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Dara Singh - the champ loses his final fight

By The Assam Tribune

NEW DELHI, July 12 (IANS): He wrestled his way from the ring to the big screen and the small one to enormous success. Dara Singh went from muscle man to hero and then uncle, father and friend in numerous character roles that endeared him to generations of fans.

Few people would have made the transition from the �akhara� to the showbiz stage with the success of Dara Singh, who passed away at his home in Mumbai Thursday morning at the age of 84 after a brief illness.

A wrestling hero to some and a much loved cine artist to others, it was a long and eventful life that triumphed many odds.

In his over five-decade long acting journey, he featured in over 140 films, including classics such as Anand and Mera Naam Joker. It was a many splendoured life.

There was Dara Singh the wrestler, Dara Singh, the hero of �B� category action films such as Tarzan Comes to Delhi� and Samson in the 1950s and 1960s, Dara Singh, the friendly �pehelwan� in �Anand�, and then Dara Singh who played Hanuman with great effect in the TV blockbusters Ramayan and Mahabharat.

He was last seen in the Kareena Kapoor-Shahid Kapoor starrer Jab We Met as the stern, lovable �Daarji� who ruled over a noisy, close-knit Sikh family. Quite like the real life man, who intimidated people with his 6' 2" frame but soon won them over with outgoing nature and warmth.

Born to Balwant Kaur and Surat Singh Randhawa Nov 19, 1928 in a village in Amritsar, Punjab, Dara Singh was encouraged to take up wrestling due to his imposing physique and trained in �pehelwani�, an Indian style of wrestling.

He became a star wrestler - and not just on Indian turf.

Dara Singh took on international wrestlers like Lou Thesz and Stanislaus Zbyszko, and had over 500 professional fights to his credit - all undefeated.

He won the Professional Indian Wrestling Championship in 1953, and took away the Commonwealth Wrestling Championship trophy in 1959 by defeating Canadian champion George Godianko.

A recipient of titles like Rustam-E-Punjab (1966) and Rustam-E-Hind (1978), Dara Singh retired from active wrestling in 1983.

In 1989, he published his autobiography �Meri Atmakatha� in Punjabi, and seven years later was inducted into the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame.

And while he was wrestling, he was making a name in cinema - both Hindi and Punjabi.

His first release was the 1952 �Sangdil� and then came a succession of films like King Kong, Faulad, Sher-e-Watan that earned him the name of Bollywood�s action king.

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