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Delhi Kumar
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Delhi Kumar (born 9 May 1942) is an Indian actor known for playing various roles in teleserials like Chithi, Metti Oli, Anandham, Malargal, Enge Brahmanan and Bommalattam. He has also acted in a few Tamil films, such as Dumm Dumm Dumm (2001), Kannathil Muthamittal (2002) and Enthiran (2010).
Key Information
Partial filmography
[edit]Actor
[edit]- Films
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1974 | Onne Onnu Kannu Kannu | debut film | |
| 1977 | Gaayathri | Gayathri's father | |
| 2001 | Dumm Dumm Dumm | Maruthu Pillai | |
| 2002 | Kannathil Muthamittal | Ganesan | |
| Samurai | Medical college dean | ||
| 2003 | Boys | Judge | |
| 2006 | Aavani Thingal | Periyavar | |
| Stalin | Chief Minister | Telugu film | |
| 2007 | Veerappu | Puli's uncle | |
| 2008 | Thangam | ||
| Thozha | |||
| 2009 | Ainthaam Padai | ||
| 2010 | Singam | Kavya's grandfather | |
| Enthiran | Vaseegaaran's father | ||
| 2013 | Singam 2 | Kavya's grandfather | |
| 2017 | Singam 3 | Kavya's grandfather |
- Dubbing artist
| Actor | Film |
|---|---|
| K. Viswanath | Kakkai Siraginile |
Television
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Channel |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Premi | Sun TV, Vijay TV | |
| Nimmathi Ungal Choice-2 | Sun TV | ||
| 1999 | Kasalavu Nesam | Sundaram | Sun TV, Raj TV |
| 1999–2001 | Chithi | Mahalingam | Sun TV |
| 2000–2001 | Anandha Bhavan | Parameshwar Iyer | |
| 2000–2002 | Chinna Papa Periya Papa | ||
| 2002–2005 | Metti Oli | Chidambaram | |
| 2002 | Annamalai | Seshadri | |
| 2002–2004 | Agni Saatchi | Star Vijay | |
| 2003 | Gopura Vaasal | ||
| 2003–2009 | Anandham | Radha Krishnan "RK" | Sun TV |
| 2005–2007 | Malargal | Nataraja Gounder | |
| 2005–2008 | Aarthi | Raj TV | |
| 2008–2009 | Gokulathil Seethai | Kalaignar TV | |
| 2009–2010 | Enge Brahmanan | Jaya TV | |
| 2009 | Vilakku Vacha Nerathula | Astrologer | Kalaignar TV |
| 2009 | Kalyanam | Sun TV | |
| 2010–2015 | Mudhanai Mudichu | Kandaswamy | Sun TV |
| 2010 | Poovilangu | Star Vijay | |
| 2010–2011 | En Peyar Meenakshi | Meenakshi's father | Vijay TV |
| 2012 | My Name Is Mangamma | KMR | Zee Tamil |
| 2012–2014 | Puguntha Veedu | Ramanathan | |
| Paartha Gnabagam Illayo | Kalaignar TV | ||
| 2012–2016 | Bommalattam | Chidambaram Periyaswamy | Sun TV |
| 2013–2014 | Ranga Vilas | Jaya TV | |
| 2016–2018 | Thalayanai Pookal | Ramanathan | Zee Tamizh |
| 2017–2019 | Mahalakshmi | Subramani | Sun TV |
| 2018–2020 | Lakshmi Stores | Thillainathan | Sun TV |
| 2019 | Swaminathan | Gemini TV | |
| 2019–2020 | Pandavar Illam | Periya Sundaram | Sun TV |
Awards
[edit]- Sun Kudumbam 2012 Life Achievements Awards for Metti Oli
- Sun Kudumbam 2018 Best Maamanaar (Shared with Poovilangu Mohan) for Mahalakshmi
- Sun Kudumbam 2019 Best Grandfather for Pandavar Illam
References
[edit]- Malathi Rangarajan (31 July 2004). "TV's famous father". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 11 September 2004.
- Chitra Swaminathan (4 August 2006). "'Entertainment mustn't erode values'". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 16 October 2008.
- ^ Throwback to actor Delhi Kumar speaking about Aravind Swamy #SunTV #SunTVThrowback #DelhiKumar. Sun TV – via YouTube.
