| Evergreen By Shekhar Hattangadi
Dev
Anand is not letting up at 80.
Sons will be sons.
Had Dharamdev Pishorimal Anand heeded his father's
advice and joined the local bank about 60 years ago,
he'd be pottering around today in a middle-class retiree's
apartment in his hometown of Gurdaspur in Punjab.
Instead, the glamour-struck teenager took the train
to Bombay with 30 rupees in his pocket. After a period
of struggle and penury, he became a Hindi film hero
and Indian banking's loss became Bollywood's most
durable legend -
Dev Anand.
As actor and later as film-maker as well, Dev Anand
has worked in more than 100 movies. He wooed dozens
of heroines on-screen and captivated millions of fans
off it with his urbane charm. With Dilip Kumar and
Raj Kapoor, he formed a dominant troika in the golden
years of popular Indian Cinema. But unlike Kumar's
intense brooder and Kapoor's bumbling simpleton, Anand's
city-smart hero was also a loveable rake who brought
a touch of mischievous buffoonery to Bollywood's seduction
routine, and his own trademark mannerisms: loose-limbed
gait, tilted head, and a rapid-fire dialogue delivery.
A journalist once described him as "evergreen." It
was to prove prophetic. At an age - he turned 80 on
Sept 26 - when his contemporaries are either dead
or nursing creaky joints, a sprightly Dev Anand is
planning two films to be made in the United States,
besides writing his memoirs. "And I've only reached
1954," he shrugs, implying its wealth of detail. The
veteran, awarded the Padma Bhushan in 2001, can shame
younger directors with the volume of his output -
and younger men with his agility.
Having defied age, he's also known to subvert gravity.
Keeping up with a buoyant boss gives his staff a daily
aerobic workout. And during our interview - in his
penthouse office littered with magazines, scripts,
posters and snapshots of aspiring starlets - an animated
Dev Anand was apt to spring up to emphasize a point
as he unspooled his life and times. Outside, Mumbai
was depressingly grey and wet. But it was clear it
would take much more than a mere monsoon to dampen
the man's spirit.
At 80, what gets you out of bed every morning?
The sheer excitement of my work. Age has nothing to
do with it. I'm working on my autobiography, and on
Song Of Life and Between Two Worlds to be shot in
the United States. In the first film, I play a famous
Indian musician who discovers he has a gifted daughter
from an affair with an American girlfriend.
Is it about Ravi Shankar and Norah Jones?
Stories are written when something triggers off. I
was to return after the New York premiere of my film
Love At Times Square, when a local Indian journalist
mentioned the Grammy ceremony scheduled that evening.
I saw Norah Jones on television winning five awards
- and in a flash I decided to stay put at the hotel
for a month, and wrote the entire script. But if I
publicly say it's about someone, I'm obliged to satisfy
him or her about the story's authenticity. A film's
characters should be larger than life - or else there's
no drama and you can't write a good climax. So let's
say it's not about particular individuals, but about
the relationships in the lives of famous men.
And the other film?
In Between Two Worlds, an NRI billionaire dreams of
building an Indian pavilion at Disney's Epcot Center
in Florida. He's caught between two wives - an Indian
and an American - and therefore two cultures. His
son from the latter wife is the first American soldier
to enter the Iraq warfront. I want to recreate those
scenes with help from the U.S. army.
Both are English-language projects with an Indian
temperament and an American feel. Who knows, an Indian
film-maker making a movie in America might just strike
a chord with American audiences! The best Hollywood
directors have been imports from abroad - Capra, Hitchcock,
Wilder, Chaplin.
Your films as director deal with contemporary
themes.
I see cinema in incidents. My directorial debut Prem
Pujari was based on the 1965 Indo-Pak conflict. During
King Birendra's wedding in 1970, I visited Kathmandu's
hippie hangout - The Bakery - and saw this brown-skinned
girl swaying in the lap of a dirty, bearded, bespectacled
white foreigner. What's a nice Indian girl doing in
a place like this? I wondered. She inspired the story
as well as Zeenat Aman's character in Hare Rama Hare
Krishna. I picked up the idea for Des Pardes - on
illegal Indian immigrants in U.K. - during a trip
there.
Why haven't your recent films done well?
