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Sharmila Tagore’s candid calls in S Africa
Showbiz Desk
Johannesburg—Candid comments on her co-stars of yesteryear and her role
as a Unicef Goodwill Ambassador in fighting HIV-AIDS were the order of
the day as actress Sharmila Tagore made a fleeting visit to South
Africa.
Tagore, who first hit the headlines in the sixties for her bold screen
performances at a time when women in bikinis were still frowned upon,
participated in public interviews entitled “In Conversation With,” part
of the Shared Histories Festival celebrating India in South Africa,
organised by the Indian missions here.
In Durban Tagore earlier had a packed audience, but her Johannesburg
appearance on Sunday evening drew a rather poor crowd.
Tagore told of how she had been angry with her male co-stars who were
consistently late for shootings by up to six hours of the scheduled
times, singling out the late Sanjeev Kumar and Rajesh Khanna, the latter
one of her most popular pairings, as being notorious for this. But
Amitabh Bachchan, with whom Tagore co-starred a few years ago in the
film “Virrudh”, came in for praise for his work ethic and punctuality.
On her family life, Tagore related how she had met her husband, Mansur
Ali Khan, the Nawab of Pataudi: “I don’t think he ever proposed to me.
He just asked me to come and meet his mother and then told her that he
wanted to marry me!”
The couple have three children, Saif Ali Khan and Soha Ali Khan, both
actors. Another daughter, Saba, who accompanied her mother on the trip,
is a designer.
Responding also to a question about changes in censorship in India in
the past decade, Tagore, who is the chairperson of the Central Board of
Film Certification in India, said: “We’ve become more liberal (in our
censorship) because society has become more liberal.”
Tagore also expressed a desire to work with the youngest generation of
Indian directors “because they bring a different kind of energy to the
industry.” She said her favourite directors were Nagesh Kukkunoor of
“Iqbal” fame; Vishal Bardhwaj, who made “Omkara” with an award-winning
role for her son Saif Ali Khan; and Rakesh Mehra, who made “Rang De
Basanti.”
“I haven’t retired (from the film industry), but roles can’t be
engineered. The directors must want me.”
On her favourite in the newest batch of starlets, Sharmila did not beat
about the bush as most Bollywood stars do with politically correct
answers that effectively name nobody, but immediately replied: “Konkana
Sen, (also a Bengali actress like Tagore) but she won’t have the
stereotypical requirements of most directors.” Tagore was referring to
the fact that the talented Konkana, who has been lauded for the many
“arty” roles she has done, would not be considered for the fluffy
heroine roles in most Bollywood films. |