Delhi Kumar
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Early life
Birth and family background
Public information regarding Delhi Kumar's birth details, parents, and any siblings remains limited and not widely documented in reliable sources.[3]Entry into acting
Delhi Kumar developed an early interest in performing arts during his youth, where he became involved with local theatre groups that nurtured his passion for drama.[4] His debut as a stage actor came through his association with the Delhi Drama Troupe, based in Nanganallur, Madras, where he began performing in Tamil theatre productions. Through consistent participation in local plays and performances, he established himself as a senior drama artist, honing his skills in acting and playwriting within the amateur theatre scene.[4] Prior to his major breakthroughs, Kumar engaged in small-scale acting endeavors, including writing and staging original plays as part of the troupe's activities. This period of amateur and community-based work laid the foundation for his professional transition from theatre to other mediums, motivated by a desire to pursue acting full-time after taking voluntary retirement from his prior employment upon relocating to Chennai.[4]Career
Stage and theatre work
Delhi Kumar established a distinguished career in Tamil theatre, beginning in the 1970s and extending over several decades, where he excelled in supporting and character roles that enriched numerous productions.[5] As a senior drama artist in Chennai's vibrant theatre scene, he actively participated in professional troupes, including the Delhi Drama Troupe based in Nanganallur, contributing to cultural performances that highlighted traditional and contemporary Tamil plays.[4] His dedication earned him significant recognition, such as the Karthik Ramanujam Award of Excellence for the Best Drama Artist at the 23rd Kodai Nataka Vizha in 2012, felicitated by veteran comedian Kathadi Ramamurthy during the event at Narada Gana Sabha in Chennai.[6] Through his consistent stage presence, Kumar has influenced younger performers in Tamil drama, serving as a mentor figure in Chennai's theatre community and embodying the craft's enduring traditions.[7]Television roles
Delhi Kumar began his television career in the late 1990s, establishing himself as a reliable supporting actor in Tamil serials during the medium's formative years on channels like Sun TV. In the iconic family drama Chithi (1999–2001), he portrayed various supporting characters, contributing to the show's exploration of familial bonds and generational conflicts.[8] His role as the patriarch Chidambaram in Metti Oli (2002–2005), a land broker striving to unite his five daughters amid societal pressures, became one of his most recognized performances, spanning over 800 episodes and exemplifying the serial's themes of resilience and sisterhood.[4][9] Kumar continued to build his reputation in the early 2000s with key roles in other prominent serials that defined Tamil television's golden era of family-oriented narratives. In Anandham (2003–2009), he played Radhakrishnan, a central figure in a multi-generational industrialist family grappling with revenge and redemption, across more than 1,100 episodes.[10] His portrayal of Nataraja Gounder in Malargal (2005–2007) added depth to the story of rural family dynamics and interpersonal tensions. Similarly, in Enge Brahmanan (2009–2010), Kumar depicted Nathan, the head of a family torn between materialism and spiritual pursuits, enhancing the serial's philosophical undertones through his nuanced acting.[11] In his later career, Kumar sustained his presence in long-running serials on networks like Zee Tamil and Sun TV, often embodying authoritative yet compassionate father figures that enriched ensemble family dramas. He appeared in Ranga Vilas (2013–2014), a 109-episode series centered on real estate rivalries and kinship.[12] From 2016 to 2018, Kumar took on the role of Ramanathan in Thalayanai Pookal, a 581-episode narrative about a young woman's integration into a joint family, where his performance underscored themes of adaptation and harmony.[13] Concurrently, in Mahalakshmi (2017–2019), he portrayed Subramani, the father of four siblings navigating non-violence and moral dilemmas over 800 episodes.[14] His most recent major role was in Pandavar Illam (2019–2023), a 1,216-episode family saga where he played a pivotal elder family member, helping sustain the serial's focus on unity and legacy.[15][16] Throughout his over two-decade television tenure, Kumar's character-driven performances in these serials—drawing from his theatre background—provided emotional depth to Tamil TV's prevalent family drama genre, influencing viewer perceptions of patriarchal roles during the industry's expansion from the 1990s onward.[4]Film roles
