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"We were born in Allahabad. Allahabad is a middle level town but extremely rich in all kinds of activities. My father came from a very eastern background and my mother was very western. She'd studied in a convent, she had an English nurse to look after her and she came from a very affluent house. There was a lot of difference in their cultures. My father is a Kayast from U.P. My mother is from Punjab. She's a Sikh. My father's a writer, a poet, and man of letters. A stalwart. My mother, strong in her values, in her beliefs. And therefore, fortunately, I got a lovely blend of both the worlds, the east and west." |
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How Was Amitabh Bachchan As A Child? "I was very
shy as a child. Very shy. Lot of problems with very simple things. Like
entering a restaurant all by myself. And even much later when I was
looking for work in films, I met Manojji and he said, he was shooting in
Filmistan, he said come and see me there. And I used to catch a train from
Churchgate, go to Andheri, walk from the station up to the Filmistan gate.
But I just never had the courage to walk in. And I tried to, for seven
days, but every time, I came back from the gate. I'm very shy even today.
But I must admit that coming into films, and putting myself into
situations which are unreal has, perhaps, given me a little more
confidence. But initially it was destroying. It destroyed me completely
when I went to Hotel Sun `n' Sand and I saw Manojji doing a song with
Sairaji. There were millions of people standing. I was petrified. I
remember having sleepless nights. I still do sometimes, when I have to do
a song out in the open in front of people. It's not so much the
incapability to do the sequence, as the fact that I have to do it when
there are millions of eyes watching. I know it's a contra-diction to my
earlier interest which is theater. But an introvert, I've always been. I
don't know why. I don't know what it was. This is something I'll really
have to search myself for, much more deeply. But at the very outset and
looking at it very immediately...actually I think I should have been a lot
more confident with the kind of upbringing and parents I had. Maybe my
father was like that but my mother's always been very bubbly, full of
confidence. My father's more shy. Introvert. But very powerful when it
came to his expression, his writing. In many respects you could say that
temperamentally I'm like my father. Physically, maybe I have the Sikh
blood." After You Passed Out Of Boarding School, Was
It Difficult For You To Obtain A Job? "Well, there was a lot of rejection because
everywhere I went, I failed to get a job. Because I was either not
qualified enough or I was too shy or I was too tongue-tied during my
interview and there were more qualified people getting it. Terribly frustrating
time. And then eventually, I just packed my bags and left for
Calcutta." How Did You Think Of Venturing Into The Movie
Business? "After a few years, life in Calcutta became
stifling. Something was missing. All along there was a lot of interest
towards movies. Specially Hindi movies and having real flights of fancy
where you, to a very long shot imagine yourself connected with the world
of films. And all your dreams. And then suddenly a desire to actually go
and join the industry but still very shy. How does one get in? And then
coming across this talent contest and applying for it and again rejection.
Not being accepted. Chucking up the job. Getting really desperate. Moving
to Delhi, back to the house to see my parents. Gearing yourself up for the
final plunge and then, landing up at Bombay. Starting your struggle. Some
days exciting, some days not so exciting. Some rejection, some
achievements. But always moving. And then what followed after that
everyone knows." Do You Think Actors Lead Normal Lives? "I've
always said that actors should be treated very carefully. We need a lot of
understanding. There are millions of things that could destroy us. We are
broken up people inside. That's why you find a lot of us landing up with
the psychiatrists. That's why you find a lot of us behaving very
peculiarly and I say, please grant us this peculiarity. Because, this is
all that is there to say our own. No, we don't live normal lives...that is
why we need to be treated perhaps a little gently. Handled a little more
carefully. Understood a lot. Grant us our idiosyncrasies. Grant us our
difficult behavior, obnoxious behavior, whatever it is. It's not easy to
be stable. And if there is somebody who is stable, then he's got have
immense power, strength to wrestle with." Your By-Now Legendary Accident On the Sets
Of 'Coolie' Was A Turning Point In Your Life. Would You Like To Talk About
It? "I hate to talk about the accident. It's
like really pushing me into areas that I've put away. It's going to be
difficult. See, I never knew that I was going to die. I knew that there
was something very wrong with me but I never knew that I was going to die.
And the entire period when I was seemingly gone, when I was struggling for
life, I was in a state of coma. I was unconscious. That was the difficult
period for my family. It was easy for me because I was oblivious. The
difficult period for me started after I got okay. When you're told what
you've been through. And it's not enough that you've been told. The worst
phase is when you discover that what they have told you is, in fact, true.
Your entire body is finished from within. You're in full bloom, you're
healthy and you're full of life and gusto. And to suddenly find that the
body is not there. You can't move your fingers. Your legs can't support
you. And your whole system has gone through a battering. But you know that
it was there. It was just there the other day. How come it's not working?
