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Bollywood has its quintessential heroes, handsome, super-rich,
and the darling of the heroine and fans. But today it is also
throwing up another breed of heroes, histrionically versatile
and ready to experiment. Shoma A. Chatterji reports
Thanks to the brilliant comeback of a
mellowed and bearded Amitabh Bachchan, the term character
actor now has a new definition. The dividing lines among
the hero, the villain and the character actor are a thing of
the past. Thus, there is no such thing as the lover-boy hero
who is firmly slotted into a no-exit ghetto he cannot get out
of. He can be a villain in one, a hero in another, while in
both roles, he gets the solid support of a doctor or lawyer
or friend or extortionist, in the name and style of some of
the best actors to have hit mainstream Hindi cinema. Take your
pick and you have ample to choose from. Paresh Rawal, Boman
Irani, Anupam Kher, Irfan Khan, Arshad Warsi, Atul Kulkarni,
Rajat Kapoor, K.K. Menon, Rishi Kapoor.
Paresh Rawal, who has shifted from arch villain to any shade-
from an impresario taking goggle-eyed kids on an US jaunt (Yun
Hota To Kya Hota) to the tongue-in-cheek lawyer in Aitraaz to
the apparently bumbling busybee in umpteen comic flicks, has
reportedly hiked his price to Rs 3 crore per film. And no one
blinked in surprise. Irfan Khan is proving himself again and
yet again since he made a mark in Maqbool. Arshad Warsi is identified
now as Circuit but that does not take away attention from his
talent. Rajat Kapoor who graduated in direction and made a couple
of very good films is now a successful character actor.
These actors have tremendous range, even within a single character
in a single film. Atul Kulkarni, for instance, changes from
the smooth-talking, sympathetic boyfriend and mentor of the
oppressed Raveena Tandon, to diabolic and ambitious go-getter
and cold-blooded killer in Madhur Bhandarkars Satta. In
Bhandarkars Page 3, he is the honest and committed journalist
who offers a role model to the confused Konkona Sen Sharma but
contrary to audience expectations, they do not fall in love;
in Rang De Basanti, he is the fundamentalist Hindu who slowly
opens up and holds the hand of the young Muslim he hated in
the beginning. In Chandni Bar, his portrayal of the small-time
goonda killed midway through the script is memorable for the
subtle nuances he invests the character with. Indeed, the National
Award for Best Supporting Actor for his debut performance in
Kamal Hasans Hari Om, was no splash in the pan.
As for the Big B, he said in a recent interview: I never
had the chance to portray such a wide variety of roles with
shades ranging from solid black to pure white when I donned
the heros make-up. And look what he has gained in
the process! A committed bodyguard-to-avenging angel in Ek Ajnabee;
the patient father trying to seek legal redress for his sons
murder failing which, he pulls the trigger himself in Mahesh
Manjrekars Viruddh; in Baghbaan, he is the loving father
who is shocked at his sons attitude and then turns his
back on them forever; in Paheli, he is simply a metaphor, a
belief, a concept who could be an illusion or could be the Almighty
himself; in Sarkar, he is a quiet don who rules the underworld
with an iron hand but has a philanthropic bent of mind; in Kabhie
Alvida Na Kehna, he is Sexy Sam who cannot keep his roaming
hands away from young damsels in skimpy clothes; last, but never
the least, in Black, he gives one of the most power-packed performances
of his career, a failed teacher of the handicapped who drowns
his sorrow in the bottle but perks up when faced with a challenge
like the severely handicapped little girl he is called upon
to train to lead a semblance of a normal life. And then, when
he senses that the growing girl is awakening to her sexuality,
he disappears from her life completely, only to surface as a
tragic patient of Alzheimers.
Boman Irani stepped into films from the English stage. He got
noticed as the very stern, bald principal in Munnabhai MBBS.
If we felt he would do fathers roles only, we were in
for a shock when we saw him stumble and fall at every step,
again as the principal of another college in Main Hoon Naa.
In Home Delivery, he does the hilarious role of a delivery boy
in red uniform and cap and wins the heart of the audience. In
Being Cyrus, he is the unsuspecting husband of his two-timing,
young wife, killed before he can say John Robinson! In the new
version of Don, Boman takes the entire kudos home as the police
officer, putting Shahrukh Khan almost in the shade. In Ghosla
Ka Khosla, he is the biggest conman in land and house promotion
in the country, as it were. His heavy build, bass voice and
mobile face allow him to carry any role on his shoulders effortlessly.
Kay Kay Menon made his strong presence felt on the small screen,
sometimes as hero, sometimes as villain and often in character
roles. He came into his own as a fine actor who offers solid
histrionic and character-centric backing to the rest of the
stellar cast in any given film. His role of the two-timing,
coward and greedy older son of Amitabh Bachchan in Sarkar is
a case in point. He is simply brilliant even in the face of
a master performer like Bachchan. In Corporate, he is in control
in a low-key performance yet manages to convey the basic honesty
of the character he portrays.
Jahnu Baruas first Hindi film Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara
has an absent hero in the name and style of Mahatma Gandhi.
But the character of the retired professor of Hindi who is slowly
getting consumed by dementia is one of the most brilliant performances
of recent times. Anupam Kher produced the film because he says
it was the role of a lifetime for him. For this film,
Jahnu and I discussed everything about how I ought to look
whether I should have a beard, whether I should not have a beard,
how I should look, everything. Jahnu had written a brilliant
script. I read up a lot on Alzheimers, talked to psychoanalysts,
went to mental homes to meet patients. There was one man who
thought he was a postman. Another imagined that his wife was
his sister. A third would suddenly get up from his seat and
begin to walk very fast. Based on this, we began to add some
distinguishing physical features to the character such
as my twitching my hair when I was getting into the amnesiac
mode. All this led to tremendous emotional drainage, says
Anupam.
One question that keeps cropping up is where have all
the ladies gone? Or the other heroines? |
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