(This column by Anna MM Vetticad was first published in The Hindu Businessline’s BL Ink supplement on April 12, 2014)
Headline: THE MODERN FAMILY
Introline: A few feisty Bollywood daughters and parents are
challenging the industry’s patriarchal ways
Changing roles:
Alia Bhatt is among the new batch of actors who continue to defy gender bias in
Bollywood families
|
In a season of opinion
polls, here’s one of the non-electoral kind. Do you believe a majority of
Bollywood stars are from film families? Chances are most of you will say yes. The
right answer though, is yes and no.
In this notoriously nepotistic
film industry, there’s a gender angle even to nepotism: while it’s true that most
male actors ruling Hindi cinema today are relatives of producers, directors,
actors and other industry insiders; most female actors are not.
If you think this is a
feminist over-reading of the scenario, just run your eyes through the past fortnight’s
mainstream Bollywood releases and spot the star kids in each lead cast:
director David Dhawan’s son Varun is the hero of Main Tera Hero; producer Vashu Bhagnani’s son Jackky headlines Youngistaan; and Dishkiyaoon co-stars producer-director Harry Baweja’s son Harman with
legendary actor Dharmendra’s son Sunny Deol. Score: film family sons – 4,
daughters – 0.
Alternatively, consider the
male stars in the 30-50 age group who have dominated Bollywood for the past
quarter century. Only three – Shah Rukh Khan, Akshay Kumar and John Abraham – are
rank outsiders. Their contemporaries are Aamir Khan, Salman Khan, Ajay Devgn,
Saif Ali Khan, Abhishek Bachchan, Hrithik Roshan, Ranbir Kapoor, Shahid Kapoor
and Imran Khan whose lineage needs no introduction. The percentage is dramatically
reversed among leading ladies in the same age group, with outsiders (Sridevi,
Madhuri Dixit, Juhi Chawla, Manisha Koirala, Preity Zinta, Aishwarya Rai, Vidya
Balan, Priyanka Chopra, Katrina Kaif) far exceeding the number of industry daughters
(sisters Karisma and Kareena Kapoor, Kajol and cousin Rani Mukerji).
The explanation for this skew
lies in Bollywood’s male chauvinism. Sanjay Dutt explicitly states that no
daughter of the Dutt clan can act in films. Some star parivaars opt for politically correct public utterances on this
matter, but Dharmendra – who openly opposed daughter Esha’s film career – was unblushing
about his conservatism when I interviewed him on his 75th birthday in
2010. “Aisi unpredictable line mein jaha
ladkon ke liye bhi mushkil hai, usme bechari bachchiyon ko kyun bhejoge?
(Why would anyone send their poor daughters into a profession which is so
difficult even for sons?) Ultimately daughters have to settle down, to be frank,”
he said. “A father wants nothing but happiness for his daughter. They should
settle down, live a happy life, and work according to their husbands (sic).”
Don’t be shocked. After
all, our film industries are not set in Venus or Mars; they’ve emerged from our
very own gender-prejudiced society here on Earth. Like Dharmendra, most
industry families are fixated on patriarchal notions of “protecting” daughters
who are too “bechari” to take on the
world, instead of investing in changing that world.
This industry is acutely aware
too of its own culpability with the casting couch. There is also a hypocritical
categorisation of women into types: if society at large often labels women as ‘wife
material’ and ‘girlfriend material’, for people in the film industry, there is the
‘my mother/wife/daughter type’ who must not wear skimpy clothes or romance
other men on screen, and the ‘co-star type’.
Rare is the film family
where the baton has been passed from father to daughter; rarer still from mother
to child to grandchild. The Samarths – Shobhana Samarth, her daughters Nutan
and Tanuja, Nutan’s son Mohnish Behl and Tanuja’s daughter Kajol – are exceptions
who have opened doors to others, as pioneers always do. If there had been no
Karisma and Kajol, who’s to say whether Rani and Kareena would have joined
films. If it weren’t for this quartet, would the past seven years have witnessed
the arrival of Anil Kapoor’s daughter Sonam, Shatrughan Sinha’s daughter
Sonakshi, or Mahesh Bhatt and Soni Razdan’s daughter Alia? Coming soon is Suniel
Shetty’s daughter Athiya.
These girls are droplets in
the ocean, but their entry still marks a notable change from earlier decades, partly
because they are not pliable or bechari
and partly due to evolving parental mindsets. Anyone who has met Anil and Sonam
could tell you that he is far too liberal to keep a daughter in a professional purdah
and she is far too feisty to follow norms. Less obvious though is the
spiritedness of Shatrughan’s daughter Sonakshi, who cultivates an image of traditionalism
by discussing family values, sanskaar
and her family’s dignity in most interviews.
As I write this column, I
place a quick call to Sinha Senior, who is busy in Patna campaigning for his
seat in the Lok Sabha polls. On the drive to an election rally, Shotgun – as he
is known to colleagues and the press – describes himself as Sonakshi’s shield
against the casting couch. I ask: Would she have listened if you had commanded
her not to act? “We’re past
the era when parents could dictate terms to children,” he replies. “You have to
treat them as your friends, guide them according to their capacity, aptitude
and qualifications.” Open-minded as Dad clearly is, it turns out too that Sonakshi
of the lowered gaze in public, is very much her own woman.
(Anna MM Vetticad is the author of The Adventures of an IntrepidFilm Critic.
Twitter:
@annavetticad)
Photograph
courtesy: Everymedia
PR (shot of Alia Bhatt shooting for Imtiaz Ali’s Highway in Aru Valley, Kashmir)
Note: This
photograph was not used in BL Ink
Related Links:
(a) The Dharmendra Interview by Anna MM Vetticad /
Headlines Today / December 2010:
http://tinyurl.com/pq5ut45
(b) “Bollywood and The Inheritance of Gloss” / Article by
Anna MM Vetticad / The New Indian Express / June 2011: http://tinyurl.com/ne5xzt3
(c) Ranbir Kapoor, on being a Kapoor / Interview by
Anna MM Vetticad / The New Indian Express / June 2011: http://tinyurl.com/ouxawxs
(d) “Ranbir my
son is a fourth generation male actor” / Interview with Rishi & Neetu
Kapoor by Anna MM Vetticad / The New Indian Express / June 2011: http://tinyurl.com/nj4fngo
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