World cinema can be appropriately divided into two halves, namely, Hollywood and Bollywood. While critics believe that Hollywood is all about original and out of the box concepts coupled with technical brilliance, Bollywood on the other hand is about drama, dance, music and yes, love! Love builds an important part of our life and our movies too. It is believed that Indian cinema stands on two major pillars – love and music. And if we were to name the two major pillars of the domain of love, it would be the impeccable Rajesh Khanna and Yash Chopra. As we lost both these legends not too long back, there was this instant debate that popped up in our mind. Is this the end of an era? Is this the end of romance? While the entire nation slipped into grief and would have needed something spectacular to come out of it, what better than living the good old times that we were gifted by these two great artists.
They made love look lovelier. |
There are actors of supreme
finesse, performers of terrific command and then there is, yes, there is and
not was, Rajesh Khanna. With twinkle in his eyes, limitless confidence in his mannerisms
and dressed neatly in his customary kurta pyjama, he swept the world off with
his charm. Unreal it was to enjoy the superstardom he did. Like Amitabh
Bachchan in one of his famous blog posts mentions, “His generation and the generations
that follow, shall never be able to describe, or understand his phenomena. The
word 'superstar' was invented for him, and for me it shall ever remain his, and
no others.” But far within this stardom laid an actor, an actor who presented
love on screen like never before. Whether it was the Air Force Officer Arun
Varma singing Mere sapnon ki rani
atop an open jeep in Aradhana, or Sunil’s love over the societal norms in Daag,
be it the insecure lover Kamal in Aap Ki Kasam or the selfless lover Anand Babu
in Amar Prem, Rajesh Khanna was never him in all these memorable roles but the
lover that we all are. And perhaps that is why we loved him because he loved
just like us.
It wasn’t that Rajesh Khanna was the first actor to present love on screen, there
were legends like Dev Anand, Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor who had shone in this
domain. But there was something inexplicable in him that struck a chord with
all the movie watchers. As far as stardom goes, no actor in that generation
enjoyed the status he did. Girls leaving their homes behind and getting married
to photographs of Rajesh Khanna, writing him letters with their blood and
painting his swanky white car with smudges of lipstick never happened to anyone
else. And when Rajesh Khanna was struck by oblivion and faded out with time,
movie making wasn’t abandoned but love sagas came to a standstill (fans would
call it the death of romance while theorists would call it the shift in trend).
And when Rajesh Khanna, fondly called Kaka, left for his heavenly abode, there
were reportedly 1 million people who came down on the streets of Mumbai. There
would have surely been a lot who had come in to catch a glimpse of the other
stars that were present at the sombre occasion but those who came in from far
lands like Singapore, California, London and many more had come in for their
unconditional love for the Superstar, the love he showed us on screen. You get
what you give and he took it all with him on his final journey. Death of
romance? Not really. Perhaps a never ending love saga.
Some stories are
written by the Almighty himself, one such story is that of the famous story
teller, Yash Chopra. Born to a family which boasts of the great B.R.Chopra (his
second brother), Yash Chopra didn’t take long to realize that cinema was his
calling. Starting as an assistant to his brother, he soon took over the reigns,
going on to create ripples with some very bold and ahead-of-times subjects. His
first few movies were indicative of the fact that this maker was going to be
different. If his movies revolving around religious sentiments, partition of
India and hard hitting social drama were anything to go by, no one would have
actually guessed that this man would offer anything other than impactful, hard
hitting and bold subjects. Then came the formula of ensemble cast, the
extremely famous lost and found formula and the most assuring of them all,
action cinema which of course established Amitabh Bachchan as the angry young
man.
Those who love deeply never grow old; they may
die of old age, but they die young. Some
would remember them for having ruled the box office for decades altogether
while some would remember them for having ruled a million hearts. But as the
years pass by and thousands of films keep being made every year, all of these
would be achieved by someone or the other. What would separate the two then?
Firsts are always special, be it the ‘first superstar of the nation’ or the
‘first or the only filmmaker to have actively made and directed films for five
decades.’ And in arguments many with our parents over who is better, we would
admit deep down that there wouldn’t have been this present had there not been
this glorious past. Only a few would know that Yash Chopra’s production house
(Yash Raj Films) was coined after the initials of the two greats themselves,
Yash Chopra and Rajesh Khanna who got together in the former’s maiden
production venture, Daag. None would have known that this partnership might not
have reappeared too many times later but the partnership remained forever.
Their passing away for many is the death of romance in the Hindi film industry
and it wouldn’t be completely wrong to say so, since pumping in that kind of
life in today’s cinema has become an almost improbable task. At the end of this
piece, while we become nostalgic about these two stalwarts and look at the far
end, they would be looking at us from above and saying, “Arreh, Yeh Bhi Ek Daur
Hai, Woh Bhi Ek Daur Tha..”
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