Chennai (Tamil Nadu):Tamil Nadu is in shock after coming to know about the demise of their favourite silver screen comedian Vivek. Hailed as the 'people's artiste,' the end came at 4.35 am on Saturday (March 17). The end came after the actor failed to respond to ECMO treatment provided at SIMS Hospital in Vadapalai, Chennai.
Several leaders, actors, celebrities and legions of fans are paying tributes to the actor for his performances and many have paid tributes online saying that films will not be the same without him.
Meanwhile, doctors have allayed rumours that the actor's death was related to a vaccine shot he had taken on Thursday.
Vivek’s cinema legacy
As Tamil ace comedian ‘Kalaivaanar’ (expert in arts) Vivek, through his comedy and humour in films critiqued superstitious ideas and practices prevalent in society. Vivek, whose film career began in the 1980s used fun, satire, and humour in his films to hit out at superstition and promote rational thinking.
In the film ‘Saami’ (2003), Vivek plays a character who enters his house, carrying an SC child on his head joined in by several children and singing the great Tamil poet Bharathiyar’s song, “A white cat grows in the house.” The character's wife would ask him who the children were to which he replies, “These children are quite tired and hungry. Give them food.”
The character's wife refuses to do so, saying that it was against the social moral code, Vivek's character sees the grandfather (played by ‘Vennira Aadai’ Murthy) calling out to crows with a leaf full of food meant for the birds.
Vivek’s character comments sending out a rationalist message on prevailing social evils, “You people would provide food to crows that you call your ancestors. But you won’t give food to living children.”
In that scene, the grandfather scolds Vivek, saying, “You 'sandaala' (untouchable fellow), don’t talk ill of our sastras.” Vivek would give a counter, saying that the crows would, somehow or other, get food from anywhere but these underprivileged children have only people to provide food.
In the same film ‘Saami’, Vivek would torture in his own humorous way a traffic policeman who would stop Vivek riding a motorcycle and indirectly tries to extort money from him. The comic scene drove home the message of the need for a crusade against corruption – the same theme that was dealt with seriously in Kamal Haasan’s film ‘Indian.’
In films such as ‘Tirumalai’, he would deliver lines satirizing the government bodies like Chennai Corporation.