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Prabhu (actor)

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Prabhu
Born
Prabhu Ganesan

(1956-12-27) 27 December 1956 (age 67)[1]
Madras, Madras State, India
(present-day Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India)
NationalityIndian
Alma materLoyola College, Chennai
Occupation(s)Actor, film producer
Years active1982–present
ChildrenVikram Prabhu (b.1986)
Aishwarya (b.1984)
Parent(s)Sivaji Ganesan (father)
Kamala (mother)
RelativesRamkumar Ganesan (brother)

Prabhu (born 27 December 1956) is an Indian film actor, businessman and film producer who has predominantly appeared in Tamil language films. He is the son of veteran actor Sivaji Ganesan, while his son Vikram Prabhu is also a Tamil actor.

After making his debut in Sangili (1982), the actor has played a series of leading and supporting roles, earning the Best Actor award recognition by the Tamil Nadu state for his portrayal in Chinna Thambi (1992). He has worked in more than 200 films as lead roles, supporting roles in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada languages.

Career

After leaving Bishop Cotton Boys' School in Bangalore, Prabhu got involved in film production as an executive producer and worked alongside his uncle and mentor V. C. Shanmugam, who insisted that Prabhu learnt the film making process through a disciplined way, giving him general tasks such as pulling up chairs for artistes. Prabhu's father, actor Sivaji Ganesan, had initially expressed reluctance in allowing Prabhu to pursue an acting career, but through his work in the industry, he began to receive offers from film-makers to feature in their films.[2][3][4]

He subsequently made his acting debut in C. V. Rajendran's Sangili (1982), a remake of the Hindi film Kalicharan, where he was cast in a supporting role. By the time Sangili released, Prabhu was working on six films, including Charuhasan's Pudhiya Sangamam and Gangai Amaren's romantic film Kozhi Koovuthu, which became his first commercially successful venture. After featuring in about thirty films, including nineteen with his father including Neethibathi (1983), Sandhippu (1983) and Miruthanga Chakravarthi (1983), Prabhu's career graph registered a drop and he began to reconsider the type of films he had signed. He opted against featuring in films co-starring his father and consciously began to choose subjects rather than accept as many offers as possible.

Among the first films he signed after taking the break included G. M. Kumar's Aruvadai Naal (1986) and Manivannan's Paalaivana Rojakkal, alongside Sathyaraj, both proving successful. Subsequently, the following period saw a series of commercial successes in 1988 for the actor, notably S. P. Muthuraman's Guru Sishyan with Rajinikanth, Mani Ratnam's Agni Natchathiram with Karthik and P. Vasu's family drama En Thangachi Padichava.[2] The success of the latter film prompted more successful collaborations in the same genre between Prabhu and Vasu with Chinna Thambi (1991) and Senthamizh Pattu (1992) also receiving a similar reception, with the actor earning the Best Actor award recognition by the Tamil Nadu state.[5]

He subsequently worked in his hundredth film R. V. Udayakumar's Rajakumaran, before portraying well received roles in K. Balachander's romantic film Duet (1994) and Priyadarshan's Malayalam period film Kaalapani (1996) alongside Mohanlal. Prabhu went through another barren spell in the late 1990s, when several films after the success of Panchalankurichi failed to do well, prompting another image change away from his village do-gooder roles.[2] Moving away from action films, Prabhu selected scripts which would appeal to family audiences in the early 2000s and collaborated with film-makers including Rama Narayanan and T. P. Gajendran, working in a series of "minimum guarantee" return films.[6]

Prabhu then made another career change and began accepting film offers in which he would play a supporting rather than the leading role and featured alongside Kamal Haasan and then Rajinikanth in two big budget ventures Vasool Raja MBBS (2004) and his home production Chandramukhi (2005).[7] Since then, he has gained acclaim portraying characters including a caring guardian in Unakkum Enakkum, Thaamirabharani and Ayan, while he has also been seen in detective roles in action films, notably Billa (2007) and then Kanthaswamy (2009). He has also played other acclaimed supporting roles in Mani Ratnam's Raavanan (2010) and Aishwarya Dhanush's 3 (2012), while he has ventured into playing similar roles in Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam films.[8] In 2016, Prabhu featured in his 200th film, the romantic comedy Meen Kuzhambum Mann Paanaiyum produced by his nephew, Dushyanth Ramkumar.[9]

Personal life

Prabhu was born to actor Sivaji Ganesan and Kamala.[10][11] His elder brother Ramkumar is a film producer and he has two sisters Shanthi and Thenmozhi. He is married to Punitha and has two children Vikram Prabhu and Aishwarya Prabhu, with Vikram making his acting debut in the 2012 film Kumki.[12]

Filmography

References

  1. ^ Srivatsan (26 December 2016). "Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan wish actor Prabhu on his 60th birthday". India Today. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "A CHAT WITH TAMIL ACTOR PRABHU". Google Groups. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  3. ^ Sreedhar Pillai (16 November 2008). "On roll!". The Times of India. TNN. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  4. ^ "Cine Biography: Prabu (Part-1)". dinakaran.com. Archived from the original on 18 January 2000.
  5. ^ KR, Manigandan. "Prabhu and Khushboo, blockbuster pair of the 1990s – Valentine's Day special". Cinestaan.
  6. ^ A swamy. "Prabhu: The comeback story". cinematoday2.itgo.com. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  7. ^ "Change and equilibrium: Actor's conundrum". Behindwoods.
  8. ^ "Yesteryear heroes: Struggle for survival". IndiaGlitz. 27 January 2009. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  9. ^ "Prabhu's 200th Film Is Getting Ready!". nettv4u.
  10. ^ "502 Bad Gateway". www.thehindujobs.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2011. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  11. ^ "Chip off the old block". 27 November 2002 – via www.thehindu.com.
  12. ^ Gautam Sunder (23 February 2016). "Appa taught me everything: Prabhu Ganesan". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 3 April 2016.