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When
I meet Shah Rukh, he's lost weight since I last saw him and is looking
thin, making me enquire as to whether he's eating properly. "I lost
it for Devdas," he tells me as we sit down and spend some time catching
up first as he's just got off a plane and walked into a press junket.
If he's tired he doesn't show it, but then again with Shah Rukh you can
never tell. He's forever the bundle of energy that inspires others and
once more he's coming to our shores to sing, dance and shout about his
favourite topic: Indian cinema.
India With Love is the biggest Bollywood event to occur in the UK and
is set to be an experience of a lifetime. When Shah Rukh came in 1995
with Aamir his concerts were the most-talked about in years and are to
this day counted among people's all-time favourites. Two years ago he
returned in a visual spectacular which saw him descending onto the stage
breathing fire and presenting a self-made parody on the Indian film industry
pioneering a live stage theatrical story infused with the songs of his
most popular films. He single-handedly brought London to a standstill
last year when he came for the premiere of Asoka and has gained fans in
everyone from Jonathon Ross to David Fincher, so this time too; it's little
surprise his arrival is nothing short of an announcement of a huge event.
"I was sitting
in the plane and I read Mr. Bachchan's interview saying it's a great honour
to be performing in Hyde Park. For me, I'm used to playing with my son
in Hyde Park with the ducks!" he begins as I ask what it's like to
be performing in an open-air venue much larger than the ones he's previously
graced in this country.
"It hit me that I'll be performing there and it's a very big event
in front of so many people, it's a major institution and for a great cause
which is the Prince's Trust charity. I was sitting in the plane thinking
all this, and also for me it's just like you mentioned, coming and blowing
fire all over again!"
"I don't like to differentiate between the audiences of different
venues, I just like to come and do things from the heart. I'd like to
come and give it my best and just have a great time on stage, yes there
will be a language barrier because this show's for both Asians and non-Asians,
there's a cultural barrier and a location barrier because we've never
performed there, but I don't want to think about it. I just want to concentrate
on doing what I do best and giving it my all and I'm sure Mr Bachchan
and Aamir feel the same way too."
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If there's one man
who's been pushing the barrier that holds Indian cinema from the acceptance
and appreciation it deserves for a long time and is all set to break it,
it's Shah Rukh Khan. He's appeared on almost every mainstream and alternative
television show and spoke to so much of the international press explaining
the ethos and essence of Indian cinema, converting many along the way
to the truth that cinema is cinema, whatever language it's in. He's aware
of the show's associations and venue and that it's aimed at a wider audience
than just the core Asian fans, and is prepared to once more be part of
a pioneering project.
"We will concentrate on doing maybe one or two items in English or
speaking more in English which will be the live equivalent to watching
a Hindi film with subtitles, and so the other audience don't feel left
out but enjoy it as much and take home memories of these five people who
came down and sang and jumped around and danced and gave it the best shot
they had. And hopefully not only will we take back with us a part of London,
but those who see the event will also retain a part of Asian cinema very
close to their heart as well."
For as long as he
can remember Shah Rukh has looked up to and idolised Amitabh Bachchan.
He knew everything about him and even bought the same cologne as him,
adopting it as his favourite. When you look up to someone for so long
you one day outgrow them as you make your own achievements and conquer
your own mountains, but Shah Rukh explains how for him, the man who changed
Indian cinema history and is a living legend will always be someone he's
proud to look up to.
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"If you discount
Aishwarya and Preity, I am the most junior of the guys, so I don't think
I can come close to Mr Bachchan or Aamir where their achievements are
concerned. I've never worked with Aamir in films but know him very closely
and have worked with Mr Bachchan in a few films and the desire has always
been to just stand there and let him do his stuff and his brightness will
let me create a shadow, which in itself is very beautiful. I'm just honoured
to be on stage with Mr Bachchan and Aamir and be a part of this and that
alone is a very big achievement for me."
