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Gufi Paintal (born Sarabjeet Singh Paintal) was an Indian actor and casting director, best known for portraying Shakuni in B. R. Chopra's television epic Mahabharat (1988–1990). With a screen career spanning over four decades in Hindi cinema and television, he became one of the most recognisable character actors associated with mythological storytelling on Indian television.
| Birth name | Sarabjeet Singh Paintal |
|---|---|
| Known as | Gufi Paintal |
| Profession | Actor, casting director, assistant director |
| Notable role | Shakuni in Mahabharat (1988–1990) |
| Industry | Hindi cinema and Indian television |
| Sibling | Kanwaljit Paintal (actress) |
| Died | 5 June 2023, Mumbai |
Paintal hailed from a Punjabi family. He trained as a mechanical engineer and served briefly in the Indian Army during the 1962 Sino-Indian conflict before turning to the performing arts. His sister, Kanwaljit Paintal, was already established as a film actress in Hindi cinema, which drew him towards Mumbai and the film industry. He initially worked as a model before moving into acting and behind-the-camera roles.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Paintal worked as an assistant director and appeared in supporting roles in Hindi films. His early filmography includes appearances in productions such as Rahu Ketu and Suhaag, where he played minor and character parts.
Paintal's defining role came when he was cast as Shakuni, the scheming maternal uncle of the Kauravas, in B. R. Chopra and Ravi Chopra's Mahabharat, telecast on Doordarshan between 1988 and 1990. Beyond acting in the serial, he also served as the casting director, helping select actors for several principal roles. His portrayal of Shakuni — characterised by a measured voice, deliberate gait, and the rolling of dice — became iconic in Indian popular culture and is frequently cited in discussions of memorable television performances.
After Mahabharat, Paintal continued to work primarily in mythological and historical television serials. His later credits include roles in Chanakya, Kanoon, Akbar the Great, Om Namah Shivay, and Jai Ganga Maiya, among other productions on Doordarshan and satellite channels.
Gufi Paintal occupies an important place in the history of Indian television because of Mahabharat's extraordinary cultural impact during its original Doordarshan run, when the serial drew nationwide audiences each Sunday. His Shakuni became a benchmark performance, often referenced when later adaptations of the epic are compared. As casting director, he also influenced the look and feel of one of the most-watched Indian television productions of the twentieth century.