| Bright Side of Desire By Kavita Chhibber
John
Abraham is forever looking at the bright side of human
nature.
He
has an MBA and started his career as a media planner
in an agency, until the media director looked at his
chiseled looks and suggested he move to the other side
of the business and model instead of planning ads. The
prestigious Gladrags Manhunt contest was around the
corner; John Abraham filled a crumpled form lying nearby
and entered on a lark. Not only did he win, he went
on to stand second in the worldwide international finals.
A successful modeling stint followed abroad before Abraham
returned home to make his mark in India, and once he
starred in a bunch of music videos, offers to star in
films poured in. John signed Aitbaar with Amitabh Bachchan
and the hot and happening Bipasha Basu. That movie is
still to see the light of day, but John finally made
his debut in the much hyped, blockbuster Jism:The Dark
Side of Desire with Bipasha as his co-star.
Jism was being touted as Bipasha’s movie, a woman oriented
film where the heroine is a ruthless manipulative woman
who stops at nothing to get what she wants. It was John
Abraham, however, who turned out to be the surprise
package of the movie, a fact that even Bipasha who is
his lady both in reel and real life today, acknowledges.
Today he is hot property, and in real life, John Abraham
is perhaps even better looking, but what comes across
is his humility and warmth, and the fact that he is
not afraid to wear his heart on his sleeve. In an exclusive
interview with Little India, he talks of his journey
so far and what he values most in life.
Tell me about your growing years.
Well my dad is an architect and a Malyalee Christian.
My mom is Iranian and played basketball for the country
and that is how they met. There was a lot of drama when
they decided to marry. In fact, they eloped and my aunt
threw a stone at my dad when they were running away.
That was a Hindi film right there in the making, but
ofcourse after I was born everyone reconciled. My father
is probably the most honest person I know. We lived
modestly and I learnt not to waste. I am still the same
person, very casual, and unmaterialistic. In fact, I
just bought my very first car, a land cruiser and it
is such a big deal!
You won the Gladrags Manhunt contest, modeled abroad
and then came back.
Yes, I did sign up with an agency abroad and a lot of
time I would be mistaken for Spanish or Italian and
did fairly well, but I came back home to let people
know what John Abraham was all about and with God’s
grace I did well here too. Modeling abroad is very professional.
The modeling agencies really take care of everything.
You are their baby and if you have signed up to shoot
only until say 6 p.m., and the clients want you to go
over even by 5 minutes, they have to take permission
from your agent. In India, you are pretty much left
to your own devices, running around with your portfolio,
fending for you self and struggling on your own. Luckily
for me, since I had won the Gladrags contest, I started
getting work without having to run around, but professionally
I think India still has to do a lot of catching up to
do.
You were a media planner, and handled the media campaigns
of other models, so what did you learn from the other
side of the fence?
Good question. I learn not to pick any and every campaign
or product that came along because once you end up over-exposing
yourself, as I saw some people do, you lose appeal very
quickly. The same applies to films. I could have signed
20 films post Jism, but I have not. You may be the handsomest,
most talented guy in the world, but if you star in 10
movies in a year, the audience will get sick and tired
of you. I am quite happy with earning enough to eat
three square meals a day, choose good scripts and do
fewer films than sign anything and everything just to
rake in the moolah.
Let us come to Jism. It was touted as Bipasha’s film,
but you turned out to be the surprise package in the
film with your sensitive performance and if it was not
for you, the various nuances and subtleties of both
the characters could not have been brought out so beautifully.
Well, I think low-key approach worked in my favor. I
hardly fit the filmi profile. I am not a trained actor,
I am not a Khan or a Kapoor and on top of that, I am
a model, and models are considered non-actors who are
not supposed to know how to emote! Therefore, the only
thing known about me was that I was a model who was
doing a film called Jism. In reality, Mahesh Bhatt said
to me that I am very lucky to be making my debut in
a role that actors, if they are fortunate get to do
in their 15th or 20th film.
