Bharat Bhushan's famous songs

 Song

 Film

Singer

Man tadpat Hari darshan ko

 Baiju Bawra

 Mohammad Rafi

Dil-e-nadaan tujhe hua kya hai

 Mirza Ghalib

 Talat Mahmood, Suraiya

Sur na saje

 Basant Bahar

 Manna Dey

Do ghadi woh jo paas

 Gateway Of India

 Mohammed Rafi, Lata Mangeshkar

Ek pardesi mera dil le gaya

 Phagun

 Mohammed Rafi, Asha Bhosle

Aa laut ke aaja mere meet

 Rani Roopmati

 Mukesh

Zindagi bhar nahin bhulegi

 Barsaat Ki Raat

 Mohammed Rafi

Jhoomti chali hawa

 Sangeet Samrat Tansen

 Mukesh

Phir wohi shaam

 Jahan Ara

 Talat Mahmood

Jab jab bahaar aaye

 Taqdeer

 Mohammed Rafi

Tum bin jaaoon kahan

 Pyar Ka Mausam

 Kishore Kumar

One of the second-tier stars of the 1950s, after the Raj Kapoor-Dilip Kumar-Dev Anand triumvirate, Bhushan's list of leading ladies included Meena Kumari, Nargis and Nutan. His well-liked pairing with Madhubala began with his cameo in the Madhubala-centric Gateway Of India, escalated with the success of the musical, Phagun, and reached its peak with Barsaat Ki Raat. Bhushan looked extremely convincing as he wooed her with such Sahir Ludhianvi gems as Mere sheron se bhi tum mujhko haseen lagti ho (You look more beautiful than my couplets to me).

Bhushan was willing to work with a variety of directors like K A Abbas (Gyarah Hazaar Ladkiyaan) and director-composer S N Tripathi (Bhushan played the music-obsessed protagonist in his Rani Roopmati, Kavi Kalidas and Sangeet Samraat Tansen, which yielded a rich haul of melodious numbers).

The 1960s began well for Bhushan with Barsaat Ki Raat and the ensemble hit, Ghunghat (opposite Bina Rai), but there were several younger heroes on the scene now. In 1964, his ambitious colour starrers like Jahan Ara (opposite Mala Sinha) and Dooj Ka Chand (opposite B Saroja Devi) failed to break the bank.

Bhushan's career was clearly on the wane.

His stint as the older man began on a hopeful note with Rajshri's Taqdeer (1967), but the film failed to recreate the Dosti (Sushil Kumar, Sanjay Khan, Sujit Kumar) magic for its producers. Nasir Hussain's Pyar Ka Mausam (1969) had a decent role for Bhushan as the estranged father of protagonist Shashi Kapoor. Realising his acting days were drawing to a close, Bhushan planned to direct a film with Manoj Kumar and Vyjayanthimala in the late 1960s, but the project fell through.

The 1970s were not kind to Bhushan -- it was a pathos-laden comment on the transient nature of fame to see a star of his stature reduced to doing bit roles in inconsequential films. 

Bhushan, who had lost his first wife, took consolation in his second marriage to actress Ratna (she co-starred with him in Barsaat Ki Raat) and in his immense library of books till he passed away a little more than a decade ago.

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Dinesh Raheja