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July 1, 1997
QUOTE MARTIAL
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Jaya Bachchan returns to the movies!Suparn Verma at Rajkamal Studios
That, at least, is the official figure, though her last official appearance on screen was in 1981, when she starred in Yash Chopra's Silsila -- a celluloid retelling of a romantic triangle featuring her husband, Rekha and Jaya herself which, at that time, was reportedly mirrored in real life. In her comeback, Jaya Bachchan will play a middle-aged mother who discovers, after his death, that her son was a Naxalite. Directing her will be Govind Nihalani, and the film, based on Mahashweta Devi's Jnanpith Award-winning Bengali novel, is named Ek Hazaar Chaurasi Ki Ma.
Appearing relaxed as she prepared for the inaugural shot, Jaya Bachchan said, "Why would I be feeling jittery about facing the camera? It would be an insult to the years of training I have had at the Film Institute." With husband Amitabh giving the clap, Jaya enacted the scene wherein she receives over the telephone the news of her son's death. Interestingly, the voice on the phone belonged to Jaya's oldest friend, producer (Hum) Romesh Sharma. Her hibernation, apparently, has not dulled her skills, for Jaya -- vice-chairperson of Amitabh Bachchan Corporation Ltd, chairperson of The Children’s Film Society and much else besides -- was at the sound of the clapper board transformed, with effortless ease, into Mrs Chatterjee. The casual hello into the phone, the shades and nuances in face, voice and gesture as the caller told her that her much loved son was dead -- the clock had turned back twenty years and Jaya Bachchan was back doing what she does best.
But why 19 years? Didn't she receive any offers in the interim? There is a touch of melancholy in her smile as she answers: "You will be surprised, the answer is, I didn't." "Jaya has a quality of sensitivity combined with vulnerability, which is very rare," says Nihalani, explaining his choice. "Do you think I am vulnerable?" smiles Jaya. "Certainly not!" The laughter is mocking. And whether the mock is directed at herself or elsewhere, the lady knows best.
Even as Jaya prepared to cut the cake, Amitabh was being facetious at the expense of (1942: A Love Story) director Vidhu Vinod Chopra, one of the invited guests. "Oh, here comes the great director, I am in the company of big men today," quipped Bachchan. "Kya sir, am I the only one you found this morning?" asked Chopra, rather tamely. One member of the Fourth Estate took the bull by its horns and asked Jaya if she had sought her husband's consent before returning to the screen. "He is my husband, not my guardian, for God's sake," was the lady's exasperated retort.
Experts figure that Jaya Bachchan is proving smarter than her husband, by coming back to the screen in a non-commercial film -- unlike hubby Amitabh, who staked all on a commercial comeback like Mrityudatta and is now reeling from the shock of its failure. Though Ek Hazar Chaurasi Ki Ma will for all intent be known as Jaya's comeback film, it merits mention that the likes of Nandita Das (Fire), Joy Sengupta, Anupam Kher, Seema Biswas, Bhakti Barve, and Milind Gunaji play major roles. The film is expected to be complete by the first week of August. Photographs: Jewella C Miranda
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