Dr. Rajkumar

Film

Birthday April 24, 1929

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Dodda Gajanur, British India

DEATH DATE 2006-4-12, Bangalore, Karnataka, India (76 years old)

Nationality India

#7642 Most Popular

1929

Singanalluru Puttaswamaiah Muthuraj (24 April 1929 – 12 April 2006), better known by his stage name Dr. Rajkumar, was an Indian actor and singer who worked in Kannada cinema.

Regarded as one of the greatest actors in the history of Indian cinema and a versatile actor, he is considered a cultural icon and holds a matinée idol status in the Kannada diaspora, among whom he is popularly called as Nata Saarvabhouma (Emperor of Actors), Bangarada Manushya (Man of Gold), Vara Nata (Gifted actor), Gaana Gandharva (Celestial singer), Rasikara Raja (King of connoisseurs), Kannada Kanteerava and Rajanna/Annavru (Elder brother, Raj).

Singanalluru Puttaswamaiah Muthuraj was born in a Kannada-speaking family on 24 April 1929 in Dodda Gajanur, a hamlet in the Talavady taluk.

His father Puttaswamayya and mother Lakshmamma were impoverished theatre artists from Singanalluru.

His mother tongue was Kannada.

Puttaswamayya was good at playing mythological roles such as Kamsa, Ravana, and Hiranyakashipu.

Muthuraj left school at eight and was later discovered by film producers, who cast him in small roles that he played till he was 25.

He was named Muthuraj, after Muthaththi Raya (a name for the Hindu deity Hanuman), which is a temple deity located in Muthathi, a settlement on the banks of river Kaveri in present-day Karnataka.

Muthuraj started his acting career with his father in a drama troupe led by Gubbi Veeranna and later joined the drama company of Subbaiah Naidu.

1942

Prior to Bedara Kannappa, Rajkumar had appeared as a child artist in the 1942 film Bhakta Prahlada in a small role and also in the 1952 film, Sri Srinivasa Kalyana, as Sage Agasthya, one of the Saptarishis (seven sages).

1953

In 1953, he was spotted by film director H. L. N. Simha, who was on the lookout for well-built, pleasant-faced man for the starring role in film, Bedara Kannappa.

Simha eventually signed Muthuraj for the film and named him Rajkumar.

1954

Rajkumar entered the film industry after his long stint as a dramatist with Gubbi Veeranna's Gubbi Drama Company, which he joined at the age of eight before he got his first break as a lead in the 1954 film Bedara Kannappa.

13 of his films have received National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Kannada (Rajat Kamal) within a span of 15 years from 1954 to 1968.

17 of his films have received Karnataka State Film Awards in five different categories.

Trained in classical music during his theatre days, Rajkumar also became an accomplished playback singer.

1960

He went on to work in over 205 films essaying a variety of roles and excelling in portraying mythological and historical characters in films such as Bhakta Kanakadasa (1960), Ranadheera Kanteerava (1960), Satya Harishchandra (1965), Immadi Pulikeshi (1967), Sri Krishnadevaraya (1970), Bhakta Kumbara (1974), Mayura (1975), Babruvahana (1977) and Bhakta Prahlada (1983).

1974

He mostly sang for his films since 1974.

The songs Yaare Koogadali, Huttidare Kannada, Hey Dinakara, Hrudaya Samudra, Manikyaveena and Naadamaya became widely popular.

For his rendition of the latter song, he was awarded the National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer.

He is the only Indian actor to be awarded the Kentucky Colonel, the highest honour bestowed by the Commonwealth of Kentucky in the United States.

Well known for his highly disciplined and simple lifestyle in both personal and professional fronts, Rajkumar was also an avid Yoga, Pranayama, and Carnatic music performer.

1983

He was honoured with Padma Bhushan in 1983 and Dadasaheb Phalke Award in 1995.

He is the only lead actor to win National Award for singing.

His 39 movies have been remade 63 times in 9 languages by 34 actors making him the first actor whose movies were remade more than fifty times and the first actor whose movies were remade in nine languages.

He was the first actor in India to enact a role which was based on James Bond in a full-fledged manner.

The success of his movie Jedara Bale is credited to have widely inspired a Desi bond genre in other Indian film industries.

He was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Mysore, and is a recipient of the Padma Bhushan (1983) and the Dadasaheb Phalke Award (1995) for lifetime contribution to Indian cinema.

He was also the first Indian actor to be bestowed with an honorary doctorate for acting.

A mega icon and a socio-cultural symbol of Kannada, he has been credited with redefining Kannada cinema and also putting the Kannada cinema on the national map.

He was the first actor to play the lead role in 100 as well as 200 Kannada movies.

1986

His 1986 movie Anuraga Aralithu was the first Indian movie to be remade in seven other languages.

2000

In 2000, he was kidnapped from his farmhouse at Gajanur by Veerappan and was released after 108 days.

2002

He received the NTR National Award in 2002.

2006

He died of cardiac arrest at his residence in Bangalore on 12 April 2006 at the age of 76.

His eyes were donated as per his last wish.

In his film career, Rajkumar received eleven Karnataka State Film Awards, including nine Best Actor and two Best Singer awards, eight Filmfare Awards South and one National Film Award.

He holds the record of receiving Filmfare Award for Best Actor – Kannada and Karnataka State Film Award for Best Actor the highest number of times.

2013

On the occasion of the "Centenary of Indian Cinema" in April 2013, Forbes included his performance in Bangaarada Manushya on its list of "25 Greatest Acting Performances of Indian Cinema".

Upon his death, The New York Times had described him as one of India's most popular movie stars.