Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Saturday, Mar 18, 2006
Google



Metro Plus Mangalore
Published on Saturdays

Features: Magazine | Literary Review | Life | Metro Plus | Open Page | Education Plus | Book Review | Business | SciTech | Friday Review | Young World | Property Plus | Quest | Folio |

Metro Plus    Bangalore    Chennai    Coimbatore    Delhi    Hyderabad    Kochi    Madurai    Mangalore    Pondicherry    Tiruchirapalli    Thiruvananthapuram    Vijayawada    Visakhapatnam   

Printer Friendly Page Send this Article to a Friend

The shaker moves on

He gave Indian audiences a break from syrupy soaps with Movers and Shakers. Shekhar Suman is now in the news with the second season of The Great Indian Laughter Challenge. The pasha of satire says he has no intention of staying stuck in the genre



NOT FUNNY ANY MORE Shekhar Suman: `After a point, doing only humour is taxing. It's just a tiny aspect of my talent, only a role I play' Photo: R.V. MOORTHY

He is possibly the best-known face of Indian comedy. Years before any of us had heard of Seinfeld and stand-up entered the mainstream, he was dishing it out on Movers and Shakers. And with the Great Indian Laughter Challenge taking off as it has, Shekhar Suman seems in comedy heaven. "The verdict is out. The audience totally loved the show," he says triumphantly.

With the second season of Laughter Challenge kicking off with a whole new cast of comedians, it seems like comedy has finally come of age in the country. As Suman explains, despite humour existing in our society for as long as anyone can remember, it never had a valid platform for itself. "When I was doing a stand-up act in Movers and Shakers, I didn't know what I was doing. I just assumed that I was connecting with the audience, until someone told me that I was actually doing stand-up comedy. Now, humour is finally getting the respect it deserves."

Runaway hits

It's easy to see why Laughter Challenge, and to a lesser extent the Great Indian Comedy Show, have become such runaway successes. In a world where television is dominated by teary-eyed DIDs and vampy seductresses, stand-up comedy is refreshingly original. "It's more relatable," says Suman, "because it's grounded in reality. It isn't about tears, crying or beating your chest." Besides, with Indian sitcoms being what they are, the country seems starved for Suman and his ilk of humorists.

Indeed, there has been a strong realisation within the film fraternity too of the power of comedy. After all, almost all of the biggest Bollywood actors have turned to comedy in recent times to rescue their careers. If one compiled a list of recent Indian comedies, chances are that the actors not figuring in it would rank highest on the list of damp squibs and has-beens. "Comedy has worked for everyone," points out Suman. "Salman Khan resurrected his career with comedy. Saif Ali Khan is more sought after than most of the action heroes in Bollywood because of his comedy skills.

Sanjay Dutt, one of the biggest heroes is best remembered as Munna Bhai. Even Amitabh Bachchan has dabbled frequently with comedy." Suman too owes his success to comedy. His first attempt at the big screen opposite Rekha in Utsav was far from a hit. And neither were any of the other dozen or so film appearances that followed.

On the small screen, as possibly the only satirist in the country, though, he quickly shot to fame and stardom.

Enough is enough

Despite the rising popularity of comedy, however, Suman is eager to get away from the genre. After years of laughter and fun, he wants to call it a day and quit doing comedy. He had originally endeavoured to come into comedy just to see if he could do it, but somehow got stuck in the genre. "It's like my visa expired, but I overstayed. After a point, doing only humour is taxing. It's only a tiny aspect of my talent, only a role I play. People need to understand the difference between an actor with comic talent and a comedian. I am only dabbling in comedy."

Even the dry wit that has earned him bouquets and brickbats, he says with candour, is just him filling a space that will soon be occupied by someone else. "I'm just the frontman. I am asked to deliver lines and I do it. Tomorrow, if I don't say these things, someone else will."

But does he see a future outside of comedy? "I am experimenting with life. I have a couple of films on the cards. I want to sing, write, act, produce, make ads and direct films. I want to push the envelope as an actor. My future is just as bright or as bleak as anyone else's, but I couldn't care less."

RAKESH MEHAR

Printer friendly page  
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail



Metro Plus    Bangalore    Chennai    Coimbatore    Delhi    Hyderabad    Kochi    Madurai    Mangalore    Pondicherry    Tiruchirapalli    Thiruvananthapuram    Vijayawada    Visakhapatnam   

Features: Magazine | Literary Review | Life | Metro Plus | Open Page | Education Plus | Book Review | Business | SciTech | Friday Review | Young World | Property Plus | Quest | Folio |



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | Publications | eBooks | Images | Home |

Comments to : thehindu@vsnl.com   Copyright © 2006, The Hindu
Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu