Showing posts with label Ahista Ahista. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahista Ahista. Show all posts
I don’t think many actresses have had a career like Shashikalatai-Padmini Kolhapure
8:03 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Padmini Kolhapure fondly remembers veteran actress Shashikala, who passed away at her Mumbai home on Sunday
Rachana Dubey (BOMBAY TIMES; April 6, 2021)
Veteran actor Shashikala Om Prakash, popularly known as Shashikala, who was a part of over 100 films and has essayed many memorable characters, passed away at her Mumbai residence on Sunday. The 88-year-old actress was seen in movies like V Shantaram’s Teen Batti Char Raasta (1953), Bimal Roy’s Sujata (1959) and Tarachand Barjatya’s Aarti (1962), to name a few. Her other prominent projects included Anupama (1966), Waqt (1965), Gumrah (1963) and Khubsoorat (1980).
Born in Solapur, Maharashtra, Shashikala started working at an early age to support her parents. While she earlier shared screen space with actors like Rajesh Khanna, Nutan, Dharmendra, Rajkumar, Shashi Kapoor and Sunil Dutt, among others, in recent years, she also worked with Govinda, Salman Khan and Shah Rukh Khan. Her last few films include Chori Chori (2003) and Mujhse Shaadi Karogi (2004). Earlier in her career, she often featured as the antagonist, while her second inning saw her making the transition into a sweet, doting grandmother on screen. Besides films, she also dabbled in television with shows like Sonpari (2000) and Kise Apna Kahein (2003).
Padmini Kolhapure, who also started out young as a child artiste, had worked with Shashikala in the film Ahista Ahista, in 1981. Padmini, at that time, had just blossomed into a leading lady. Remembering the actress, who she fondly called Shashikalatai, Padmini says, “I have always called her Shashikala tai as she was elder than me. We bonded while shooting Ahista Ahista. I was a newbie as far as playing the leading lady was concerned. Her grace before the camera, her poise and the way she played her part inspired me in a big way. I had the good fortune of having the chance to see her perform. I had seen many of her films, and the way she held the audience’s attention when she came on screen, was truly impressive. I don’t think many actresses have had a career like she did — she started in the 1930s and continued well into the new millennium. I think she was commendable as an artiste and also a wonderful human being. I remember while shooting Ahista Ahista, we would chat a lot between our shots and share laughs. We would talk about so many things, including some of her older films. She had a fabulous sense of style and was legendary for so many reasons.”
Talking about her last meeting with Shashikala, Padmini says, “It’s strange, but life takes people in different directions. When you’re shooting, you’re together all the time and then suddenly, you’re on your own. We drifted apart, too. Shashikala tai had her own films to work on, and I had my career, and eventually, my marriage and family life. We met several years later socially, but we didn’t lose our connection. We spoke like no time had gone by, and our special bond was still intact. This was a few years ago. Today, she has left the mortal world. I am going to miss her, but I also know that she will live in all our hearts through so many of her incredible movies.”
Stories last a lifetime; box office calculations are transient-Imtiaz Ali
8:17 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta

As he brings another timeless romance, Laila Majnu, to theatres, Imtiaz Ali on how he'd rather create a legacy with his work than be part of the rat race
Mohar Basu (MID-DAY; August 12, 2018)
When you've said almost everything about love in your last eight films, is it difficult to find uniqueness in a concept?
I don't approach a story based on the concept of love. I love the idea of telling stories about men, women and their relationships. People are unique and that makes it interesting for me. I don't start thinking that I am making a 'love story'. I have a lifelong interaction with my movies and choose to showcase the experiences well that keep the audience entertained for three hours. I am a greedy filmmaker, hunting for stories to satiate my greed. I don't uphold the genres I am said to be known for.
But ultimately, they are all love stories.
I don't deny that they are, because that's what they are categorised as eventually. However, these categories are defined by people. The audience finds what they are looking for and what is missing from their lives, in my movies. Filmmakers are categorised by their abilities. If my films explore the relationship between a man and woman, someone else's beat revolves around a man's relationship with guns. When Yash ji [Chopra] started making films, he introduced the concept of the angry man with Waqt (1965). In the latter half of his career, he made movies like Dil Toh Pagal Hai and was hailed as King of Romance. Who knows what I will be known for (smiles)?
What about Laila Majnu's story compelled you to write it?
There is divinity and an eternal quality in stories that never end. To understand that is essential in improving my craft. I was reading an anthology on great love stories and my focus was on Heer Ranjha, especially because I was making (2011) at the time. Laila-Majnu has a philosophical stature, like Sufi saints, which hooked me. I wrote about 35 scenes and 10 years later, people who read it thought it could be made into a film.
Is it easy to part with a script that you have written?
I never intended to direct this. Usually, I write scripts with the intention of directing it, otherwise, I hate writing. But once a story is given away, like Cocktail (2012) and Ahista Ahista (2006), I let go. I make no bones about the treatment of a story once I've handed it over to someone else. I don't grudge Homi [Adajania] for Cocktail; once it is someone else's baby, it is easy.
Are you critical of the films they make?
I am critical, but only as much as I am of my own work. I am aware of the mistakes in Cocktail, that happened because of me, as well. Work in this industry is collaborative; at any time, over 150 people are involved in making a film. An Imtiaz Ali film is a product of many people; movies are never a one-man show. All my films could have been better and I can list scenes which could have been shot differently. It's a curse I live with because unlike other industries, the work we do here exists for eternity.
Since you are critical of your own work, can you deduce why Jab Harry Met Sejal was panned so brutally?
It's difficult to say what it deserved. I don't think it's a bad movie and won't shoot it down as a mistake. I have worked hard on that film, like all my other projects. I know what went wrong with that film. Had I done few things differently, it would have turned out better. As far as criticism goes, people will say things, but you have to believe in what you are making and stand by it. I've got contrasting views on Tamasha (2015). Some hailed as a masterpiece and some called it boring as sh** on the same day. They will always try to convince you that their feeling is the universal truth.
When you move forward from a commercially unsuccessful film, are you cautious about your next?
There are no guidelines on what would work and what wouldn't. I am a clean slate when I sit down to write. Stories last a lifetime; box office calculations are transient. I don't operate from a mindset that movies are made for cashing out. I don't know what Sholay (1975) or Andaz Apna Apna (1994) earned but I want to give the audience what these movies gave me. I am creating a legacy.
Have you managed to create a trademark legacy?
I haven't made a legacy, but I am in the process of creating and producing what I wish to. I believe in the power of movies. Market respects talent and creativity, but creativity doesn't necessarily have to respect the market. Making something like Baahubali is beyond my purview.
Do you have a favourite in your filmography?
I can pick a thousand reasons why none of my films are my favourites. But as passionate experiences, I'd pick Highway (2014) and Rockstar.
What is next in the pipeline?
I am writing four stories, will figure out what I want to make next at a later stage. I will be producing these and hence won't be under pressure to stick to time frames. I have had these stories for a long time, and each film will have its own destiny. Right now, I am in the hatching period. I can't be compelled to be part of the industry's rat race.
Farhan Akhtar tries new singing style in Shaadi Ke Side Effects
7:57 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Garima Sharma (BOMBAY TIMES; February 17, 2014)
Farhan Akhtar’s vocal skills have taken his repertoire to a new pitch and the actor is strengthening it even further. He has lent his voice to the music of his upcoming film Shaadi Ke Side Effects, which includes two songs Yahaan Wahaan and Ahista Ahista, composed by Pritam. Written by Swanand Kirkire, Yahaan Wahaan is an upbeat melancholic number that plays out between Farhan’s and Vidya Balan’s characters Sid and Trisha at their most crucial moments in the film.
Says the actor, “It’s a new kind of singing style for me, which made it challenging and exciting. I love the fact that it’s not a typical sad song and yet, Pritam has evoked those emotions with his chord progression and Swanand’s lyrics have given it a lot of heart.”
Farhan recorded the song in one sitting, over a couple of hours in the presence of both Pritam and the film’s director, Saket Chaudhary, who says, “Both the songs are beautiful and emotional and they convey feelings that the character Sid would never be able to voice otherwise. Farhan’s singing has given the songs intimacy, pain and joy.” Yahaan Wahaan has already received rave reviews on the internet and Farhan will soon be performing this song live on stage.
As part of the film’s narrative, Farhan, who plays a struggling musician, resorts to composing advertising jingles to keep his kitchen fires burning. He has also recorded several jingles in his voice. Mikey McCleary has composed the background music and has worked with Farhan to evolve these jingles and songs. Ahista Ahista has also been released as a single.
Shaadi Ke Side Effects, produced by Balaji Motion Pictures and Pritish Nandy Communications, releases February 28.
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