CHENNAI: Two weeks after the death of his mentor K Bharathiraja, Tamil cinema lost its one-man studio — a titan, K Bhagyaraj on Saturday.The director, actor, screenwriter, composer and novelist, who was 73, was brought unconscious to Apollo Hospitals, where doctors declared him dead.Born Krishnaswamy Bhagyaraj on January 7, 1953, near Gobichettipalayam, he arrived in the film industry carrying little more than ambition. His first screen appearance, in Bharathiraja’s 16 Vayathinile (1977), required him to lead a donkey across a field as a background extra. Two years later, he became a director.He spent the next five decades doing what very few in Indian cinema have managed: writing the script, composing the music, directing the film, and then stepping in front of the camera to play the lead. He did this not once, but across a remarkable body of work.His hits came in a dazzling run through the 1980s. Oru Kai Osai (1980) announced a distinctive new voice in Tamil cinema. Mundhanai Mudichu (1983) — which he wrote, directed, and starred in alongside Urvashi — won him the Filmfare Best Actor Award and remains a touchstone of Tamil popular cinema.Chinna Veedu (1985) and Ninaivellam Nithya (1986) cemented his reputation as a filmmaker of warmth and wit. Several of his films were remade in Telugu and Hindi, crossing linguistic boundaries at a time when that was far from routine.Off-screen, he edited the weekly Tamil magazine Bhagya and authored several novels. In his later years, he returned to acting in prominent supporting roles, most recently in Dhanush’s Kuberaa (2025). At his golden jubilee celebration in January 2026, with Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan in the audience, he announced that he would direct again — a film, and possibly a web series. Tamil cinema had been waiting.He is survived by his son, actor Shanthanu Bhagyaraj, daughter Saranya and wife Poornima.
