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A Brief Bio of Farooq Sheikh

Farooq Sheikh was born on 25th March 1948 in Amroli district, Gujarat to Mustafa Sheikh and Farida. He was an Indian actor, Philanthropist and a popular television presenter by profession.

Having the privilege of growing up in a luxurious surrounding due to his father being a lawyer and extended family being Zamindars, he attended St. Mary’s School and later went to St. Xavier’s College, Mumbai.

After graduating from junior college, Farooq went onto pursuing the same career that his father excelled at from Siddharth College of Law. Later did he realise the profession chosen was not what he could relate to and gradually moved into acting. This happened only in the final year when he was approached by a renowned film director; M.S. Sathyu for a directorial debut to play a supporting role in Garam Hawa, which later credited for being a pioneer of a new wave of Hindi Art cinema.

Popularity in the eyes of the public was not gained by Farooq through this debut film due to him having a supporting role. He then went onto anchoring shows such as Yuvadarshan and Young World on Bombay Doordarshan that made him a household name.

During college days Farooq also met his spouse, Rupa Jain with whom he has 3 children; Rubina Shaikh, Shaista Shaikh, Sanaa Shaikh.

Farooq Sheikh died of a heart attack on the 27th December 2013 in Dubai where he had gone for a holiday with his family.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Jeena Isi Ka Naam Hai - Farooq Sheikh


Farooq Shaikh created a scintillating image with his presence in the TV series “Jeena isi ka naam hai”. It was a hit TV series which featured on Zee TV. This series premiered on 1. 11.1998 with Shah Rukh Khans appearance. It was directed by Divena Dwivedi and had 97 episodes over two seasons.

This shows gives its audience a glimpse of the personal lives of their bollywood superheroes. It interviews them, their families and their friends. Each one comes and shares memories and instances that they might have shared with the superstars in the past before and after they attained stardom.

This show featured stars like Aishwarya Rai, Sourav Ganguly, Sushmita Sen, Lalu Prasad Yadav, Hema Malini and many others.


Filmography of Farooq Sheikh

   
Acting Filmography
TitleRole
Club 60 (2013)Dr. Tarique
Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (2013)Thapar
Shanghai (2012)Kaul
Listen... Amaya (2013)Jayant
Tell Me O Khuda (2011)Ravi Kapoor
Accident on Hill Road (2009)Prakash Shrivastava
Lahore (2009)S K Rao
Saas Bahu Aur Sensex (2008)Firoze Sethna, stock broker
Lépidoptère, Le (1998)Le collègue du jongleur
Mohabbat (1997)
Ab Insaf Hoga (1995)
Maya Memsaab (1992)Dr. Charu Das
Jaan-E-Wafa (1990)
Mera Damad (1990)
Toofan (1989)Gopal Sharma
Doosra Kanoon (1989)Diwan Sardarilal
Biwi Ho To Aisi (1988)Suraj Bhandari
Gharwali Baharwali (1988)Sunil Khanna
Peechha Karo (1987)Vijay
Rajlakshmi (1987)
Khel Mohabbat Ka (1986)Amit Verma
Anjuman (1986)Sajid
Ek Pal (1986)Jeet Barua
Faasle (1985)Sanjay
Salma (1985)
Lorie (1984)Bhupinder Singhpeechha karro[1986]
Ab Ayega Mazaa (1984)Vijay
Yahan Wahan (1984)
Lakhon Ki Baat (1984)Alok Prakash
Rang Birangi (1983)Prof. Jeet Saxena
Ek Baar Chale Aao (1983)
Katha (1983)Bashudev
Kissi Se Na Kehna (1983)Ramesh
Bazaar (1982)Sarju
Saath Saath (1982)Avinash
Chashme Buddoor (1981)Siddharth Parashar
Umrao Jaan (1981)Nawab Sultan
Noorie (1979)Yusuf Fakir Mohammed
Gaman (1978)Ghulam Hussain
Shatranj Ke Khilari (1977)Aqueel
Mere Saath Chal (1974)Amit
Garam Hawa (1973)Sikandar Mirza

Source: Wikipedia

5 Most Memorable Roles of Farooq Sheikh




Chashme Buddoor (1981): Chashme Buddoor was a romantic comedy that saw a very young Farooq Sheikh wooing Deepti Naval along with his two friends Rakesh Bedi and Ravi Baswani. Over the years this film moved ahead to join the league of cult classics. The film has appeal even today and it urged filmmaker David Dhawan to come out with a remake in 2013. Even though Ali Zafar did his best to play Siddharth, Farooq's portrayal of the same had a different appeal altogether. 


