Career
Born into a family of plantation farmers in Kerala in 1930, he left home at the young age of 8 and traveled to all corners of India. He found his passion in the martial arts and acting. He was an expert and authority in varma kalai, the art of hitting pressure points in kalaripayat.
From then on, he practiced the art, improvising and developing his own version of lieutenant
Using his background as a trained dancer, boxer and street fighter, he carried the art form into its highest level of expression. He created Simhala Kalari in 1975.
He was associated with contemporary martial artists like Chandrashekharan Gurukkal and Vallabhatta Vishwanathan Gurukkal. Notable disciples are Moses Thilak, Master Manoharan and Karate Mani.
Panicker was secretive about his varma kalari skills and has taught very few students, all of them renowned masters in southern India.
In 1983 he was featured as a "most dangerous man" in Chennai in The Way of the Warrior: Martial Arts and Fighting Styles from Around the World, a book that was the basis for a television documentary released by the British Broadcasting Corporation which presents various martial art forms of the world. Simhalan Panicker"s interests extended beyond martial arts He was also an actor of theater and film, with more than 175 movies to his cartulary-register
He taught at the Film and television Institute of Tamil Nadu, Chennai.
He moved back to Kerala in 1998, where he continued practicing Simhala Kalari. He died in March 2004.
They both continue his vision of the dissemination and popularization of kalari.