Irrfan Khan ’s versatility and his ability to assume a new persona with every film are by now legendary. Very few Indian actors have had the privilege of playing such a wide variety of characters. The actor passed away on 29 April 2019. Today, 7 January, on his 55th birth anniversary, we are looking at some of the most memorable roles of Irrfan since his debut with a cameo in Mira Nair’s Salaam Bombay in 1988. Warrior (2000)
Many Irrfan-o-philes including me still consider this to be Irrfan’s finest. Playing Lafcadia in Asif (Amy) Kapadia’s film about a warrior in Rajasthan who tries to give up a life of violence, Irrfan was enigmatic lethal and potent. He had no reference points for the character. Irrfan created his own inner world for Lafcadia. Fascinating to see the actor at work in his early film. Haasil (2003)
Playing a student leader Ranvijay Singh in a rowdy violent college in Uttar Pradesh, Irrfan just wouldn’t allow us to take our eyes off the character whenever he was on screen. The association with director Tigmanshu Dhulia began here, and it was quite simply, an eye-opener. Maqbool (2003) [caption id=“attachment_8728401” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] Naseeruddin Shah and Irrfan Khan in a still from Maqbool (2004). Via Disney+Hotstar.[/caption] Playing Vishal Bhardwaj’s version of Shakespeare’s Macbeth Irrfan brought to the screen a kind of unnerving emotional violence. Pitched against the mighty Pankaj Kapoor and the incandescent Tabu, Irrfan not only held his own in the erotic triangle, he made us realise the greatness of his craft without throwing his histrionics in our face. The Namesake(2007)
2004-2006 was a sterile season for Irrfan. No dearth of varied characters but terrible films…until he bounced back with brilliant bravura performance in Mira Nair’s richly tapestried look at NRI couple in The Namesake. Irrfan quite simply and fluently brought alive Jhumpa Lahiri’s Ashoke Ganguly. His pairing with Tabu gave us one of the most enduringly memorable screen pairs of modern times. Mumbai Meri Jaan (2008)
As a hoax-bomb caller Thomas, Irrfan was a disturbing blend of the comic and pathetic in this Nishikant Kamat-directed look at the aftermath of the 11/7 train bombing. The film showed how Irrfan could hijack a sense of satire into the most tragic of events. 7 Khoon Maaf (2011)
Irrfan’s most romantic role to date. Playing the Kashmiri poet Wasi-ullahKhan Irrfan had a ball reciting Gulzar’s poetry. But here was a twist, a twisted twist to the tale. Wasiullah was a wife-beater by night. But sshhhh….Whether making love or slapping Priyanka Chopra, Irrfan was in his element. Paan Singh Tomar (2011)
Irrfan Khan in a still from the Lunchbox[/caption] Playing the lonely widower Saajan Fernandes, Irrfan brought to the table, the lunch table to be precise, a kind of tenderness and sadness that made its way from his eyes to our soul. As far as lonely loveless characters go this one takes the ‘ache’. Qissa (2013)
Subhash K Jha is a Patna-based journalist. He's been writing about Bollywood for long enough to know the industry inside out.