Mahabharat Br Chopra Page

For two years (1988–1990), India came to a halt every Sunday morning. Streets emptied. Markets closed. Trains ran late. The reason? Not a political event or a cricket match, but a television show: B.R. Chopra’s Mahabharat . At a time when Doordarshan was the only broadcaster, an estimated 80–100 million viewers tuned in each week—a staggering number for a pre-liberalisation, single-TV-per-neighbourhood India. More than three decades later, the show enjoys a second life on streaming platforms, proving its timeless power.

B.R. Chopra (1914–2008) was already a titan of Hindi cinema, known for socially relevant films like Naya Daur (1957) and Gumrah (1963). But adapting the 100,000-verse Sanskrit epic for television was his boldest gamble. He was 73 when he took on the project. Chopra approached the Mahabharat not as mythology but as a itihasa (history) and a political-moral treatise. He famously told his team: “The Gita is not just a sermon; it is the first book on management and crisis leadership.”

The show wasn’t without critics. Scholars pointed out that Chopra sanitized the epic’s grey areas: Karna’s caste-based persecution was softened; Draupadi’s “I will tie my hair only with Dushasana’s blood” vow was made more heroic and less vengeful. Some objected to the portrayal of Karna as a “tragic hero” at the cost of Pandava virtues. Yet Chopra’s defence was consistent: “Television reaches the family. I had a moral responsibility.” mahabharat br chopra

Introduction: A Sunday Morning Ritual

| Feature | B.R. Chopra (1988) | Peter Brook (1989) | StarPlus (2013) | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Tone | Reverent, didactic | Experimental, arthouse | Soap-opera, melodramatic | | Krishna | Playful yet divine | Alien, mysterious | Handsome, romanticized | | Length | 94 episodes | 6 hours (theatre) | 267 episodes | | VFX | Minimal (painted auras) | None (theatrical) | CGI-heavy | | Legacy | Pan-Indian, devotional | Western critical acclaim | Youth-friendly but forgettable | For two years (1988–1990), India came to a

Many cast members became typecast for life. later entered politics (BJP) but remains the Krishna. Mukesh Khanna doubled down on his Bhishma persona, launching a children’s show Shaktimaan (India’s first superhero). Puneet Issar became a villain in B-movies. Gufi Paintal (Shakuni) passed away in 2023, but his meme-worthy dialogues— “Aisa kyon?” (Why so?)—live on eternally on social media.

No other adaptation has achieved such iconic casting. Even today, if you say “Krishna,” most Indians picture – his gentle, knowing smile and twinkling eyes. Mukesh Khanna ’s deep baritone as Bhishma Pitamah became synonymous with righteous resolve. Puneet Issar ’s Duryodhana was not a caricature but a proud, jealous, wounded prince—almost tragic. Gufi Paintal ’s Shakuni, with his sly whisper and loaded dice, became the archetypal chess master. And Roopesh Kumar as Dushasana (Draupadi’s disrober) played his role so effectively that he reportedly faced public abuse and needed police protection. Trains ran late

Special mention: as Draupadi. Her Cheer Haran (disrobing) episode—shot in a single day—remains the show’s most searing moment. Her unanswered cry, “Kya tum mein se koi nahi bolega?” (Will none of you speak?), echoed through a million living rooms, turning a mythological scene into a modern feminist question.