It was a very frightening time." Were You Overwhelmed With The Kind Of Support
You Got From Your Fans During That Period? "The disturbing element of the accident was
the millions of people and their expectations. Their wishes, their prayers
and their feelings. And the extent to which people had gone. And you have
nothing, absolutely nothing to repay them. You just sit in your bed and
you just enjoy the benefit of how the others have prayed. And lots of them
who really went through physical penance, when you've actually sat back
and enjoyed it. I remember when I came out of the hospital, for many
months I could think of nothing else. It still disturbs me that I have
been unable to do anything in return. And how does one do it? How do you
go and actually thank each one of them? How can you possibly reach all the
churches, the temples, the Gurudwaras where prayers were made. Most of
them, I'm not even aware of. And to this date, I still meet the odd person
whose only reference to me is that I prayed for you when you were sick.
And meet this lady, she fasted for you, and meet this kid who didn't eat,
this is the temple where we prayed for you. Just fleeting glances of
people just coming in and saying things like this. That's your only
connection. And millions of others whom you know nothing about. And what
do you do? Soon after I started working, I went for a very long schedule
in Madras. I remember that it was the first time I had got out of the
hospital, come home and then I was alone again. I used to spend miserable
nights. I used to call Jaya and I used to ask her, `What do I do?'...Some
of my friends, they tell me if we were in your position, we would have
committed suicide long time ago. And sometimes I did feel like it...I
don't think it's advisable to go into it further...I told you there are a
lot of disturbing areas. I'm really marveling at myself at the moment that
I have had the strength to talk about it but it's like an addiction, you
know. When you start thinking about it, you start talking about it - every time
I talk about it or think about it, something new comes into my mind -
something new comes out of it - maybe it will all come out one day. When
I'm going through perhaps a psychiatric test or something." What Kind
Of A Husband Does Mr. Bachchan Make? "Jaya is a very spontaneous person. Not at
all like me. And it's just very fortunate for me that she's from the same
profession as me and so she understands. She was always familiar with the
environment I was in. She knows what the film industry is all about, so in
fact, it's a boon to have her. I don't know of course what the situation
would have been had I married a lady outside my profession. You say that
marriages in this industry don't last. But with all due apologies and all
due respect to others, how do you put me in the same category? In any
marriage, there are ups and downs and areas where disagreements take place
but that's all part of it. Jaya is extremely open and very straight.
Sometimes embarrassingly straight but that's how her nature is. I've never
tried to disturb that quality of hers and she's not disturbed my quality
of being to myself. When I want to be left alone, she leaves me alone.
It's very similar to the relationship between my parents...You know, when
I married Jaya, I was not economically very sound. And now, when I've
reached a stage where I can afford to be extravagant, that stage has
passed by. But I'm sure that had I not been married to her and had I still
had the kind of success that came my way, I would have still not
encouraged a situation where expensive gifts, expensive outings were going
to be the criterion for my association with a woman. I appreciate a more
normal and simple relationship. That is what attracted me to Jaya. She's
very simple and very down-to-earth. Away from all this." Do You Have Any Regrets Whatsoever? "My greatest regret has been that I could
not share the growing up with my children. When they were growing up, I
was working from morning to night. When I left, they were asleep, when I
came back, they were asleep. In many ways, I envy Jaya who spends more
time with them. Of course, these days, thanks to the condition put by the
various associations, there is just one shift and I do get back home
early. But now the kids are at the boarding. And I miss them. In certain
respects, we have probably not been able to give them a very normal
upbringing. Specially after I entered politics and the security problem
came up. Going to school with six-seven guards holding machine guns is not
really the wisest of ideas for a growing child. And I'm sure it must have
affected them adversely. Not being able to go to friends' houses without
checking out details, without informing the security. Not being able to
invite their friends home for various security reasons. Metal detectors,
checking out proper-ties and their friends. Even my friends and people who
visited me were checked out. They were embarrassed but it couldn't be
helped." Why Did You Venture Into Politics In The First
Place When You Knew Nothing About It? "I know I should have never got into
politics. And I've learnt my lesson. No more politics. But the additions
and subtractions will continue. And what am I supposed to do? How can I
rectify the situation?" Have You Ever Tried To Analyze Yourself As
A Person? "I know that there are a lot of areas inside
me which I need to analyze. But I need time. I can't be rushed into it.
Even if it keeps lingering in the back of my mind always. I keep joking,
fooling around on the sets, trying to push everything away for a later day
scrutiny. I don't even want to acknowledge those dark corners of my
insides as yet. And if at all I do it, I'll do it for no one else but
myself. Not my wife, not my parents. Maybe my children - maybe just my
son. Nobody else. Of course, there is also another way of looking at
things. Supposing I did not have this pressure of talking to the media,
maybe people like you and others would have always thought of me as
somebody else. I don't know what opinion of me you have now. I don't know
what you felt before you met me, how you felt while you were interviewing
me and how you feel today and how you'll feel tomorrow. But I'm sure there
will be a difference. Because forming an opinion without meeting a person
and judging your instincts and impressions after meeting him are two
different things. Most people I've met of late have gone back thinking
exactly the contrary of what they thought earlier. I've tried to be as
honest as I can with you. I can tell you that I've never spoken like this
to anyone before. I wonder if you're convinced. You don't look it. Maybe I
will convince you someday." |
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