Soumitra Chatterjee was an Indian movie entertainer, chief, dramatist, essayist, artist, and writer. He is observed as one of the best and most persuasive entertainers throughout the entire existence of the Indian Bengali film industry. He is most popular for his coordinated efforts with chief Satyajit Ray, with whom he worked in fourteen movies.

Renowned Indian actor Soumitra Chatterjee, who was famous for his collaborations with Oscar-winning director Satyajit Ray, has passed away due to complications from Covid-19. The 85-year-old actor was admitted to a hospital in Kolkata on October 6th after testing positive for the virus. Fans and critics alike will mourn the loss of this talented Bengali-language film actor, who had a successful career spanning over six decades.

Chatterjee, who featured in excess of 300 motion pictures, was additionally a cultivated writer, theater entertainer, and artist. He tested negative half a month after he was conceded to the emergency clinic yet his condition before long weakened and he was put on a ventilator somewhat recently in October. He passed on Sunday morning. Chatterjee was maybe most popular for his work with Ray, one of the world’s most compelling chiefs and creator of the much-feted Apu Trilogy.

The series depicts the life of a man living in a Bengali town. These movies received critical acclaim and earned numerous awards globally, putting Indian cinema on the map. The third film of the trilogy, Apur Sansar, was released in 1959 and marked Chatterjee’s debut as a lead actor. He went on to star in 14 of Ray’s films. Pauline Kael, a highly influential and respected American film critic, described Chatterjee as Ray’s “one-man stock company” who portrays his roles so differently that he is almost unrecognizable.

In 2012, Chatterjee received the prestigious Dada Saheb Phalke Award for his contributions to Indian cinema. He was also honored with France’s highest award, the Legion of Honor, in 2018. Chatterjee began his acting career in school and participated in various plays. It was during his time in school when he met Ray through a mutual friend, which led to his debut in films.

“I didn’t have the foggiest idea what to do when Mr. Ray originally asked me. I didn’t have the foggiest idea what was the genuine contrast between stage and screen acting. I was apprehensive I’d exaggerate,” he disclosed to Marie Seton, film pundit and biographer, in a meeting.
Chatterjee’s jobs in excess of twelve movies crossed a wide reach.

He played a Sherlock Holmes-like criminal investigator in Sonar Kella, a spent husband in Devi, a hot-tempered north Indian cabbie in Abhijan, a city slicker in Aranyer Din Ratri, and an unassuming town cleric in Ashani Sanket. He additionally played what Seton called a “not at all subtle representation” of Nobel Prize-winning writer Rabindranath Tagore in Charulata, one of Ray’s most appreciated movies.