Mohanlal Viswanathan (born 21 May 1960) is an Indian actor, film producer, playback singer, film distributor, and director who predominantly works in Malayalam film industry besides also having sporadically appeared in Tamil, Hindi, Telugu and Kannada films.
Mohanlal has a prolific career spanning over four decades, during which he has acted in more than 400 films.
Mohanlal's contributions to the Malayalam cinema have been praised by his contemporaries in the Indian film industry.
Mohanlal Viswanathan was born in the village of Elanthoor in the Pathanamthitta district, Kerala on 21 May 1960.
He is the youngest child of Viswanathan Nair, a former bureaucrat and Law Secretary with the Kerala government, and Santhakumari.
1977
During 1977 and 1978 he was the Kerala state wrestling champion.
1978
Mohanlal made his acting debut at age 18 in the Malayalam film Thiranottam in 1978, but the film was delayed in its release for 25 years due to censorship issues.
Mohanlal made his acting debut in 1978 with the film Thiranottam, which was produced and made by Mohanlal and his friends—Maniyanpilla Raju, Suresh Kumar, Unni, Priyadarshan, Ravi Kumar and a few others.
Mohanlal played Kuttappan, a mentally disabled servant.
Due to some issues with censorship, the film was not released on time.
It took 25 years to release the film.
1980
His screen debut was in the 1980 romance film Manjil Virinja Pookkal, in which he played the antagonist.
He continued to do villainous roles and rose to secondary lead roles in the following years.
By the mid-1980s, he established himself as a bankable leading actor and attained stardom after starring in several successful films in 1986; the crime drama Rajavinte Makan released that year heightened his stardom.
Mohanlal prefers to work in Malayalam films, but he has also appeared in some of Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and Kannada films.
In 1980, Mohanlal was cast in the lead antagonist role in Manjil Virinja Pookkal – the directorial debut of Fazil.
The film became a major success.
Mohanlal's friends had sent his application in response to an advertisement released by Navodaya Studio.
He auditioned for the role in front of a panel that included professional directors.
Displeased with his appearance, two of them gave him poor marks, but Fazil and Jijo Appachan gave him 90 and 95 marks out of 100.
1983
By 1983, Mohanlal was credited in more than 25 feature films, most of them had him playing negative roles.
Films such as Ente Mohangal Poovaninju, Iniyengilum, Visa, Attakkalasham, Kaliyil Alpam Karyam, Ente Mamattukkuttiyammakku, Engane Nee Marakkum, Unaroo and Sreekrishna Parunthu changed his image.
Through Sasikumar's Ivide Thudangunnu, he became a successful hero with a "good heart".
1997
Some of his best known non-Malayalam films include the Tamil political drama Iruvar (1997), the Hindi crime drama Company (2002) and the Telugu film Janatha Garage (2016).
Mohanlal has won five National Film Awards—two Best Actor, a Special Jury Mention and a Special Jury Award for acting, and an award for Best Feature Film (as producer), also nine Kerala State Film Awards and Filmfare Awards South and numerous other accolades.
2000
He had an elder brother named Pyarelal (died in 2000, during a military exercise).
Mohanlal was named by his maternal uncle Gopinathan Nair, who initially decided to name him Roshanlal before choosing "Mohanlal".
However, his father avoided giving him their surname.
His father was adamant that he should not bear their caste name (Nair) as surname which they all had.
Mohanlal grew up in Mudavanmugal at his paternal home in Thiruvananthapuram.
He studied at Government Model Boys Higher Secondary School, Thiruvananthapuram and graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Mahatma Gandhi College, Thiruvananthapuram.
Mohanlal's first role was as a sixth grader for a stage play called Computer Boy, in which he played a ninety-year-old man.
2001
The Government of India honoured him with Padma Shri in 2001, and Padma Bhushan in 2019, India's fourth and third highest civilian honours, for his contributions to Indian cinema.
2004
In an interview with Reader's Digest in 2004, Mohanlal said that his looks as a young man might have fit the villain's image.
His acclaimed negative roles include Sandhyakku Virinja Poovu and Kuyiline Thedi.
2009
In 2009, he became the first actor in India to be awarded the honorary rank of lieutenant colonel in the Territorial Army.
Mohanlal was named as one of "the men who changed the face of the Indian Cinema" by CNN-News18.
2010
He received honorary doctorates from Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit in 2010 and the University of Calicut in 2018.
Mohanlal is also known for his philanthropic endeavours.
He founded the ViswaSanthi Foundation, a non-profit charitable organization that was started to create and deliver high-impact and focused programs to the underprivileged sections of society in the areas of Healthcare and Education.