Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

Book Review: Conversations With Waheeda Rehman

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Apr, 2014 01:23 PM
  • Book Review: Conversations With Waheeda Rehman
Book: Conversations With Waheeda Rehman
Author: Nasreen Munni Kabir
Publisher: Penguin-Viking
Pages: 227
Price: Rs 499
 
She has done some of the most unconventional roles in Indian cinema - a prostitute, a gangster's moll, a tawaif, a woman who walks out of a marriage and so on - but with such art and innate grace that Waheeda Rehman has always remained a byword for refined sensibility in the Bollywood universe.
 
The sentiment is well brought out by Nasreen Munni Kabir's "Conversations With Waheeda Rehman", in which the veteran actress engages in conversation - over a year from December 2012 to November 2013 at her Mumbai home - with the author about all aspects of her life and work in a career that began in the mid-1950s and still continues.
 
Kabir's work is strictly not an autobiography or a biography, but goes far beyond their limitations to provide a fairly comprehensive account of a remarkable actress whose ethereal beauty has lit the screen in the many unforgettable roles she has essayed - but always on her terms.
 
An incident when she was on the threshold of her career is illuminating. Waheeda relates how she, when a teenager and not even of an age to legally sign a contract, clashed with established filmmakers Guru Dutt and Raj Khosla, insisting she be allowed to choose her costumes and reject those she deemed unsuitable. And what's more, she would not change her name for the screen.
 
Though Khosla was taken aback at the gumption of someone who was far from an established star, Guru Dutt was more amenable to her concerns and agreed, thus launching her career.
 
 
Waheeda was the female lead in most of Guru Dutt's films, and Kabir manages to draw her out on the professional relationship that led to such masterpieces such as "Pyaasa", "Kagaaz ke Phool", "Sahib, Bibi aur Ghulam" and "Chaudhvin Ka Chand". Kabir has written a book on Guru Dutt earlier but Waheeda's account helps to provide a fuller, more nuanced account of the man and the filmmaker.
 
The book, very readable and enlivened with several rare photographs, is replete with many other illuminating accounts of Waheeda's work with other legends of Indian cinema - of Bollywood and even beyond including Satyajit Ray. It also chronicles her brush with Hollywood viz the English version of the cinematic adaption of R.K.Narayan's "Guide".
 
However, "Conversations with Waheeda Rehman" could have added some more value by drawing more on her recollections of other cinematic stars she worked with and remembers with affection - the excellent but masterfully restrained Rehman is an example.
 
But for one view of Waheeda we must turn to R.K. Narayan himself - it appears in his essay on the making of "Guide".
 
"The director wanted the hero (Dev Anand) to kiss the heroine, who of course rejected the suggestion as unbecoming for an Indian woman. The hero, for his part,
 
was willing to obey the director, but was helpless, since kissing is a cooperative effort. The American director realized that it is against Indian custom to kiss in public; but he insisted that the public in his country would boo if they missed the kiss. I am told that the heroine replied: "There is enough kissing in your country at all times and places, off and on the screen and your public, I am sure, will flock to a picture where, for a change, no kissing is shown.' She stood firm'."
 
Waheeda Rehman did stand her ground - Bollywood or Hollywood!

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Anurag Kashyap's 'Ugly' to open New York Indian film festival

Anurag Kashyap's 'Ugly' to open New York Indian film festival
The New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) will open with Anurag Kashyap's "Ugly", a sensational tale of corruption, indifference, and systemic violence that begins with the disappearance of an aspiring actor's 10-year-old daughter.

Anurag Kashyap's 'Ugly' to open New York Indian film festival

Dipannita may co-script movie on fashion industry

Dipannita may co-script movie on fashion industry
Model-actress Dipannita Sharma is likely to co-write a movie script on the fashion industry. She hopes the project changes the "perception" of people about the "one dimensional angle" of the industry.

Dipannita may co-script movie on fashion industry

Sonakshi should campaign for Shotgun: BJP workers

Sonakshi should campaign for Shotgun: BJP workers
With former actor and BJP candidate Shatrughan Sinha facing a four-cornered contest for the Patna Sahib Lok Sabha seat, party workers and supporters say it will be great if his daughter, Bollywood actress Sonakshi Sinha, campaigns for him.

Sonakshi should campaign for Shotgun: BJP workers

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun
Varun Dhawan took his film's co-producer Ekta Kapoor for a bike ride to promote their film "Main Tera Hero" Monday. But thanks to her fear of two-wheelers, she found the experience tough

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers
Be it Hollywood or Bollywood, actresses put in everything to achieve success and stardom. But once they marry and have children, these glam girls prefer to be hands on mothers and say neither meaty roles nor red carpet perfect looks distract them from their domestic preoccupations.

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'
Accomplished actor Irrfan Khan will spend the rest of this year living out of a suitcase as he will be shooting for two films - "Jurassic World" and "Piku". This week he leaves for the US to begin shooting for Colin Trevorrow-directed fourth part of the phenomenal "Jurassic Park" franchise. The film is to be shot in Hawaai and New Orleans.

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'