Om Puri (born October 18, 1950, Ambala, Punjab [now in Haryana], India—died January 6, 2017, Mumbai) was an Indian actor who was noted for his compelling performances in a wide range of roles in Hindi, Punjabi, British, and American films.
Puri was the son of an officer in the British Indian Army and originally aspired to a career in the military, but he became interested in theatre while attending Khalsa College in Patiala, Punjab, India. He gained experience onstage after joining a local theatre company, Punjab Kala Manch, and he later earned a degree (1973) from the National School of Drama in New Delhi. He also studied at the Film Institute of India (now the Film and Television Institute of India) in Pune, Maharashtra. In 1976 Puri made his big-screen debut in Ghashiram Kotwal, the film version of the popular 1972 play of the same name by Indian playwright Vijay Tendulkar.
In 1980 Puri starred in the powerful drama Aakrosh; his portrayal of a young tribal man wrongfully accused of having murdered his wife earned him a Filmfare best supporting actor award. Puri won the Indian National Film Award for best actor, for his work in Arohan (1982), which depicted the struggles of a poor tenant farmer and his family. Two years later he was again named best actor, for his portrayal of an honest police inspector beset by the corruption of others in the film Ardh satya (1983). His other notable films include the comedy Jaane bhi do yaaro (1983), the thriller Mirch masala (1987), the crime drama Maqbool (2003), and the caper comedy Singh Is Kinng (2008).
During this time, Puri also established a broader international reputation by acting in films outside India. In 1982 he appeared in a brief but intensely moving scene in the Academy Award-winning biopic Gandhi, by British director Richard Attenborough. Other notable British movies include My Son the Fanatic (1997), about a cab driver worried by his son’s embrace of Islamic fundamentalism, and the comedy drama East Is East (1999), for which he earned a British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) nomination for best lead actor. He also appeared in Hollywood films alongside some of the biggest stars in the industry, including Patrick Swayze in City of Joy (1992), Jack Nicholson in Wolf (1994), and Tom Hanks in Charlie Wilson’s War (2007). In 2014 Puri starred in The Hundred-Foot Journey, in which he and Helen Mirren played the owners of competing restaurants in a small village in southern France. Puri earned praise for his portrayal of a man who has been displaced from his native India.
The recipient of numerous awards, Puri received the Padma Shri, one of India’s highest civilian honours, in 1990, and he was made honorary Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2004 for his contributions to the British film industry.