Harish Bhimani

Harish Bhimani
Born February 15, 1956
Mumbai
Occupation voice over artist, compere, ad-man

Harish Bhimani (born February 15, 1956) is a renowned Indian voice-over artist and a Master of ceremonies/compere. He is most known as the voice of Samay, the narrator in the TV series, Mahabharat (1988-1990). He is Channel voice of Peace TV Urdu. Formerly his voice was used for Idea Cellular as notification of mobile switch off, number busy or not available. He is the leading voice in many documentaries, corporate films, feature films, TV & Radio commercials, games, music album apart from hosting public events and ceremonies, since the 1980s.[1][2][3] Media have variously described Harish Bhimani as ‘One of the Most Recognisable Voices of India’, ‘The Most-travelled Indian Compere’ and ‘A Writer with a Zing’.

Biography

Harish did his schooling from Hansraj Morarji Public School, Mumbai, and completed his MBA from the prestigious Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management Studies.[4] Harish Bhimani started TV news anchoring; narrating the Mahabharat on TV to India’s ambitious text-to-speech eVenture - with some 18,000 recordings of commercials, corporates & documentaries in between & counting; compering at Madison Square Garden to the Royal Albert Hall, Sydney Opera House & Shrine Auditorium & writing TV serial Khandaan to the legendary playback singer Lata Mangeshkar’s biography titled, Lata Didi Ajeeb Dastan Hai Yeh (1995);[5] and recording globally through his unique voice website.

He narrated most of Sachin Shankar's ballets. Harish wrote & narrated an admirable film on Guru Dutt - The Guru of Celluloid - in 2008 for Guru Dutt Films Pvt Ltd.],.[6][7]

Works

References

  1. "Do we prefer a powerful male voice to a sexy female one?". Economic Times. May 18, 2008.
  2. "‘Kalady' documents the life of a great Indian philosopher". Chennai, India: The Hindu. June 6, 2010.
  3. "On a starry starry night". Indian Express. Feb 2, 2009.
  4. Video on YouTube
  5. "Meet Lata-ben Mangeshkar!". The Times Of India. Sep 29, 2009.
  6. "In times of war, this 56-year-old lent voice to Gandhi". Indian Express. April 11, 2003.
  7. "The past master". The Telegraph (Kolkata). October 10, 2004.

External links