Regardless of his talent, this phenomenon came to be known as Ramesh Sippy Syndrome. It loomed over many an -accomplished director who delivered a cult hit, including Mehboob Khan, K. Asif, Aditya Chopra and Anil Sharma (see box). It, however, has not stymied the careers of filmmakers alone. Many actors also suffered a similar predicament after delivering knockout performances. Amjad Khan gave glimpses of his versatility in Shatranj Ke Khiladi (1977), Qurbani (1980), Love Story (1981) and a glut of other movies but he was always known as Gabbar Singh, the dreaded dacoit he portrayed in Sholay. Similarly, Anupam Kher has more than 500 movies to his credit, including a few in Hollywood, but his performance of a retired schoolmaster in Saaransh (1984) is still acknowledged as his best. And when Manoj Bajpayee played a Mumbai ganglord in Ram Gopal Varma’s Satya (1998), a prominent filmmaker cautioned him that he had done a (Diego) Maradona. He was, of course, drawing an analogy between Bajpayee and the famous Argen-tinian soccer star who could never repeat what he pulled off at the 1986 World Cup.