Manav Kaul


Manav Kaul is an Indian theatre director, playwright, author, actor and filmmaker. He was nominated at the 63rd Filmfare Awards for Best Supporting Actor for his film Tumhari Sulu.

Early life and career

Born on 19 Dec 1976 in Baramulla, Kashmir, Manav Kaul lived in Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh. Before starting the theatre group named Aranya in 2004, he was a swimmer and had participated in the state and national levels champianships. Amongst his notable plays are Ilhaam, Park and Shakkar ke Paanch Daane, which was his first outing as playwright and director in 2004. His influences include Charles Bukowski, Vinod Kumar Shukla, Franz Kafka and Nirmal Verma, to whom he paid homage in his 2010 play Red Sparrow.
In 2012, Kaul debuted as a film director with Hansa, for which he also wrote the screenplay. He made his acting debut in Hindi cinema with fantasy film Jajantaram Mamantaram in 2003, and has been lauded for his performance as a right-wing politician in the Gujarat-based Hindi drama Kai Po Che! in 2013.

Plays

In 2004, Kaul staged Shakkar Ke Paanch Daane, a dramatic monologue in Hindi about a small-towner whose "structured middle-India existence begins to feel suspiciously like a lie." It featured actor Kumud Mishra, who was to become his longtime collaborator. The Mumbai Theatre Guide wrote, "the final poetic denouement is neat, funny, reflective but unfortunately all too expected, all too perfect." The play was a stage hit and was performed in English in 2009, from a translation by Arshia Sattar.
In his next play, Peele Scooter Wala Aadmi Kaul explored a father-son relationship in an open-ended narrative, and adopted a style of poetic dialogue similar to that employed by Vinod Kumar Shukla and Nirmal Verma. It won him a META award for Best Script in 2006.
In 2006, moving away from internal monologues, Kaul staged a bitter-sweet meditation on old age called Bali aur Shambhu, featuring Sudhir Pandey and Mishra. The Times of India found it "not as philosophical as Shakkar Ke Paanch Daane, yet, it's a story that tugs at your heartstrings and has its moments," while the Mumbai Theatre Guide described it as "one of those plays that appeal to the senses but not to the intellect." Said Kaul, "I wrote the play after I visited an old-age home. I wanted to show that people in old-age homes also have fun."
In 2009, Kaul directed Ranga Shankara's Hindi adaptation of Jean-Paul Sartre's Huis Clos, with The Hindu citing his "treatment of non-verbal, physical expression" as impressive.

Filmography

Actor

Director

Television series

YearTitleRoleNetworkNotes
2018GhoulCol Sunil DacunhaNetflix
2019The Verdict - State vs NanavatiKawas NanavatiZEE5 & ALTBalaji

Books

1-Theek Tumhare Peeche.
2-Prem Kabootar.
3-Tumhare Bare Mein
4-A Night in the Hills
5-Bahut Door Kitna Door Hota Hai
6-Chalta Phirta Pret