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Paul Bhattacharjee : ウィキペディア英語版
Paul Bhattacharjee

Gautam Paul Bhattacharjee (4 May 1960〔 – c. 12 July 2013) was a British Indian actor of stage, film and television.
==Early life and career==
The only son of Gautam Bhattacharjee, a member of the Indian Communist Party who had to flee from the country in 1942, and Anne, a woman from a family of Russian Jewish descent, he was educated at state schools in Harrow.〔 In the 1970s, Paul was a member of "The Young Theatre" at North Harrow〔("Membership List" ), The Young Theatre at North Harrow.〕 where he was very involved in their productions (including an early role in ''The Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew'' in 1974)〔("The Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew" ), The Young Theatre at North Harrow.〕 and began to learn his trade as an actor. An association with Jatinder Verma and his theatre company Tara Arts began in 1979,〔Suman Bhuchar, "Bhattacharjee, Paul" in Alison Donnell (ed.), ''Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture'', Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2002, p. 32.〕 when he was, according to Verma "passionately idealistic, both artistically and politically" and had the desire "to use theatre to change the world".〔("Jatinder Verma on Paul Bhattacharjee: 'He was passionately idealistic, both artistically and politically'" ), guardian.co.uk, 18 July 2013〕 Bhattacharjee appeared in ''Yes Memsahib'' (1979), "the story of the formation of modern East Africa by colonial Indian 'coolie' labour",〔("Yes Memsahib 1979" ), Tara Arts.〕 and ''Diwali'' (1980), which he also directed, "the story behind the annual Festival of Lights",〔("Diwali 1980" ), Tara Arts.〕 among other productions.
Bhattacharjee's first regular television role was in the short-lived soap ''Albion Market'' (1985) in which his character was charged by the police for the murder of a racist;〔 it was the actor's work as a teenage anti-racism activist which had led to his first meeting with Jatinder Verma in 1977.〔 He played Omar Khayyam, a narrator named after the poet, in ''Iranian Nights'' (1989) by Howard Brenton and Tariq Ali, at the Royal Court. a satirical response to the controversy over Salman Rushdie's novel ''The Satanic Verses'',〔Marcus Williamson, ("Paul Bhattacharjee: Actor whose work took in the RSC, the Royal Court and 'EastEnders'" ), ''The Independent'', 23 July 2013.〕 later shown in a television version on Channel 4.
He had successfully taken over Art Malik's role in the West End run (at the Aldwych Theatre)〔 of ''Indian Ink'' by Tom Stoppard in 1995〔 after originally playing the character's son,〔Paul Taylor, ("The sun never sets on Stoppard's empire" ), ''The Independent'', 1 March 1995.〕〔("Resurrecting the Raj" ), ''India Today'', 30 April 1995.〕 and had appeared in ''Murmuring Judges'' (Royal National Theatre,〔 1991), one of the plays in David Hare's trilogy examining British institutions.

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