Bedi was born in village Dalleki in Sialkot district, Punjab, now in Pakistan, to Hira Singh Bedi and Seva Dai. He spent his early years in Lahore, where he received his education in Urdu, as it was common to most Punjabi families, though he never graduated from a college.
Career
His first collection of short stories, Daan-O-Daam, featuring his prominent story "Garam Coat" was published in 1940. In 1942, he published his second collection of short stories, Grehan. In 1943, he joined Maheshwari Films, a small Lahore film studio, although after one and half years he returned to All India Radio and was posted to Jammu, where he worked until 1947, and became the Director of Jammu and Kashmir Broadcasting Service. By the time of Partition Rajinder Singh Bedi had published numerous more short stories, and had made a name for himself as a prolific writer. His Urdu novel, Ek Chadar Maili Si, translated into English as I Take This Woman, received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1965. The book was later translated into Hindi, Kashmiri and Bengali. His later collections of short stories were Kokh Jali and Apne Dukh Mujhe Dedo and a collection of plays, Saat Khel.
Films
After the partition of India in 1947, he moved to Bombay, and started working with D. D. Kashyap and got his first screen credit for dialogue, in the 1949 filmBadi Bahen, although he received greater recognition for his second film Daag, a 1952 film. In 1954, he joined with Amar Kumar, Balraj Sahni, Geeta Bali and others to create a new company called Cine Cooperative. In 1955, it produced its first film, Garam Coat. Based on Bedi's short story Garam Coat, starring Balraj Sahni and Nirupa Roy, and directed by Aman Kumar, the film gave Bedi the chance to write an entire screenplay. Their second film, Rangoli, starring Kishore Kumar, Vyjayantimala, and Durga Khote, was also directed by Amar Kumar. He continued to display his range in dialogue writing styles in many classic Hindi films, starting with Sohrab Modi's Mirza Ghalib, Bimal Roy's Devdas, and Madhumati ; Amar Kumar and Hrishikesh Mukherjee's films, Anuradha, Anupama, Satyakam and Abhimaan. He made his directorial debut with Hindi classic Dastak, starring Sanjeev Kumar and Rehana Sultan, with music by Madan Mohan, and in the following decade he directed three more films: Phagun, Nawab Sahib and Aankhin Dekhi. His novella Ek Chadar Maili Si was made into a film in Pakistan, Mutthi Bhar Chawal and later in India, as Ek Chadar Maili Si. His son Narender Bedi was also a film director and the maker of films including Jawani Diwani, Benaam, Rafoo Chakkar, and Sanam Teri Kasam. He died in 1982, a few years after Bedi's wife. Thereafter, Bedi's health consistently deteriorated. He suffered paralysis in 1982 and died in Bombay two years later. His short story 'Lajwanti' was made into a telefilm, by Neena Gupta in 2006.
Rajinder Singh Bedi: A Study, by Varis Hussain Alvi. 2006.
Sounds and Whispers: Reflections on the Literary Scene, 1984–86, by Abulkhair Kashfi, Syed Abu Ahmad Akif. Asasa Books, 1991. Chapter 25 – "Rajinder Singh Bedi:The Last Pillar Of Modem Urdu Short Story", page 111.
India Partitioned: The Other Face of Freedom, edited by Mushirul Hasan. New Delhi, Roli Books, 1995