Delhi Kumar entered Tamil cinema with a supporting role in the 2001 romantic comedy Dumm Dumm Dumm, where he played Maruthu Pillai, the father of the lead character Adhi.[17] His early film work often drew from his established television presence, which opened doors to selective cinematic opportunities.[4] In 2002, Kumar appeared in Mani Ratnam's critically acclaimed drama Kannathil Muthamittal, essaying the role of Ganesan, the adoptive father of the protagonist Indra, contributing to the film's exploration of family and identity amid the Sri Lankan civil war. That same year, he portrayed the medical college dean in Samurai, a vigilante thriller directed by Balaji Sakthivel, adding authority to the narrative's institutional elements.[18] The following year, in the coming-of-age film Boys directed by Shankar, Kumar took on the role of a judge, underscoring themes of youth rebellion and justice.[19] Kumar continued with supporting parts in films like Ayodhya (2005), where he played Jamal Bhai, a key figure in the drama's interpersonal conflicts.[20] In Sandai (2008), an action-comedy, he depicted Thangalakshmi's father, influencing the central romantic and familial dynamics.[21] His role as the Chief Minister in Stalin (2006), a Telugu-Tamil bilingual, highlighted his versatility in authoritative positions within political subplots.) Notable among his later contributions were paternal figures in high-profile franchises, including Vaseegaran's father in the science-fiction blockbuster Enthiran (2010), directed by S. Shankar. He reprised the role of Kavya's grandfather across the Singam series: in the 2010 original as a family patriarch providing emotional grounding, and subsequently in Singam 2 (2013) and Singam 3 (2017), maintaining continuity in the action saga's domestic layers.[22][23] Throughout his film career, Kumar specialized in portraying fathers, elders, and authority figures, blending gravitas with subtle emotional depth in both commercial hits and acclaimed narratives.[24]Personal life
Marriage and immediate family
Delhi Kumar is married to Gayathri, with whom he shares a long-term partnership based in Chennai.[4] Their family life remains largely private, with limited details shared publicly.[4] Delhi Kumar has resided in Chennai throughout his career, where his immediate family has formed the foundation of his personal life away from the spotlight of the entertainment industry.[4]Relationship with Arvind Swamy
Delhi Kumar is the biological father of actor Arvind Swamy, who was born on June 18, 1970. Immediately after birth, Arvind was adopted by Delhi Kumar's sister, Vasantha, and her husband, V. D. Swami, a prominent industrialist and co-founder of the Sankara Nethralaya eye hospital in Chennai.[25][26] This arrangement was made to provide Arvind with a stable family environment.[25] The biological connection remained private for decades until Delhi Kumar publicly confirmed it in a 2023 interview with a Tamil media outlet, stating, "Aravind Swamy is my son... but he was adopted by my sister."[25] He further noted that Arvind occasionally visits for significant family occasions but maintains limited interaction otherwise.[25] This revelation garnered media attention and sparked public curiosity about their familial bond, highlighting the complexities of adoption within prominent Tamil families.[25] However, it has not influenced their individual careers, with Delhi Kumar continuing in television and theatre, and Arvind Swamy pursuing his path in film and entrepreneurship independently.[25]Filmography
Selected films
Delhi Kumar appeared in several Tamil films between 2001 and 2017, primarily in supporting roles that often portrayed paternal or authoritative figures. His contributions to the Singam franchise stand out, where he recurrently played Kavya's grandfather across three installments, providing emotional grounding to the family dynamics amid the action narrative.[27]| Year | Film | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Dumm Dumm Dumm | Maruthu Pillai (Aditya's father) | Supporting role as the protagonist's father in this romantic comedy directed by Azhagam Perumal.[17] |
| 2002 | Kannathil Muthamittal | Ganesan | Portrayed Indira's father in Mani Ratnam's critically acclaimed drama about adoption and civil war. |
| 2002 | Samurai | Dean (Medical College Dean) | Appeared as the dean in this action film starring Vikram, emphasizing institutional authority.[18] |
| 2003 | Boys | Judge | Brief role as a judge in Shankar's coming-of-age youth drama.[19] |
| 2005 | Ayodhya | Jamal Bhai | Supporting antagonist figure in this thriller directed by Prem.[20] |
| 2008 | Sandai | Thangalakshmi's Father | Played the father in this action-comedy starring Sundar C.[21] |
| 2010 | Enthiran | Vaseegaran's Father | Father to the lead character in S. Shankar's sci-fi blockbuster starring Rajinikanth. |
| 2010 | Singam | Kavya's Grandfather | Debut in the franchise as the family patriarch. |
| 2013 | Singam 2 | Kavya's Grandfather | Reprised the role, continuing the familial support in Hari's action sequel. |
| 2017 | Singam 3 | Kavya's Grandfather | Final appearance in the series, maintaining the recurring grandfather character. |
Television serials
Delhi Kumar has appeared in several prominent Tamil television serials, often portraying patriarchal or supporting family figures. His notable credits include the following:| Year(s) | Serial | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1999–2001 | Chithi | Mahalingam, husband of Janaki and father figure in the family drama[8][28] |
| 2002–2005 | Metti Oli | Chidhambaram, a widowed land broker raising five daughters[9][29] |
| 2003–2009 | Anandham | Supporting role in the family-centric narrative[10][30] |
| 2005–2007 | Malargal | Natraj Gounder, a key family elder[31] |
| 2009–2010 | Enge Brahmanan | Nathan, head of a Brahmin family exploring cultural themes[32][33] |
| 2013–2014 | Ranga Vilas | Supporting role[2] |
| 2016–2018 | Thalayanai Pookal | Ramanathan, a family patriarch[2][34] |
| 2017–2019 | Mahalakshmi | Subramani, supporting family member[2][34] |
| 2019–2023 | Pandavar Illam | Supporting role in the long-running family serial[2][35] |
