Starting his career with comedy, some 22 years ago, Adnan Shah Tipu has become his own trademark. The maestro of menace has the type of face you don’t forget (and don’t often see on movie posters), plus a reputation for versatility, which is why you see him in every other TV play, and most films where, as a character actor, his second fiddle soon rises above the din of his higher profile co-stars. His talent for comedy and villainy has garnered him roles on TV, films and in Bollywood (Himesh Reshammiya’s Kajraare and Arshad Warsi’s Welcome to Karachi).
Whether he is playing Rafaqat in Chhalawa, Ghorzang Khan in Dukhtar, Faridday in Maalik, the sensitive transgender Bubbly in the TV serial Khuda Mera Bhi Hai or Jalal Khan in Suno Chanda, Tipu plays his characters with absolute conviction. With an over-long stare, a slight edge of hostility to an otherwise innocuous line, or a subtle implication, he draws you in with eyes that glow with unshakeable sincerity.
He has a particular vibe about him: natural and unaffected, slightly dreamy-eyed and soulful. Tipu arrives late for the interview, citing an unavoidable family emergency. I ask him if he feels like a star yet. “Star kya hota hai, yaar? [What is a star?] A person is who he is. Someone asked me a long time ago, what is success? I remember saying, to be able to live the way you want. I believe that, if I’m happy, I’m the most successful person. Today, I’m living almost the way I want to,” Tipu says with a smile.
In 1998, he did Sassi Punnu, playing a negative character, of course, but his performance was noticed by veteran actor Talat Hussain. “He [Talat] came up to me and said ‘Ap theatre bohat kartay hain?’ [Do you do a lot of theatre?] I was most honoured and told him I have never done theatre before. He couldn’t believe it. People think I debuted with Sab Set Hai in 2001 — it wasn’t easy but I loved doing it — but it was Nighat Chaudhry, who is like a spiritual sister to me, who placed her trust in me and brought me to showbiz when I landed a role in Sassi Punnu.”
His unconventional looks have meant he is always cast as a side character or a villain in Pakistan, never as a lead actor. But directors may be missing out on the depth of Adnan Shah Tipu
Tipu claims to have learnt acting from the street. “I observe people on the street, even children and animals because they are so pure and natural.”
Tipu has had a fairly steady stream of work for over two decades but perhaps not as much recognition. “I used to complain about this but not anymore. When I was auditioning in India, I reached there early. Other people who came later were actors whose films I’d seen, and I would think they are all better actors than me. But when I got the role, I realised that the entire universe is being run by someone up there. I’m just supposed to work hard and not worry about returns. I never say that I’m a great actor but I’m a hard-working and honest actor.”
Directors such as the Spanish Pedro Almodovar or the Frenchman Pierre Jeunet may have turned someone with Tipu’s unusual looks into a pop-culture icon. After all, Almodovar used the unusual looking Rossy de Palma in many of his films while Jeunet was fond of bringing actors such as Dominique Pinon and Ron Perlman front and centre in his films.