Raj Babbar reveals how he dodged dancing in 'Hum Paanch' (1980)
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Veteran actor Raj Babbar has revealed a behind-the-scenes story from the making of the classic 1980 ensemble drama 'Hum Paanch', disclosing how he and his co-stars deliberately provoked their choreographer to avoid performing dance sequences. Babbar shared the anecdote on 'The Kapil Sharma Show', offering a rare candid glimpse into the making of one of Bollywood's most celebrated multi-starrers.
The Great Dance Escape
Babbar explained that the film's cast was largely made up of actors with no dancing background — including himself and Naseeruddin Shah. Mithun Chakraborty was the sole exception. Faced with the demanding choreography of dance master Kamal Master, the non-dancing actors hatched a plan.
'So, this syndicate decided that we'll do something. We will make him (Kamal Master) abuse us, and when he abuses us in front of so many people, we'll get angry and will refuse to dance,' Babbar recounted.
The scheme played out exactly as planned. Mithun dutifully performed the steps while the others deliberately fell short, prompting the choreographer to lose his composure. 'First, there was a sound — Cut, cut, cut, cut. After that, a loud noise came from the bottom, and we stood up and walked the other way round,' Babbar recalled.
Boney Kapoor Steps In
Producer Boney Kapoor — for whom 'Hum Paanch' was his debut production — rushed over to defuse the situation. The standoff eventually resolved amicably, with the cast and choreographer reportedly reaching a mutual understanding and becoming friends.
Babbar also joked about the workaround the actors settled on: 'We used to follow the crowd around us and do some hand movements. We concentrated so much on the hand movements and with such great intensity that our hands probably seemed better than Mithun.'
About 'Hum Paanch'
Directed by Bapu, 'Hum Paanch' featured an extraordinary ensemble cast including Sanjeev Kumar, Shabana Azmi, Mithun Chakraborty, Deepti Naval, Naseeruddin Shah, Raj Babbar, Uday Chandra, Gulshan Grover, and Amrish Puri. The film was released on 19 December 1980 and went on to become a major box-office success.
The film is a Hindi remake of the 1978 Kannada drama 'Paduvaaralli Pandavaru', directed by Puttanna Kanagal. Notably, director Bapu had also adapted the same source material into Telugu the same year as 'Mana Voori Pandavulu'. The Hindi version marked Boney Kapoor's first outing as a producer — a career that would go on to span decades of landmark productions.
Why the Story Still Resonates
Anecdotes from the golden era of Hindi cinema rarely surface with such specificity and humour. Babbar's account not only humanises some of the industry's most revered performers but also underscores how differently films were made in that era — where star power and personal chemistry often shaped production decisions as much as formal planning. This is precisely the kind of behind-the-scenes texture that fans and film historians find invaluable.