Garam Hawa (1973): A sensitive film on the plight of Muslims after the India-Pakistan partition, Farooq Sheikh made his debut as Sikander Mirza. Directed by M S Sathyu, the film is about a Muslim family that lives in Agra and how their lives change along with the changing political situation in the country. Farooq played a student who despite his father's wishes joins an agitation against unemployment and discriminaton.    



Biwi Ho Toh Aisi (1988): Paired opposite Rekha in this drama, Farooq Sheikh plays the dutiful son to his dominating mother (Bindu) in this film. The movie focuses more on a mother-in-law's tactics to drive her village belle daughter-in-law (Rekha) away, however no one could overlook Sheikh's performance as the befitting obedient son. 



Umrao Jaan (1981): Farooq Sheikh plays the suave and charming Nawab Sultan who falls in love with Umrao Jaan played by Rekha in this Muzaffar Ali film. A love story with a bitter ending, Farooq leaves his ladylove, a courtesan, to marry a more 'acceptable' girl that pleases his family instead. Like 'Chashme Buddoor', 'Umrao Jaan' too was remade in 2006 with Abhishek Bachchan reprising Farooq Sheikh's role from the original.



Noorie (1979): A tragic love story, 'Noorie' has Poonam Dhillon play the title role while Farooq Sheikh plays her lover Yusuf Fakir. One of Farooq's finest performances of his career, he plays a lover who avenges the death of his fiance and eventually unites with her after death. 


Deepti Naval Reminisces about Farooq Sheikh



Veteran actress Deepti Naval says the late Farooq Sheikh was a constant part of her professional and personal lives. 

On Saturday (December 28), Deepti woke up to the news that Farooq Sheikh was no more. He died of cardiac arrest in Dubai late Friday (December 27). 

"He was not just a constant part of my career but also of my life. Oh God! It's so hard to believe he's gone," said Deepti, who last interacted with Farooq two months ago at the Sharjah Book Fair. 

"We worked together for the first time in Chashme Buddoor, and we did 7-8 films together after that. Of these my favourite films are Chashme Buddoor, Saath Saath and Listen...Amaya," she said. 

Deepti remembers the 1981 film, Chashme Buddoor, directed by Sai Paranjpye, with special fondness.

"Sai Paranjpye, I, Rakesh Bedi, Ravi Baswani, Saeed Jaffrey... What a team it was! We made a film that just happened. We were all having so much fun while making it. On a flight, I saw the Chashme Buddoor remake. It did nothing to me. It had no impact. Watching the remake, I missed the original team even more. 

Now, Ravi Baswani is gone, Farooq is gone. We also did Sai's Katha together where Farooq played this incorrigible flirt. I used to tease him that in Katha he played his real self," said Deepti. 

She says Farooq was a big flirt. 

"I asked him when we got together for Listen ...Amaya, why he didn't flirt with me. When I look back at our films together, I find he was very cute and charming. And what a good-looker," she said. 

But she says with her, he had a different rapport. He would always tease her. And he would crack jokes at her expense. 

"When we worked together again in Listen....Amaya after 26 years, he was still pulling my leg. I said, 'Ab toh sudhar jao.' He was adorable. He never changed. 

The only change I saw in him during Listen...Amaya was that he would not sit with the rest of the unit after a shot. He would go back to his book. He was always reading," said Deepti. 

Deepti had plans of working with Farooq all over again.

"He had read three of my scripts. He kept prodding me to make those films. After doing Listen...Amaya, together we realized how much we missed one another. We wanted to do a play together. Now, we can never work together again," she said.

Source:http://movies.ndtv.com/bollywood/deepti-naval-farooq-sheikh-was-part-of-my-career-and-life-464768

Tribute to the Legend

"I have never been commercially viable: People recognise me, smile and wave at me —but I have never received marriage proposals written in blood. In his heyday, when Rajesh Khanna drove down a street, the traffic stopped —I don't mind not receiving this kind of adulation. But I do miss not having been able to command the kind of work I wanted. I miss not being 100 per cent commercially viable."
-       Farooq Sheikh

Many a times we face the crisis of having to write about something or someone but not knowing how to go about it. This article started out just like that. An article about the famous Farooq Sheikh, who well to be completely honest I had not much knowledge about. Yes, I can be judged upon but it’s always better to write an honest piece of writing than cook up one.

