Not many remember Satish Kaul as Rehana Sultan's handsome lover in the 1973 drama Prem Parbat where he played the forest ranger Rehana ran to when her aged husband Nana Palsikar was asleep.
It was a bold film and Satish got lead roles in off-beat Hindi films like Nek Parveen, Mere Sartaj and Ang Se Ang Laga Le .
Like most failed lead actors Satish soon switched to supporting roles in big budget films like Shiva ka Insaaf and Inaam Dus Hazaar. He had insignificant roles in two Pahlaj Nihalani productions Ilzaam and Aag Hi Aag.
Pahlajji remembers Satish as "hard working, friendly, hungry for work, always eager to face the camera, always wondering where the next meal would come from."
Bitter and frustrated for the lack of work in Hindi cinema, Satish moved to Punjabi cinema where he had a relatively more successful innings with films like Jatt Punjabi, Lacchi and Rano. He was labeled the 'Amitabh Bachchan Of Punjabi cinema'.
Not that it helped sustain his career. When roles in Punjab too began to dry up Satish moved to Indian television. He played small parts on television . He was seen in Vikram-Vetal and Mahabharat.
In recent years his financial condition went from bad to worse. Satish was forced to live in a charity home in Ludhiana. He died in a hospital in Ludhiana.
Satish's final years are a lesson to all actors and technicians in Indian cinema who have no savings to fall back on during hard times.
I remember the actress Vimi of the 1970s, a grand B R Chopra discovery who was launched with fanfare in the hit Humraaz. Soon her career floundered.
Her corpse had to be loaded on a handcart to be taken to the crematorium.