Ayushmaan
Ayushmaan | |
---|---|
Directed by | Santosh Batt, Shiladitya Sen & Gautam Deva |
Creative director(s) | Anjali Bhushan Nugyai |
Starring | See Below |
Opening theme | "Ayushmaan" by Sonu Nigam |
Country of origin | India |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 163 |
Production | |
Editor(s) | Gaurav Deep |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production company(s) | Cinevistaas Limited |
Release | |
Original network | Sony Entertainment Television India |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Original release | 2004 – 2005 |
External links | |
Website |
Ayushmaan is a Hindi language Indian television serial on Sony Entertainment Television Asia (Global), started late in 2004. It is a story of a child medical genius.[1]
Story
The popular soap was the story of a teenager whose carefree adolescence is pitted against the responsibilities that his medical profession demands from him. It later leads to heart-rending conflicts. It is a based on a true child prodigy who became a qualified doctor at the age of 17.[2]
The blessings of his parents give him an optimistic outlook to life and the strength that will help him to keep on his chosen path. Being a practicing doctor, Ayushman remains a teenager at heart and everything turns topsy-turvy when Cupid strikes. He falls in love with another doctor who is much senior to him and once again makes a tough struggle to strike a balance between his professional and personal life.
In trying to fit in with his peers and gain acceptance he paid no attention to academics and intentionally just managed to scrape through school and college. The dean of a renowned hospital, Dr. Reema Seth, recognizes his talent and forces him to acknowledge and accept his strengths. From here begins his journey of self-realization and he becomes the youngest qualified doctor.
Progression
The show started with a lot of promise as it dealt with child geniuses. It showed in detail how most of the child geniuses in the Indian subcontinent go through rejection because they end up doing something different from the common mass. All was going fine till the time when the protagonist falls in love with Tani.
The story lost its original track. Moving from Tani to Sonya to Kavya the soap in the later stages became the chronicle of his love life. Looking at Ayushmaan's life in the later stages one would be bound to think that serving in the noble profession of doctor is just a child's game. Then the character of Ayushmaan's brother Bodhi who was first shown as the mentally retarded turns up to be the villain.
Cast
- Vinod Singh / Sudeep Sahir ... Ayushmaan (a teenage wonder doctor. He treats his patients very nicely and try to cure their disease quickly. He is very happy and tries to spread happiness.)
- Indira Krishnan ... Ayushmaan's mom
- Uday Tikekar ... Ayushmaan's dad
- Riva Bubber ... Dr. Kavya (Ayushmaan's wife)
- Neha Mehta ... Dr. Tani (Ayushmaan's first love, killed by Bodhi)
- Gunn Kansara ... Sonia (Ayushmaan's second love)
- Kamalika Guha Thakurta ... Urvashi (Sonia's Mom)
- Hemant Thatte ... Bodhi (Ayushmaan's brother who was mentally retarded turns up to be the villain)
- Nivedita Bhattacharya ... Dr. Sunaina (Tani's elder sister; senior doctor at Vardaan)
- Darshan Jariwala/Rajeev Verma ... Dr. Dalmia (Sunaina and Tani's father, CEO of Vardaan)
- Manav Gohil ... Dr. Mayank (Sunaina's husband, antagonist)
- Jhumma Mitra ... Sister Laila (friendly nurse)
Cast exchange
Vinod Singh to Sudeep Sahir for Ayushmaan
As the wonder doctor in Ayushmaan, Vinod Singh was forced to make an exit from show in November 2004. This was after he allegedly bashed up a studio hand during an Ayushmaan shoot at the Cinevistaas studio in Kanjur Marg.
He had taken offence when a helper from the neighbouring set brushed past his co-star Tani (Neha Mehta). The channel had described his action has "unfortunate" and said they "did not subscribe to such behaviour". Later, Sudeep Sahir handled the role of Ayushmaan.[3][4][5]
Crew
- Producer: Prem Krishnen and Sunil Mehra
- Creative director: Anjali Bhushan Nugyal
- Open title (singer): Sonu Nigam
- Story development: Abhay Tiwari
References
- ↑ "Ayushmaan - Sony TV". alehigado.com. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- ↑ "Ayushmaan". setsyndication.com. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
- ↑ "'Aayushman' kicked out of serial". Telly Chakkar. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- ↑ "Vinod Singh’s exit from Aayushman disappoints". tribuneindia.com. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- ↑ "Idiot box egoes". Calcutta, India: telegraphindia.com. 7 April 2006. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
External links
- Ayushmaan at Sony Entertainment Network
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