The Tragedy King aka Dilip Kumar’s Lesser-Known Onscreen Comic Side (Photo Credit –Still/Poster From Movie)

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Playing a boisterous Bohemian, a debonair prince, or a cheerfully irresponsible student, who intentionally provokes his father and fiancee in a court hearing, a rustic, or a rollicking romantic lead with a swagger that Dev Anand, Shammi Kapoor, and Rajesh Khanna could envy, came natural to him. Yet, in popular memory, Dilip Kumar is only synonymous with the dejected, despondent and (usually) doomed hero.

In his 57 films over his half-century-plus stint in the Hindi film industry, Kumar is chiefly remembered as the ‘Tragedy King’, battered down by unrequited love, social or political pressure, or other inexorable circumstances. Whether it was as lush Devdas in the eponymous 1955 film, the unfortunate Prince Marcus of “Yahudi” (1958), the eventually subdued rebellious Prince Salim in “Mughal-e-Azam” (1960), the star-crossed Dilip of “Andaz” (1949), and so on, there was usually no happy ending for him.

In his second phase, where he switched to playing more mature roles, Dilip Kumar was usually typecast as the faithful slave of duty and honour, beyond any personal considerations — the Sanga of “Kranti” (1981), DCP Ashwini Kumar of “Shakti” (1982), Dinanath Saxena of “Mazdoor” (1983), Jailor Vishwanath Pratap Singh of “Karma” (1986), and Thakur Veer Singh of “Saudagar” (1991).

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