There was a scene where you realize that the woman you
love so passionately has used you all along and you
break down. I read somewhere that you drew upon a broken
relationship and its painful aftermath, during your
MBA days.
That is correct. I drew upon the memories of those moments
when my relationship was going through this rough patch.
When the story was initially related to me, it was a
woman’s story and how she falls in love with this lawyer,
but as it developed, I am glad the camera was put on
my shoulder and it became a story about a man who falls
hopelessly in love with this woman and the consequences
of that obsessive love.
There is a scene where he realizes how he has been used
and breaks down. I had gone through that pain and I
can relate to someone who is emotionally disturbed,
because I know how that feels. I remember doing that
scene and reliving that pain and I could not stop crying
even after the scene was over. Mahesh Bhatt said the
last time he saw such emotional reaction and someone
getting in to the skin of things was from Shabana Azmi.
It was an unconventional debut. In fact, after the first
trial, every one said to me you are the first hero who
is coming on the scene, out of a car crying and half
dead. Is this how you want to start your career, do
you have a better option? I was very sure of the film
and said that is just the way I want to do it.
I really thank the audience for their overwhelmingly
positive response and it has really brought home the
fact that the audience is non-judgmental, hard work
pays off and the time for realistic cinema and fresh
themes is right now!
I also got a lot of industry support. I had heard a
lot of stories about people here being unscrupulous,
and I did not see that, but then I guess if you are
good people want you, in any sphere of life, and if
you are not, you are out.
Aitbaar was the first film you signed and it is still
not finished.
Yes, it ran into production problems, but it is a movie
to watch out for in terms of my performance. It has
Amitabh Bachchan in it playing Bipasha’s possessive
father and Iam her lover. Mr. Bachchan is a legend,
but so professional and such a thorough gentleman. It
was a pleasure working and learning from just watching
him emote. Mr. Bachchan and the directors have taught
me what it means to be natural and not be selfish. Many
actors just want to hog the limelight and be in front
of the camera all the time.
I believe you are an expert in martial arts.
It is something I do not talk about, but yes I have
trained with the police and though Aitbaar has scenes
with me performing martial arts, I was well versed in
it even before I signed the movie. It is something that
has taught me discipline, tolerance and to smile when
people around me are being negative. I have never hurt
anyone — on the contrary, martial arts has given me
an inner serenity, and an appreciation of the strength
and beauty of the human form.
You too are not doing too many multistarrers, which
have become the norm in Bollywood?
Yes, even though I am only a couple of films old and
it is indeed difficult to get scripts that have only
one hero. I know Iam not Shahrukh Khan and maybe it
is unrealistic of me to ask for films that revolve only
around me at this early stage of my career, but I am
confident and have no qualms in saying that I am capable
of shouldering the burden and carrying it off with ease
if given the opportunity. Jism and Saaya were both solo
hero films, though Aitbaar is with Mr. Bachchan and
I am doing Ahmed Khan’s multi-starrer with Sunny Deol,
Sunil Shetty, Sohail Khan and Vikram Bhatt’s film with
Arjun Rampal and Rahul Khanna. I am also excited about
Pooja Bhatt’s first directorial venture Paap. It will
be an outstanding movie.
If there was a movie, you would give an arm and a leg
for which one would it be?
There is indeed one and I am going to do it one day
even if I have to produce it myself. It is the Sean
Penn starrer, I am Sam. I want to play Sean Penn’s role
of the mentally challenged father raising his daughter.
In the past year with all the stupendous success, what
is it about yourself that has surprised you?
That I have come this far. I still tell people that
luck and timing are definitely important but nothing
succeeds like hard work, and nothing is more important
than being honest, sincere and a clean person. I came
to the industry with no expectations, I do my work without
shortchanging or undercutting any body, the credit if
I succeed or the blame if I fail, is all mine, but wherever
I end up I want to be remembered as a decent human being
above anything else.
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