Menu

Achyut Potdar

Overview

Achyut Potdar is an Indian actor known for his work in Hindi cinema and television. Active in supporting and character roles across several decades, he is particularly recognised for playing professors, bureaucrats, fathers, and other authoritative figures in mainstream Bollywood films. He gained widespread popular recognition for his brief but memorable appearance as the engineering college professor in Rajkumar Hirani's 3 Idiots (2009).

Key facts

Name Achyut Potdar
Nationality Indian
Occupation Actor
Industry Hindi cinema (Bollywood), Indian television
Notable role Professor in 3 Idiots (2009)

Background

Before pursuing acting full time, Potdar served in the Indian Armed Forces and later worked in the corporate sector. He turned to acting in the latter part of his working life, drawing on his maturity and experience to portray older characters in films and television serials. His grounded screen presence and natural delivery made him a frequent choice for character parts requiring restraint and gravitas.

Career

Potdar has appeared in a large number of Hindi films from the late 1980s onward, often in roles lasting only a few scenes but contributing strongly to the narrative. He has been cast in productions by leading Hindi filmmakers and has worked alongside several generations of mainstream actors.

Selected film appearances

  • Tezaab (1988)
  • Parinda (1989)
  • Lamhe (1991)
  • Damini (1993)
  • Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994)
  • Rangeela (1995)
  • Ghulam (1998)
  • Sarfarosh (1999)
  • Munna Bhai M.B.B.S. (2003)
  • 3 Idiots (2009)

Television

Alongside film work, Potdar has acted in Hindi television serials, often in patriarch and senior official roles, contributing to the ensemble casts of family dramas and social dramas broadcast on Indian television.

Significance

Achyut Potdar belongs to a generation of Hindi cinema character artists whose contributions, while rarely headlining, define the texture of mainstream Bollywood. His role as the strict professor in 3 Idiots—delivering the often-quoted classroom scene on the definition of a machine—brought him renewed recognition with younger audiences and remains one of the most widely remembered cameos in 21st-century Hindi cinema.

References