When Raj Kiran appeared on screen for the first time, he was sitting at the beach, surrounded by huge question marks carved on the sand. When his girlfriend Sarika asks him about all the markings, he says, 'Sawaal ek hi hai. Bas bada ho gaya hai'. One can’t help but wonder if this was a foreshadowing of the days to come. In part nine of Outlook's Sands Of Time series, we take a look at the life and works of Raj Kiran, the 'prince who got away'.
Roger Corman was a towering presence in Hollywood, despite his indie cred. Regardless of the kind of cinema he espoused, Corman is known to have given first breaks to some of the greatest filmmakers and stars of the 70s-80s, including Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Jack Nicholson, Peter Fonda, Jonathan Demme, James Cameron, Ron Howard, even Sylvester Stallone. In Hindi cinema, Babu Ram Ishara aka Roshan Lal Sharma was a Corman-esque figure. He launched such actors as Parveen Babi, Danny Denzongpa, Reena Roy, Raza Murad, and even cast an untested young actor named Amitabh Bachchan. All his films began with sensational epithets for the actors he was launching. The 1973 film Charitra, for example, begins with the introduction of Parveen Babi as the “hottest discovery”, along with “ace cricketer of India” Saleem Durrani, who Ishara also cast as a lead in the film.