Veteran actor Dinesh Hingoo’s recent revelation cuts through Bollywood’s glitter to expose a distressing truth: at 86, despite a career spanning over 300 films and iconic performances in movies like Phir Hera Pheri and Hum Saath Saath Hain, he still worries about affording medical care. His candid line—“Doctor ke paas jaane ke liye paise bhi toh chahiye”—is not just a personal cry for help but a stark symbol of the financial insecurity many character and supporting actors face in an industry that rarely guarantees long‑term security.
The invisible side of stardom
While lead stars enjoy big paychecks, endorsements, and residuals, actors like Hingoo, who bring comic relief or family warmth through smaller roles, often work on one‑off fees without royalties, health‑care coverage, or pensions. Their work is essential to the movies’ success, yet their livelihoods remain precarious as they age out of the conventional hero‑centric space. Even prolific careers do not automatically translate into stable income, as roles naturally dry up and budgets shrink for older actors.
systemic gaps in the industry
Hingoo’s experience highlights a broader systemic failure: Bollywood, a multi‑billion‑dollar ecosystem, has no robust, universal safety net for its veteran artists. Trade unions and welfare trusts exist, but they reach only a fraction of the workforce, especially freelancers who move from project to project. Many character actors never receive structured contracts, insurance, or retirement plans, leaving them dependent on family support or sporadic work long after they’re physically or financially unable to sustain it.
Hingoo’s story is not unique; it mirrors the lives of countless technicians, junior artists, and supporting performers who built the industry’s foundation without sharing in its long‑term rewards. It forces a necessary conversation about ethics and responsibility: if cinema is built on collaboration, then the industry must design better pension schemes, subsidized healthcare, and dignified work opportunities for its veterans. Otherwise, the message to future artists is that fame is fleeting, but insecurity lasts a lifetime.
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