"We
were in an Indian restaurant in England
and my mother said that the waiter had
pretty hands. Then she said she didn't
think anybody would touch her again,"
remembers Kureishi. That led Kureishi,
whose father passed away ten years ago,
to think that though desirability fades
with age, clearly desire doesn't die.
"I thought about a woman who might
rebel, refuse to be a mother and grandmother,"
says Kureishi. "And the hullabaloo
it might cause." It's not so much
the fantasy about doing it. The Mother
deals with the crisis that erupts when
the older woman actually decides to act
upon it.
In The Mother when May is first widowed,
her busy children try to be understanding
and make space for her in their lives,
but always in the background. But when
she suddenly gets involved with a younger
man, who is also her daughter's on-again
off-again boyfriend, all hell breaks loose.
But this is no feel good romance for
the older woman like the hit Under the
Tuscan Sun where a still attractive middle-aged
woman finds succor and a hunk in Italy
after a shattering divorce in Manhattan.
Anne Reid who plays the mother is a stage
and television actress who doesn't bring
high voltage start power to the role.
"I guess if it had been Charlotte
Rampling or Helen Mirren or Julie Christie
it would have been easier," says
Kureishi. "But that wasn't the point.
The point was to take somebody who looked
anonymous. I am interested in the ordinary;
I have always been."
For Kureishi that interest has manifested
itself in a rich body of work that has
skipped mediums from screenplays to novels
and short stories and an upcoming memoir
about his father. It has also allowed
him to explore a range of issues and never
be pigeonholed as the desi writer or the
race writer. "I think I get interested
in stuff in twos" he says. He ticks
them off on his fingers. Buddha of Suburbia
(1990) and My Beautiful Launderette (1985)
kind of go together. And The Black Album
(1995) and My Son the Fanatic (1998).
Intimacy (1998) and Love in a Blue Time
(2001). Now The Body and The Mother."
But even as he skips over subjects and
themes, Kureishi has always returned to
his own life for inspiration. He has been
pilloried for doing so. His own sister
has blasted him for using her life in
his stories. In Intimacy he was derided
for pitilessly chronicling a marital breakup
that very much paralleled his own. An
aunt told him he should show good things
about the community not drug users and
poofters. Kureishi's response was to name
the lesbian character in Sammy and Rosie
Get Laid after her. But then he adds more
seriously, "I don't want to upset
them but I have to tell a story truthfully
for it to be worth telling. But its a
big deal for a family to be exposed. You
explain to them what you are doing and
how it's not them or it might be a bit
of them. But that is tough sometimes."
Even in The Mother, he was a little worried
how his own mother would react, especially
to the sex scenes involving Reid. "But
she loved it," he says with obvious
relief. "She found it liberating.
They are rather self-deprecating these
women, they don't think they are important."
Kureishi's mother came from a working
class English family. His father, on the
other hand, came from the well-to-do intelligentsia
of Bombay. "But he left because he
didn't want to be with a big family. He
was one of 12 children. He wanted to be
king of his house in the suburbs."
His leaving also effectively deprived
him of a homeland since the rest of the
family moved to Pakistan. "So he
would have no sense of rejoicing in touching
his own soil again. Pakistan was just
where the family lived," reminisces
Kureishi.
Now Kureishi has been going through his
father's papers and manuscripts and reconstructing
his life. Some of the material is startling.
For example his father writing about going
to a brothel for the first time. "It's
disconcerting to be going into a brothel
with your dad at age 16," chuckles
Kureishi. "This kind of intimacy
with your parents is something we don't
really have. We see them as protectors
not sexual beings."
And Kureishi has always been very effective
at exploding these taboos. At a time when
Islamic fundamentalists conjured up images
of bearded old men, in My Son the Fanatic,
the father is the liberal while the young
son is increasingly drawn into fundamentalism.
When South Asians were hardly visible
in the media, he gave us Omar in My Beautiful
Launderette, young, Pakistani and gay
and involved with the most unlikely of
partners - a skinhead. That has always
been the strength of Kureishi: the complicated
canvases he has worked with and the unlikely
juxtapositions of characters. "My
work is a mixture. Buddha of Suburbia
is full of white people," says Kureishi.
At that time it had seen iconoclastic
to people a novel set in Britain with
characters that looked like Omar and Karim
and Jamila. Now South Asians are everywhere
whether it's Bend it Like Beckham or Bombay
Dreams. "That's how cultures work.
It starts at the edges and moves to the
mainstream," says Kureishi. He had
visualized Launderette as Godfather like
saga that would follow Omar and Johnny's
story over generations. "But Daniel
Day Lewis (Johnny) had become a big star
and didn't want to go back to some little
English film. Also Stephen Frears (the
director) had gone to America by then.
So it was hard to get everyone back together,"
says Kureishi. |