CRITICISM
OF MUMBAI HURTS JAVED AKHTAR
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service (9 April 2007)
Bollywood's
well-known lyricist Javed Akhtar is in a nostalgic mood about
the city that nurtured his dreams - and he calls it a no-nonsense
city. "I came to Mumbai on Oct 4, 1954. Since then this city
has given me everything - from food to fame. I was taken aback
when Reader's Digest called it a rude city. Mumbai isn't a rude
city. It's a no-nonsense city," Javed told IANS.
He
added: "Everyone is busy and has no time for niceties. But
when it comes to showing solidarity, we're right on top of the
map. Didn't we see how the compassion oozed out during the deluge
in July 2005?"
In
2007, Javed is back to being the busiest bee among the bards of
Bollywood. Last year he had Karan Johar's "Kabhi Alvida Naa
Kehna" and J.P. Dutta's "Umrao Jaan", but neither
of the two films was received well.
"I'm
glad people liked my work with Karan after 'Kabhi Khushi Kabhie
Gham' and 'Kal Ho Naa Ho'. 'Umrao Jaan' was a special challenge.
The film had already been done gloriously earlier, and so were
the songs. You can't fight history and myth. Anyway, I removed
the fear of myth and destiny. For the first time I had to write
poetry for mujras. I wrote one whole song in pure Awadhi."
Javed,
who enjoys working with new music directors, teamed up with Himesh
Reshammiya for the first time in Vipul Shah's "Namastey London".
"Reshammiya has gone back to making music the old way. The
tunes are all done in the bandish tradition that the ustads of
music used to sing in, in the olden days. Taking the bandish,
he has tuned it in a modern way. The songs are so catchy that
listeners can't stop humming them. I enjoy working with new composers."
Incidentally,
Javed doesn't think much of Rekha as an actress, though he loved
her performance in "Krissh". "I've never been a
fan of Rekha. Her performance never touched my heart. But I liked
her immensely in 'Krissh'."
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