I'm convinced they're ahead of their time. Unfortunately,
people in India - especially in smaller towns - don't
accept tomorrow's ideas because they're living in
the yesterday. But the growth of information technology
is bringing the world together, and they're growing.
How do you continue getting money to make films?
I close my eyes, and God pours money on me.
God in the form of NRIs?
Not just NRIs. I manage because I'm not extravagant.
I own a post-production studio. I don't pay myself.
And I enjoy tremendous goodwill - not just in India.
I was very close to Nepal's royalty: they rolled out
the red carpet for the shooting of Hare Rama Hare
Krishna. Many Nepalis want me to make a film on the
family's massacre. But it's a sensitive subject, so
I'd like to take everybody into confidence: the King,
the Prime Minister, the Maoists. Why the Prince killed
- or why he was provoked to kill - we don't know for
sure. Here again is an intriguing love story. The
Prince wanted to marry his girlfriend, his mother
didn't want it. But he must have had other affairs.
If I were a prince, I'd have them.
You too were a prince of sorts in Bombay's film industry.
In my own way, yes. I'm a private person, not a sanyasi.
I had a teenage crush in Lahore, on our history professor's
daughter. It was only from a distance, something we
all go through at that age. But when you're seriously
in love, you propose and tell the girl, "I can't live
without you.'
That happened with singer-actress Suraiya,
right?
It did. Suraiya was my first and only real love. I
wanted to marry her and she was willing. But her Muslim
family objected to my being a Hindu, and created a
big row over the communal issue. Remember, she was
already a big singing star when we first met, and
I was a nobody. Fans mobbed her, her songs were on
the air, and her star image added to the attraction.
Film lore has it that you still send Suraiya a rose
on her birthday.
Never. Once I was through with her, I got busy with
my production company Navketan, and Mona Singh joined
us for Baazi. As Kalpana Kartik, she was my costar
in a few films. We became friendly, and then got married.
Well, you find yourself alone, in need of emotional
security, and suddenly comes this young girl with
a college degree like yours and a liberal worldview.
You married secretly on the sets during a lunch break?
Because I don't like this tamasha of the groom riding
in on a horse with a band-baja. It's ridiculous. I'm
told some of today's actors dance at weddings for
a fee. They're selling their souls. I'd never do that
- it was our generation's value system. My good friends
- Singhanias - approached me once for a corporate
ad. I agreed, but didn't charge a penny. I'm a film
star, not a model.
Your marriage, from all accounts, isn't a happy one.
Is marriage more difficult for celebrities?
I'm in showbiz, mingling with the world's best, the
most glamorous. My wife prefers to stay out of the
limelight. My marriage is as good or bad as any other
- except that I'm in the public eye, and most other
people are not. If a man is an achiever, his marriage
cannot really work because he needs to be totally
in love with his own work. No matter what field you're
in - entertainment or politics. Do you think the Prime
Minister can have the time for his family? He can't.
Is that why Atal Behari Vajpayee has remained a bachelor?
[Laughs] I don't know. That could be for other reasons.
You went with him on the bus to Lahore.
Tell us about that 1999 trip.
The Pakistanis recognized me as I got off the bus
- that's the power of popular cinema. Nawaz Sharif
rushed forward and grabbed my hand, saying we're from
the same college. When he told me he'd seen my films,
I promptly put his hand into Prime Minister Vajpayee's,
and said "This should be the beginning of the end
of our problems." It was great revisiting Government
College Lahore - the same architecture, classrooms,
hostels. Only, the buildings now have Muslim names.
I was never a good student. But I was fond of reading,
and keen on doing my M.A. My father's legal practice
wasn't doing well, so he asked me to join a bank instead.
I hated the thought of a sedentary job, so I came
to Bombay to become a film star.
Didn't your mother stop you?
She wasn't around by then. Our society treats its
women very badly. My mother was a simple housewife
who bore nine children, and died young of TB when
there was no cure for it. My siblings were either
away in college or too young, so I was the only child
close to her. As a young boy I nursed her before she
was taken away to a sanatorium. She never came back.
Every morning, I brought her goat's milk which was
prescribed by the doctor. I remember her gentleness
and loving nature. On her deathbed, she held my hand,
looked into my eyes and told my father: 'This son
of mine will become a very important man.'
