Denzil Smith


Denzil Leonard Smith is an Indian film and stage actor and producer. Born to Anglo-Indian parents in Mumbai, he is known for his stage and screen roles as a character actor. Smith has acted in over 45 plays and 50 films.
He has a long-standing association with both Motley Productions for Waiting for Godot and The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, and PrimeTime Theatre for Guahar, and Sammy. Notable international productions include Merchants of Bollywood and Life of Buddha.
His film credits include Viceroy's House, Brahman Naman, The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, The Lunchbox, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Frozen and Paap.

Early life

Smith was born into an Anglo-Indian family in Mumbai, in Maharashtra in India to Benjamin John Smith and Kathleen Maude Shepherd. He has an older sister Cheryl Roy-Smith, and younger brother Lionel Smith. Smith’s father was a civil servant with the Government of India, and possessed a deep love for music and the arts. It was through him that Denzil was first exposed to music and theatre.
Smith's father played the accordion, piano, violin and ukulele. A talented singer, Benjamin was granted a leave of absence to represent India as part of the classical a cappella Paranjoti Academy Choir for an extended tour of Europe in the 1960s. His father died suddenly when Smith was 11.
Smith completed his schooling at St Andrews in Bandra, and studied English Literature at the University of Mumbai.

Career

Smith began his professional career as a film executive under Indian adman and actor, Alyque Padamsee, who was then CEO of the advertising agency Lintas. In 1988, Smith quit his corporate career to focus on stage acting. He trained in voice at the National Centre for the Performing Arts, Mumbai, and was guided by Dr. Ashok Ranade and Pratap Sharma.

In theater

A pivotal play early in his theatrical career was Pearl Padamsee’s Les Liaisons Dangereuse where he first worked with Naseeruddin Shah and Ratna Pathak. Shortly after this play, he became a member of Shah’s Motley Productions – a theatre group formed by Naseeruddin Shah, Tom Alter and Benjamin Gilani. Smith played the role of Lucky in Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot with Shah, Gilani, and Kenneth Desai. He then went on to do Herman Wouk's The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, Beckett’s Endgame, The Odd Couple and several other productions. Smith then worked with Satyadev Dubey in Hindi productions such as Sambogh Se Sanyas Tak.
By 1998, he also began working extensively with Lilette Dubey’s PrimeTime Theatre in productions such as On a Muggy Night in Mumbai, Zenkatha, Sammy, August: Osage County and "Gauhar" about the life of Gauhar Jaan. These plays toured both India and various cities in North America, UK and Europe, South-East Asia and Australia.
Smith also played key roles in numerous other productions such as Jawaharlal Nehru in Letters to a Daughter from Prison, Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar in Toronto, Canada, Vali and Vibishan in The Legend of Ram, Judge Brack in Hedda Gabler, and the solo performer in four monologues written and directed by Zubin Driver in Mumbai vs Mumbai.
In 2007, Smith joined All Star Artists for the Broadway style musical production The Merchants of Bollywood – written and directed by Toby Gough and choreographed by Vaibhavi Merchant – in the lead role of the grandfather, Shantilal, and then later a double role that of "a splendidly-moustachioed narrator" and the sleazy Bollywood director Tony Bakshi. There were 600 shows between 2007 and 2009 in the UK, Europe and Malaysia. and he reprised his role for a run in the UK and Lebanon in 2016. In 2017, Smith re-joined director Toby Gough, choreographer Shruti Merchant and team as the voice of Raj Pakoda in the light-hearted dance musical Taj Express.
In addition to his acting career, Smith also regularly curates theatre programming at Celebrate Bandra.

In film

Smith has worked in a range of independent, Bollywood and international film productions. One of Smith’s early films was Mango Soufflé, an adaptation of Mahesh Dattani’s successful English stage play On a Muggy Night in Mumbai, which was centered around the lives of gay men in Mumbai. The film starring Atul Kulkarni, Rinkie Khanna, Heeba Shah and Ankur Vikal, was promoted as "first gay male film from India."
He is known for roles such as the Tibetan monk Lama Norbu in Paap, directed by Pooja Bhatt and starring John Abraham, and as Tenzing in the film Frozen, based in Leh and Ladakh. Among the many independent films he has worked in are Shobhayatra, where he played Jawaharlal Nehru, The Memsahib, Mumbai Salsa, Chase, Lamhaa, Impatient Vivek, Tripura, Ajita Suchitra Veera's Ballad of Rustom, John Day, and Dad... Hold My Hand!. In 2017, Smith played the role of the Principal in the Marathi film Manjha, directed by Jatin Wagle. Recent films include Ritesh Batra's Photograph, which premiered at Sundance Film Festival in February 2019.
He's also been featured in many Bollywood films such as Ek Ajnabee with Arjun Rampal, Amitabh Bachchan and Parizaad Zorabian, Zid and Bombay Velvet directed by Anurag Kashyap with Anushka Sharma and Ranbir Kapoor, Kabir Khan's Phantom with Saif Ali Khan and Katrina Kaif. More recently, Smith appeared in the crime drama Baazaar, as the Manipuri militant leader in Disney's Jagga Jasoos, the emergency period action film Baadshaho, comedy Happy Phirr Bhag Jayegi and as a detective in the mystery thriller Badla directed by Sujoy Ghosh and starring Amitabh Bachchan and Taapsee Pannu.
Smith has featured in several international productions that have achieved both critical and commercial success – One Night with the King with Omar Sharif and Peter O’Toole, The Lunchbox with Irrfan Khan, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel with Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Dev Patel, Bill Nighy and directed by John Madden and Brahman Naman, a Netflix original release sex comedy, directed by Qaushiq Mukherjee, written by Naman Ramachandran with Shashank Arora.
Smith's most prominent international film til date is Gurinder Chadha's Viceroy's House on India's partition in 1947 in which he plays the role of Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

