Popular Malayalam actor Innocent passes away at 75

The actor, a cancer survivor after he was detected with the deadly disease as far back as 2012, has been undergoing treatment at a private hospital in Kochi for the last two-and-half weeks
Popular Malayalam actor Innocent passes away at 75
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Popular Malayalam film actor Innocent, known mostly as a comedian for his unique style and dialogue delivery in a career spanning over four decades and 500 films, died here on Sunday. He was 75. Innocent was also a former member of Lok Sabha from 2014-19, winning the seat from Kerala's Chalakkudy constituency as an independent candidate backed by the Left. He also served as president of the Association of Malayalam Movie Artists (AMMA) for several years.

The actor, a cancer survivor after he was detected with the deadly disease as far back as 2012, has been undergoing treatment at a private hospital in Kochi for the last two-and-half weeks for breathing issues. He is survived by his wife, Alice and two children.

Innocent, who carved a style of his own, peaked as an actor from 1985 to the late 1990s, where he played a string of roles as a comedian, character roles, and even a few villain roles for directors like Priyadarshan, Sathyan Anthikad, Fazil, and Kamal. His performance in blockbuster films like Kilukkam (Priyadarshan, 1991), Azhakiya Ravana (Kamal, 1996), Ramji Rao Speaking (Siddique-Lal, 1989), Nadodikkattu (Sathyan Anthikad, 1987), and Devaasuram (I V Sasi, 1993) are still talked about, decades after their release.

However, he got his first big recognition in Mazhavil Kavadi, the 1989 film directed by Sathyan Anthikad, for a serious character as 'Kalarickel Kizhamkamthudiyil Shankarankutty Menon', in a full-fledged role alongside the film's hero Jayaram. The role fetched him the state government's best actor in a supporting role. Reportedly, Innocent struggled during the dubbing of the film when his lip movement would not match the dialogue, and when both lip movement and dialogue came in sync, the emotion would not match up. Finally, Sathyan Anthikad told him that he would be forced to pray at the Mookambika temple to get Innocent going. To this Innocent, then slowly finding his feet in the industry, retorted, half-jokingly, 'Who asked you to cast me in this role? You could have cast some famous actors in this role.'

"Innocent, along with Oduvil Unnikrishnan and Kuthiravattam Pappu, are actors who have created a style which no one can emulate," Satyan Anthikad would later say in an interview. "In Azhakiya Ravanan, the scene where Innocent appears before a camera for a film shoot is a classic. It's almost impossible for another actor to play that scene," said Sathyan Anthikkad.

Innocent made his first steps in show business by producing a few Malayalam films in the early 1980s, mostly serious offbeat films, including award-winning Vida Parayum Munpe (Kerala government's second-best film in 1981, directed by Mohan) and Oramakkayi (Kerala government's second-best film in 1982, directed by Bharathan). Lekhayude Maranam Oru Flashback, a 1983 film directed by K G George that is considered a landmark movie and loosely based on the life of actress Shobha, was also produced by Innocent (along with David Kachapally).

After seeing the films he produced failing to ring the cash registers, Innocent decided to seriously involve himself as an actor in Mollywood even as he dumped the producer hat, which left him nearly bankrupt. But, it was in the 1972 film Nrithashala that the veteran made his debut, and in Football Champion, the next year, where he uttered dialogue for the film time on the silver screen.

Born Innocent Vareed Thekkethala on February 28, 1948, in Irinjalakuda, then a small village near Thrissur, as the fifth child of his parents, who had eight children, his early life has not been anything to write home about. He studied only till the eighth grade after he found studies very difficult to cope with. 

He later tested water in politics, contesting and winning the Irinjalakuda municipal council elections as a Revolutionary Socialist Party-backed candidate in 1979. He is also the author of five books, including Njan Innocent and Cancer Wardile Chiri (Laughter in the Cancer Ward), where he narrates his experiences while undergoing treatment for throat cancer.

Irinjalakudakku Chuttum won the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Humour in 2020.

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