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I see life differently after ‘Jhalak’: Urmila
Noreen Aslam
MUMBAI—Urmila Matondkar has been pretty much off the media radar in
recent months. Her time has been consumed primarily by her first major
television stint - as a judge on reality show “Jhalak Dikhla Jaa” -
which she seems to have enjoyed to the hilt. “I see life in a different
light,” Urmila said in an interview. “Very honestly I’m ecstatic about
being able to be part of this show. I was facing the participants and
audience for the first time. There were no written lines, no cues, no
second chances. Either it worked or it didn’t work for you.”
Even though she has been exposed to public events and limelight from an
early age, the TV dance show has been an unforgettable experience for
Urmila. “Yes, I’m comfortable being in public places. I feel if you’re a
celebrity you need to be comfortable with crowds. But, believe me, it
wasn’t easy for me to judge people who were far more senior and
sometimes much more accomplished than me. The comments were all
extempore.” In a truly warm and emotional look-back at her days on TV
the diva talks nineteen-to-the-dozen about her dancing friends.
Excerpts:
Q: You seem to have enjoyed the task of judging amateur dancers on
“Jhalak Dikhla Jaa”?
A: Very honestly, I’m ecstatic about being able to be part of this show.
I was facing the participants and audience for the first time. There
were no written lines, no cues, no second chances. Either it worked or
it didn’t work for you. It required a lot of quick thinking. It was a
concept that I liked, and the participants were celebrities in their own
right. I loved the idea of them trying to dance. But it didn’t mean I’d
sugar coat my comments. I had to be frank. And it was tough. The
experience got me lots of accolades. Everywhere I go I’m complimented
about my personality and comments.
Q: But you were exposed to quite a lot of public events.
A: Yes, I’m comfortable being in public places. I feel if you’re a
celebrity you need to be comfortable with crowds. But, believe me, it
wasn’t easy for me to judge people who were far more senior and
sometimes much more accomplished than me. I had to show I was only doing
my job. It required a lot of mental presence. The comments were all
extempore. Fortunately everyone seems to have liked what I did.
Q: You often broke into a song during the show.
A: I know! It was a conscious effort to lighten the load of some of my
stronger comments. Sometimes a song expresses a bitter truth far more
effectively and inoffensively than mere words. It was certainly not the
channel’s idea that I sing. Everything I did on the judge’s chair was my
own decision.
Q: You openly said Sandhya Mridul deserved to win after Prachi Desai’s
victory?
A: And why not? I felt Sandhya would win. When she didn’t I felt
terrible on her behalf. So I said so. I thought it was my duty as a
judge to state my opinion on the potential winner. I know not many
people on the hot seat would be so vocal. But when I saw how moved
Sandhya was at my words I felt I had done my duty. My greatest victory
was when at the after-finals party Prachi’s mother congratulated me for
balancing out the trio of judges on the show.
Q: Being an expert dancer, was it hard to lower your standards to judge
the amateur dancing?
A: Believe it or not, I’ve never been trained to dance. I had it within
me and I didn’t even know it. The urge to dance will remain with me till
the day I die. The fact is I’ve never learnt dancing. Yet I’ve done
classical and salsa. It took me no time to get the salsa right in “Bas
Ek Pal”. Dancing isn’t just about getting it technically right. For me,
it’s about expressing oneself beyond words. I’ve performed many dances
on screen without even a choreographer by just feeling the music and its
rhythm. I never strove to be a perfect dancer. But whatever dance was
given to me I made it my own. In “Geela geela pani” in “Satya” all I had
to do was tilt my head and sway my body slightly.
Q: How did you lower your perceptions of dancing to suit the amateur
dancers?
A: I never looked at the dancers on “Jhalak Dikhla Jaa” as amateurs,
though admittedly some of them were really naďve when they started the
contest. But I’m a positive person. And I only thought of these
celebrities giving dancing their best shot. To me that’s fantastic. When
I read someone commenting that Mir Ranjan Negi (the hockey champ) looks
ridiculous dancing at his age, I wondered what age had to do with it!
For him to even get out of the green room when he had never lifted a
limb to dance required a lot of guts. Sudha Chandran with all her
hurdles was so fantastic. I was blown by her hip-hop. |