On television, radio and voice

Smith has acted in many Indian television serials as well as international tele-series. Prominent ones include Netflix's "Delhi Crime" directed by Richie Mehta on the Nirbhaya gang rape tragedy, renewed for Season 2. Smith also played the therapist in Amazon Prime's sitcom Mind the Malhotras and "P.O.W.- Bandi Yuddh Ke" on Star Plus for which he won 2017 Indian Television Academy Awards Best Actor in a Negative Role. In 2019, Netflix and BBC cast Smith to play the father of serial killer Charles Sobhraj in their eight-part series The Serpent.
Smith is also in an episode of "Made in Heaven " on Amazon Video, C.I.D. on Sony, Jassi Jaissi Koi Nahin, Hansa: A Love Story, Rishtey and Time Bomb 9/11 on Zee TV, The Sword of Tipu Sultan on Doordarshan, The Return Of Sandokan on Italian National TV, and Samvidhaan: The Making of the Constitution of India produced by Rajya Sabha TV and directed by Shyam Benegal.
Smith regularly lends his voice for various radio dramas, documentaries and advertisements. His voice has been featured in Tiger's Eye and The Mrichhakatikaa for BBC Radio, and on Personality Hour for Times FM.
Has also dubbed in Hindi feature films like Hanuman, House of Flying Daggers, The Boolean Conspiracy, Up, Bolt, James and the Giant Peach, Amar Chitra Katha, A Bugs Life, Shoot At Sight, Making of The Mahatma, Kung Fu Hustle and Red Cliff. He has done and several voiceovers for commercials, corporate films and documentaries.

Media and events

Smith’s love of music – Jazz in particular – has translated into being a regular host of jazz festivals, music and other events. He regularly hosts Jazz tribute concerts on International Jazz Day at the National Centre for the Performing Arts and Blue Frog in Mumbai. He also co-hosted the META awards in 2014 with Perizaad Zorabian.
Smith has been involved in charities such as Avehi Abacus. He also conducts voice workshops in theatre institutes and colleges in India.

Producer

Smith founded Stagesmith Productions in 2006 with an aim to produce Indian English Theatre rooted in homegrown narratives. Its first production, titled Jazz, starred actor Bhargava Krishna, saxophonist Rhys D’souza, and featured musical compositions by Merlin D’Souza. The play opened to a full-house at the Prithvi Theatre Festival in 2007, and won a 'Best Actor' award for Krishna at the Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards in 2008. The play has also been credited with laying the seed for Fernandes’ now-iconic book on the history of Jazz music in India and Goan Jazz musicians in Bombay’s film industry – Taj Mahal Foxtrot: The Story of Bombay’s Jazz Age.
In 2015, StageSmith revived Jazz, and renamed it Bombay Jazz with Smith himself playing the mentor – an amalgamation of jazz musicians Sebastian D’Souza, Chris Perry, Micky Correa, Chic Chocolate Frank Fernand and Anthony Gonsalves – with saxophonist Rhys Sebastian D’Souza playing the mentee.
In 2016, StageSmith created a new production "Poetrification" dubbed as "Your moment to get smashed by some poetry & music." In the performance, Denzil Smith, Danish Husain, and a musician craft a performance of poetry, music, and banter. Denzil performs pieces by English poets from the sub-continent - Dom Moraes, AK Ramanujan, Jeet Thayil, Arundhathi Subramaniam - while Danish recites Urdu poets - Ghalib, Noon Meem Rashed, Faiz, Zehra Nigah, Afzal Ahmed Syed. Through this, Adil Manuel or Beven Fonesca weave words with music.

Filmography

Dubbing roles

Animated series

Live action films