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Hum Paanch is an Indian Hindi-language sitcom that originally aired on Zee TV. The show became one of the most popular family comedies on Indian television in the 1990s and is remembered for its slapstick humour, exaggerated characterisations and the depiction of a middle-class Gujarati household coping with five very different daughters. It was produced by Ekta Kapoor's Balaji Telefilms and is considered one of the early successes that established the production house on Indian television.
| Title | Hum Paanch |
|---|---|
| Genre | Sitcom, family comedy |
| Language | Hindi |
| Original network | Zee TV |
| Production company | Balaji Telefilms |
| Producer | Ekta Kapoor |
| Country | India |
| Format | Half-hour episodic series |
The series revolves around Anand Mathur, a middle-class man, and his wife Beena, who together struggle to manage their five daughters, each with a starkly different personality. The household is also haunted, in a comic sense, by the framed portrait of Anand's deceased first wife, who occasionally "speaks" to him and offers commentary on family affairs—a device used for recurring humour.
The roles of some daughters changed hands across the run of the show, with different actors taking up the same character at different stages.
The show was created and produced by Balaji Telefilms under Ekta Kapoor, and aired on Zee TV during the late 1990s. It ran for two seasons, with the first season being the more widely remembered. A revived version was attempted later, but the original run remains the definitive iteration in popular memory.
Hum Paanch was among the most-watched comedy serials of its era and is often cited alongside other landmark Indian sitcoms such as Dekh Bhai Dekh, Shrimaan Shrimati and Tu Tu Main Main in discussions of 1990s Hindi television comedy. Its style of broad, exaggerated comedy and its template of contrasting siblings under one roof influenced subsequent family sitcoms on Indian television.
The show is also notable as an early credit for Vidya Balan, who later became a leading film actress, and as one of the formative productions of Balaji Telefilms before the company shifted predominantly to soap operas in the early 2000s.
The phrase "Hum Paanch" has entered popular usage in Indian television parlance as a shorthand for chaotic family-based sitcoms. The characters of the five daughters—particularly Sweety, with her tapori dialect, and Kajal, with her vanity—remain part of nostalgic recollections of 1990s Indian television. Reruns and clips on streaming and video platforms have introduced the series to younger audiences.