Tom Alter, the son and grandson of American Presbyterian missionaries
who first came to India in 1916, grew up in north India in the towns of
Rajpur and Mussoorie, and studied at Woodstock School. It was while
teaching at a school in Jagadhri, Haryana in the early 1970s that Alter
picked honed his Hindi and fell in love with the movies, in specific
Indian cinema. In that era television was not common in India and so
most people went to the movies, often several times a week.
Alter was enamored by the films and in June 1972, after noticing a
small classified ad in the newspaper, he enrolled at the prestigious
prestigious Film and Television Institute of India of Pune. Alter was
one of two people selected out of more than 1000 applicants that year
and he learned his craft at the FTII, where he studied with the likes
of Benjamin Gilani, Naseeruddin Shah, Shabana Azmi, Mithun Chakraborthy
and others.
After graduating from FTII, Alter headed straight to Bombay and soon
got his first break in the Dev-Anand starrer 'Sahib Bahadur' directed
by Chetan Anand. His first release, however, was Ramanand Sagar's
'Charas' in which he played the superstar Dharmendra's CID boss. Steady
work came to Alter throughout the 1970s and 80s and he worked with
luminaries such as V Shantaram, Raj Kapoor, Hrishikesh Mukherjee,
Manmohan Desai, Manoj Kumar and Satjajit Rai as well as a host of
lesser-known directors. He has also acted in regional cinema - Bengali,
Assamese, Telegu, Tamil and Kumaoni films. Alter was witness to the
coming of television to India and worked on the small screen in a
number of popular serials, the biggest of which was the popular drama
'Junoon' which ran for five years. In it, he played the role of the mob
lord Keshal Kalsi - KK, as he was famously known - and his performance
earned rave reviews. During this same period Alter acted in the
ensemble comedy 'Zabaan Sambhalke', another drama called 'Ghutan', and
hosted the health-based talk show 'Mere Ghar Aana Zindagi'.
Some of his most famous movie roles have been as Musa in Vidhu Vinod
Chopra's acclaimed crime drama 'Parinda', Mahesh Bhatt's blockbuster
romance 'Aashiqui', and Ketan Mehta's 'Sardar', in which Alter essayed
the role of Lord Mountbatten. Alter has also accumulated a body of
theatrical work, the most recent having been in the theatrical
reproduction of William Dalrymple's 'City of Djinns' and the solo play
'Maulana', based on Maulana Azad for which he has received much
critical acclaim. He has also received praise for his role in the art
film 'Ocean of An Old Man', which has been screened at film festivals
around the world. Among several international assignments was the
opportunity to work with Peter O'Toole in the Hollywood film 'One Night
With The King'.
In addition to acting, Alter has also ventured into direction - he
directed a one-shot episode for the short-lived series 'Yule Love
Stories' in the mid-1990s - and was a sports journalist in the late
1980s to early 1990s. He has written three books, one non-fiction and
two fiction, and in 2008 was awarded the prestigious Padma Shree by the
Indian government in recognition for his services to the field of arts
and cinema.