Background
Bandyopadhyay was born on 26 August 1920 at Bikrampur, Dhaka.
Bandyopadhyay was born on 26 August 1920 at Bikrampur, Dhaka.
He studied at Pogose School and Saint Gregory"s High School followed by Jagannath College.
He acted in over 300 movies, in numerous plays and performed frequently on the radio. He then moved to Calcutta in the 1940s. In his initial years Bandyopadhyay worked at the Steel Control Board.
Bandyopadhyay started his acting career as a stand-up comedian in Dhaka.
He performed at office parties and then moved on to larger venues. In 1943, he released his first major comic gramophone record Dhakar Gadoane.
Its success prompted him to release a new record every year during Durga Puja. Bandyopadhyay"s breakthrough film role was in Nirmal Dey"s Basu Parivar (1952) where he played a Bangal businessman.
The next year his role as Kedar in Share Chuattar made him rise to fame.
His quote in the film Mashima, malpoa khamu. (Aunty, I want to eat malpoa) became a popular catchphrase. He went on to act in over 300 movies like Bhrantibilash and Pasher Bari.
In most of his films he played comedic roles in which he exaggerated Bengali accents and mannerisms for comic effect.
Typically, in the pair"s films Bandyopadhyay would take the role of the Bangal and Roy would be the comical Ghoti character. Although chiefly known as a comedian, Bandyopadhyay played serious roles in the film Galpa Holeo Satyi.
He also played the lead roles in Jomaloyer Jibonto Manus, Personal Assistant, Mission Priyambada and Ashite Asio na. Later in his career Bandyopadhyay founded his own Jatra group called Mukto Mancha.
He produced, directed and acted in his own productions, traveling around the country with the troupe.
Bandyopadhyay died of a heart-related illness on 4 March 1983. On 26 August 2011 his last film Nirdharito Shilpir Onupasthitite (1959) was released on Digital Video Disc.