I didn’t even know what the National Award was-Rehana Sultan remembers Dastak & Sanjeev Kumar
7:37 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Roshmila Bhattacharya (MUMBAI MIRROR; November 9, 2017)
Monday, November 6, was Sanjeev Kumar’s 32nd death anniversary. While the world raised a toast to some unforgettable performances in films like Koshish, Khilona, Arjun Pandit, Aandhi, Angoor, Sholay and Trishul, my mind flashbacked to a little remembered black-and-white film from 1970. Dastak marked Rajinder Singh Bedi’s debut as a director in films and was based on one of his own plays, Naqle-Makaani. It won its leading man his first National Award, as also Rehana Sultan and composer Madan Mohan.
Almost half-a-century later, Rehana recalls being surprised by a call on sets from Sanjeev Kumar informing her about the coveted award. “I didn’t even know what the National Award was and wondered why they would give it to a newcomer. Thinking I had misunderstood him, I replied, ‘Oh aap ko award mili hai?’, to which he retorted with a faint trace of irritation that if it were only about him, he wouldn’t be calling me. He rang off, leaving me shedding tears of joy,” says the veteran actress.
Seeing her crying, the unit members assumed she had got some bad news from home. When she confided that she had won a National Award there was jubilation and it was early pack-up. She accompanied Sanjeev Kumar and Madan Mohan, who were wearing matching tuxedoes, to the prestigious function. “I was like this village belle who’d just arrived in the city whose bright lights left her wide-eyed and speechless. It was one of the happiest moments of my life,” says Rehana.
Dastak revolved around a newly-married couple whose search for a home in an overcrowded city ends up with them renting an apartment, which had earlier housed a tawaif. Believing that the young and demure wife was a replacement for the bazaar-soiled Munnibai, her customers come knocking on their door at odd hours, and not even the presence of her husband deters them. Finally, fed up, Salma runs home to her abbu and sister in the village, complaining that it’s hard to find a decent place to stay in Mumbai. Her father sighs that even they are short of space and she has no option but to go back. “That scene with my father and sister was the muhurat shot. It was okayed in one take and Bedi saab liked it so much that he retained it in the final cut,” she exults.
Bedi saw Rehana in a short diploma film while she was still studying at the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) in Pune when he was there as a guest lecturer. When she came down to Mumbai after finishing her course, a fellow student asked her to call Bedi who invited her over to his office located in Tardeo. “I asked him when I should come over and he said ‘barah baje’ which made me giggle as I remembered the famous sardar joke. Realising this, Bedi saab told me I could drop by at 12.15 pm or 12.30 pm, it didn’t matter,” she recalls. Bedi finalised her instantly as Sanjeev Kumar’s heroine without any audition.
The actor turned out to be a really nice guy who, unlike the exasperating junior artistes, wasn’t constantly giving her instructions on how to do a scene. Rather he would tell her she had done a good job and to not let anyone else but Bedi saab direct her. “He also had a wicked sense of humour, cracking jokes with a straight face. Once he told me to go to Bedi saab and say that I didn’t want to do the film because Sanjeev Kumar was harassing me. I did and a harried Bedi saab pleaded with him not to upset me, or we would be without a heroine. He eventually admitted that he had pulled a prank on Bedi saab with some convincing acting from me,” Rehana chuckles.
Their director wasn’t laughing when she messed up take after take in a scene which required her to go flying to Sanjeev Kumar and him drawing her into his arms, saying solicitously, “Kya hua?” She would start giggling the minute he spoke and Bedi finally packed up early only for the silsila to continue the next day. He almost blew a fuse, till his actor suggested he bury his face in Rehana’s shoulder before asking the question. “He never got angry or upset, woh bahut araam se har chez bardasht kar lete the,” Rehana reminisces fondly.
During the course of the shoot, Sanjeev Kumar revealed himself as a foodie and after discovering that Rehana’s mother was a great cook, he dropped by at their place twice for some finger-licking paya. “After the film was over we met only a few times at parties and functions. I would have loved to feed him more paya but he went away too soon. He was just 47 when he left a heartbroken nation mourning him,” she sighs.
This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under
Dastak,
Film and Television Institute of India,
Interviews,
Madan Mohan,
Rajinder Singh Bedi,
Rehana Sultan,
Rehana Sultan interview,
Sanjeev Kumar
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