A woman's intuition?
A mother's intuition. Similarly, I'd gone to Amritsar
to fetch her medicine. It was a burning hot afternoon
in June, and I stopped outside the Golden Temple for
some cold sherbet. As he gave me the glass, the man
kept staring at my face, then said in Punjabi: O baau,
tu baut vadda banda banega. (Brother, you'll become
a very big man.) I was only 16 then, and he was a
complete stranger.
You think someone up there has scripted your life
story?
I often wonder. At times, one works hard without results.
At other times, things just happen and one succeeds.
I came with no family connections in the movies, not
even a letter of recommendation. I stayed initially
with my older brother Chetan's friends - the famous
novelist Raja Rao, and then the famous communist K.A.
Abbas. Later I moved into a chawl. I was rejected
by a couple of studios, and worked as an accounts
clerk for three days.
Which was the most depressing of your
struggling days?
The day I sold my beloved stamp collection. I spent
my last penny for the bus to Bombay's Fort area and
then walked along the main road, hungry and thirsty.
I found a stamp-seller on the pavement who gave me
30 rupees for it. It was a godsend, but I was also
heartbroken - that collection had many rare stamps.
Looking back however, I don't regret the day. It made
a man out of me. I continued looking for acting roles.
I went to IPTA (Indian People's Theatre Association),
where the senior actors never took me seriously. Meanwhile
at the military censor's office, my degree got me
a job scanning soldiers' letters for wartime secrets.
Reading letters is like peeping into lonely hearts
pining for their sweethearts and their desires. It
was educative, but still a routine desk-job. Then
one day I barged into the Bombay office of Prabhat
Studio. The boss gave me a ticket to Poona for a screen
test and I got hired for Rs 400 a month - a lot of
money in those days. But it wasn't just the money.
The best turning point in life is finding the first
job that you truly like.
Who were your closest buddies those days?
Chetan Anand and Guru Dutt. Both are dead now. Chetan
was more than my brother - he was my confidant. I
remember weeping on his shoulder like a child when
Suraiya broke up with me. I set up Navketan only to
let him make movies. I asked a producer for a huge
advance and we made Afsar. It didn't do well. I then
gave Guru Dutt his break as director in Baazi, which
was a hit. We'd made a pact during our Prabhat days:
If ever I became producer, he'd direct my film, and
I would, in turn, act in his production. While I kept
my part of the promise with Baazi, Guru kept his with
CID.
Was your first meeting really the result of a dhobi's
blunder?
The dhobi had mistakenly exchanged our shirts. We
bumped into each other at the studio, where Guru Dutt
was already working as an assistant director, and
noticed the shirt-swap. We had a good laugh, and it
sealed our friendship for ever. Even after starting
separate production houses, we'd go for long walks
discussing our dream projects. After a gap, we met
in 1964 and decided to work together again. Four days
later, Guru was found dead in his bedroom.
Baazi onwards, Navketan introduced a lot of newcomers.
Nearly 80 per cent of our movie people either began
at or were associated in some way with Navketan. We've
made some 35 films, and after 54 years are still functioning
under the same ownership and management. Not even
Fox or Columbia or any other Hollywood studio can
claim this unique distinction!
What provoked you into making Censor?
I wanted to make the point that censorship in India
is all wrong. I walked out of a Censor Board meeting
because those stupid people wanted to cut a scene
from my film Main Solah Baras Ki where I was shown
drinking alcohol. You have such a respected image,
they argued. I'm not playing an image, I explained,
I'm playing a man who drinks. They were adamant.
I'm not advocating nudity or gratuitous sex and violence.
But our obsolete code of moral censorship is made
even worse by the conservative bureaucrats who implement
it. Cable TV and Internet show more objectionable
stuff - why is that allowed? Urdu poets have written
exquisite verses on liquor, and Kama Sutra is a part
of Indian philosophy. Each society has its own norms.
And so, without scrapping the code, we need to liberalize
it after a healthy debate. As Censor Chief, my brother
Goldie [Vijay Anand] tried hard for a less dogmatic
system, but they didn't like him and his ideas. There's
a strong lobby in the government that wants censorship
to continue in its present form.
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