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|rowspan="3"| 2012 || ''[[Winds of Change (upcoming film)|Winds of Change]]'' || Shiva || [[English language|English]] || Filming

Revision as of 05:31, 15 November 2011

Siddharth
Born
R. Siddharth Suryanarayanan

(1979-04-17) 17 April 1979 (age 45)
Occupation(s)Film actor, playback singer, writer
SpouseMeghna (2003–2006)
Websitehttp://www.siddharth-online.com/

Siddharth Suryanarayanan (Tamil: சித்தார்த் சூரியநாராயண், born 17 April 1979), popularly known and credited as Siddharth, is an Indian film actor, playback singer and screenplay writer. After his business management studies, Siddharth chose to work in film making and worked as an assistant director before making his acting debut in the 2003 Tamil film Boys. In the subsequent years, he has worked in many Telugu, Tamil and Hindi films.

Personal life

Siddharth was born in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India into a Tamil Iyer family. He studied at DAV Boys' Senior Secondary School, Chennai and Sardar Patel Vidyalaya, Delhi.[1] He graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce (Honors) degree from Kirori Ma, New Delhi. Siddharth was popularly known as "Sidy" in school and college, and was part of the reputed theatre group of the college The Players. He was also president of the college's debating society and attended the World Debating Championships. He went on to complete his MBA in 2001 from S P Jain Institute of Management and Research, Mumbai.[1] In 2006, he divorced his wife of four years, Meghna. The couple had grown up together in New Delhi. After his divorce, he was dating Shruti Haasan, the daughter of Kamal Haasan but they broke up in October 2011.

Career

After finishing his MBA at the age 21, Siddharth landed the role of assistant director for Mani Ratnam's Kannathil Muthamittal. The script writer of that film, Sujatha, were insistent that Siddharth auditioned for S. Shankar's Boys which would feature five debutant actors. After consulting with Mani Ratnam, he met Shankar, auditioned, and got the role of Munna.[2] The film was a moderate success in Tamil but the dubbed version in Telugu gave Siddharth an opening in the Telugu film industry. Siddharth then appeared in another Tamil film, Mani Ratnam's Aayutha Ezhuthu (2004), after which he would shift focus and concentrate on Telugu-language projects. His first direct Telugu project, Nuvvostanante Nenoddantana released in early 2005. The comedy-drama film, marking the directorial debut of choreographer-turned-actor Prabhu Deva, became a commercial blockbuster as well as a critical success, with Siddharth winning his first Filmfare Best Actor Award for his portrayal of Santhosh,[3] a playful NRI, who fights for his love. Siddharth, subsequently, also ventured into the writing forum as well as the singing forum as he wrote the screenplay for his next Telugu film Chukkallo Chandrudu (2006) directed by Siva Kumar and sang as a playback singer. He next debuted in Bollywood as part of the critically acclaimed blockbuster Rang De Basanti which also starred Aamir Khan. Siddharth received the Star Screen Debut Award for his role as Karan Singhania in the film.[4] Siddharth's final release of 2006 was Bommarillu, directed by then newcomer Bhaskar. The film, revolving around a father-son relationship, received critical acclaim and garnered box office success, too. He worked with director Vishal Bhardwaj and Oscar winning cinematographer Guillermo Navarro on a short film titled Blood Brothers,[5] which screened at the Toronto International Film Festival.

After the above average grossing Aata in 2007, Siddharth took a sabbatical and did not have a release for 20 months. In 2009, his Konchem Ishtam Konchem Kashtam opposite Tamannaah received good response from the critics and the audiences. Siddharth played the lead role in debutant director Anand Ranga's Oy!, which achieved box office success despite mixed reviews. His second Bollywood venture, and first release of 2010, Striker portrayed the life of a carrom player[6] and became the first Bollywood film to be released in theatres and on YouTube on the same day. His other release that year was the Telugu film Baava, a village-based romantic family entertainer, shot in places like Palakollu, Razole, Rajahmundry and Hyderabad.[7] His first release of 2011, Prakash Kovelmundi's fantasy epic Anaganaga O Dheerudu was produced by veteran K. Raghavendra Rao. His subsequent release, the Tamil-Telugu bilingual 180, won positive reviews and enjoyed moderate success at the box office.

He has also worked in advertisements for Idea Cellular and Peter England.

Filmography

Actor

Year Film Role Language Notes
2002 Kannathil Muthamittal Passenger on bus Tamil Uncredited role
2003 Boys Munna Tamil Winner, ITFA Best New Actor Award
2004 Aayutha Ezhuthu Arjun Tamil
2005 Nuvvostanante Nenoddantana Santosh Telugu Winner, Filmfare Best Telugu Actor Award
2006 Chukkallo Chandrudu Arjun Telugu Also Story and Screenplay writer
Rang De Basanti Karan Singhania Hindi Winner, Star Screen Best Male Debut
Nominated, Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award
Bommarillu Siddharth (Siddhu) Telugu Nominated, Filmfare Best Telugu Actor Award
2007 Aata Sri Krishna Telugu
2009 Konchem Ishtam Konchem Kashtam Siddharth Telugu
Oy! Uday Telugu
2010 Striker Suryakant Sarang Hindi
Baava Veera Babu Telugu
2011 Anaganaga O Dheerudu Yodha Telugu
180 Ajay Kumar (Mano) Telugu
Nootrenbadhu Tamil
Oh My Friend Chandu Telugu Post-production
2012 Winds of Change Shiva English Filming
Kadhalil Sothapuvadhu Eppadi Tamil Pre-production
The First Class Man Srinivasa Ramanujan English Pre-production

Playback singer

Year Title Language Song(s)
2006 Chukkallo Chandrudu Telugu Everybody, Edhalo Epudo
Bommarillu Telugu Appudo Ippudo
2007 Aata Telugu Ninu Choostunte
2008 Santosh Subramaniam Tamil Adada Adada
2009 Oy! Telugu Oy Oy
2010 Striker Hindi Bombay Bombay, Haq Se
Baava Telugu Baava Baava
2011 Oh My Friend Telugu Maa Daddy Pockets, Sri Chaitanya Junior College

References

  1. ^ a b "Interview with Siddardh by Jeevi". idlebrain.com. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
  2. ^ "Welcome to". Sify.com. 2007-01-20. Retrieved 2011-10-23.
  3. ^ "Filmfare South awards 2006 - Telugu cinema". Idlebrain.com. 2006-09-11. Retrieved 2011-10-23.
  4. ^ "Winners: 13th Annual Star-Screen Awards". Bollywoodhungama.com. 2007-01-07. Retrieved 2011-10-23.
  5. ^ "Actors we missed this year". rediff.com. Retrieved 2011-10-23.
  6. ^ Bollywood Hungama (21 February 2008). "Siddharth: I am not attached to anything". Sify. Retrieved 12 January 2010.
  7. ^ "I don't do remakes". movies.rediff.com. Retrieved 28 Oct 2010.

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