When you don’t know much about a topic, you are left with no choice but research. And that’s what I precisely did, and found the quote you read above. The quote represented something blatantly honest, real and simple to me. It explained a lot about the kind of actor Mr.Sheikh was and how he was perceived differently from many other actors of his time.

Farooq Sheikh could be described as a very average looking man who was far from the description of a perfect bollywood hero. This is precisely why he was not considered “commercially viable” but also exactly the reason he blended in successfully in the roles he potrayed and left a mark in people’s minds. He looked like a common man that people could relate to but had immense on-screen presence and acting abilities. He did not have the qualities to look great running across gardens in Switzerland, his height didn’t make women weak in their knees and his voice surely did not make men insecure; however what he could do was be remembered as a studious Delhi university boy in Chashme Badoor, a sly sweet talker in Katha and a simple man with high morals in Saath Saath. He could be what a common man is, he could be exactly like someone you were likely to meet in real life and that’s where his true talent hid. His talent was to be effortlessly normal and relatable in terms of the characters he potrayed.

The only people to whom letters in blood are written to are people everyone subconsciously knows are too good to be true, exactly like an illusion. They are characters who are potrayed through acting in it’s truest form with nothing completely relatable in them.

The people who represent real life and play roles that remind you of the world as it is in its good and bad moments shouldn’t need haemoglobin dripping paper. A “smile and a wave” from one human to another is perfectly good enough!

Filmography of Farooq Sheikh

Farooq Sheikh, who died aged 65, possessed a colossal acting talent, angelic looks, and the innocence and vulnerability of a child.

Born in Gujarat in Amroli in the district of Baroda, he got into theatre and then made his way through his fantastic achievements in cinema and television.

Unlike most actors in the industry, Farooq Sheikh was a man who committed himself to his work, who had a spotlessly pristine reputation. He was an actor who never pursued or craved for media attention and yet was never ignored; a complete gentleman and an extraordinary personality.

The experienced film actor of parallel Indian cinema leaves behind a legacy of unforgettable movies, astounding acting and treasured memories.


Here's a journey down the Farooq Sheikh lane with his best performances.


Garam Hawa (1973)

Director: M. S. Sathyu


Shatranj Ke Khiladi (1977)
Director: Satyajit Ray


Gaman (1978)
Director: Muzaffar Ali


Umrao Jaan (1981)
Director: Muzaffar Ali


Chashme Buddoor (1981)
Director: SaiParanjpye


Katha (1983)
Director: SaiParanjpye



Kissi Se Na Kehna (1984)
Director: Hrishikesh Mukherjee



Shanghai (2012)
Director: Dibakar Banerjee

Farooq Sheikh - An Introduction

“All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts, his acts being seven ages.”
                                                                                                           William Shakespeare

Farooq Sheikh was among one of those man who has left behind a mark. He began his acting career in plays and made his debut in Indian cinema in 1973 with the classic Garam Hawa, set in post-partition India. He was best known for his films during the 1970s and 1980s. Often referred as the blue eyed boy of the parallel cinema movement, his major contribution was in Parallel Cinema or the New Indian Cinema.


He worked with critically acclaimed directors such as Satyajit Ray, Muzaffar Ali, Hrishikesh Mukherjee and Ketan Mehta. It was his performance in films such as Shatranj Ke Khiladi, Chashme Buddoor, Kissi Se Na Kehna, Noorie, Bazaar, Saath Saath and Umrao Jaan that catapulted him to fame.


The unassuming actor touched the hearts of millions of Indians with roles that reflected the common man’s travails. Known for his comic timing, Sheikh performed in a range of films from comedy to classics and romance.


In a career spanning almost four decades, Sheikh's body of work is not huge as he ignored the alluring, money-spinning world of commercial cinema to focus on roles that were nearer to reality.

Sheikh was actively involved in all the genre of Indian cinema right from typical masala Bollywood movies to Theater. He has acted in many serials and shows on television and performed on stage in famous productions such as 'Tumhari Amrita', presented the TV show, 'Jeena Isi Ka Naam Hai'.

In recent times, he acted in fewer films like 'Saas Bahu Aur Sensex', 'Tell Me O Khuda' and 'Lahore' for which he won the 2010 National Film Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance as a boxing coach.


Being titled as a Veteran speaks bounds about Farooq Sheikh and his unique style of acting. He was a true artist; he did Art and not blockbusters.