"I did a show
with Mr Bachchan in New York with Govinda, and was called last minute,
flew in and rehearsed something in the afternoon. What came across from
working with him was that I used to think I work very passionately and
very hard with a lot of attention to detail, but when you work with Mr.
Bachchan you realise that he's like a nervous child doing his first show,
his first school play every time and that quality is what I feel makes
him very endearing. More than the persona or the greatness of his acting
or the amazing quality of control that he has, that's the side everyone
sees, but more amazing than that is the manner in which every time he
mouths a dialogue or walks on stage he's doing it as though it's the first
opening of a school play in that rare manner. So I'm going to just go
there and react to whatever he's doing which is what I did in Mohabbatein
and Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham"
The
live experience is very much a personal interaction with the audience
unlike cinema. Shah Rukh may have been told by certain sections of the
press that his Asoka didn't work, but the audience in every cinema internationally
said otherwise. When the lights go down and the microphone's on, all that
he knows is that thousands of eyes are on him, something very different
and more personal than the direct response a film can generate. Asking
him about the live experience, I catch the sparkle in Shah Rukh's eye
as he enthusiastically reveals the nirvana of being on stage.
"I've always been more of a theatre actor than a film actor, and
what we do on stage now is different when theatre was more serious. It's
50 percent like a rock concert. People say you go and dance at weddings
and private parties, and my view is that when I come down and perform
here it's like a wedding or a celebration too except in New York or London
or Australia or wherever. And I know the Asians who have thronged there
it is a great moment of pride that someone has come from abroad and is
doing what they would love to do in their houses but are unable to because
of the pace of life here or the position of life in a Western country
away from their homeland. When people are cheering you can feel it, it's
as though they're saying 'Whatever you're doing, we're really liking it'
and it reminds them of back home, so whenever I do something live, it's
about returning that warmth. It's not about how many people there are
or how hard they're clapping or how much they've paid, it's about me trying
very hard at that point in time in saying 'you've invited me to your party,
I'm going to do my best to make sure you go home having had a great, great
time and night out'. That's my whole take on shows, it's about having
fun and generating happiness. When a show's over, I'm really tired and
my knees are hurting and I'm carried off the stage and I wish I could
carry on all night, I get that much out of a live show."
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Being whisked away
with him as he describes the experience, I try to visualise the sea of
faces that will all be mesmerised this June and be chanting his name,
alongside cheering for their favourite stars who are bringing the magic
of India
with love. The magic of the movies is not something that
is replaceable and as Shah Rukh goes on to explain, he's hoping he can
just introduce a spark of that magic to the audience and relay the warmth
that exists on the peacock screen.
"I think magic cannot be recreated, it just happens. You cannot plan
it and go into that much detail and say this one show will sum up Indian
cinema and say what it's all about. I think already because of people
like you, because of the films that are coming here and the curiosity
that surrounds our films and the fact that our country is producing the
largest number of films in the world, all contributes to the attitude
that this cinema can become a part of my life. It's not about a fad or
forty-two days of Bollywood, it's about the essence and I hope it does
become a part of people's lives. So when you go to Leicester Square and
see a film by Quentin Tarantino or Spike Lee, you can see an Indian film
also. It will take time and slowly we might get there, but hopefully this
show will give them a taste of the warmth of Indian cinema and show how
different it is, and they find it very different from a rock concert or
anything else they've seen on stage. They'd never expect Al Pacino, Robert
DeNiro or George Clooney to come up on stage and start dancing, so they
have to be aware of the fact that yes, we have songs in our films and
that is why we can do this dual role. If we didn't have songs we wouldn't
have what we have in live shows, we could only come and speak and mouth
dialogues. It will take a little time for people to understand that a
film star of India is not just a film star, he's a rock star, an action
and singing star and is all of them rolled into one, he's a walking-talking
variety machine. It will take some time for them to understand but I hope
we're able to make them aware of the fact that this is how Indian culture
and cinema works."
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As I'm told that my
time is almost up, I thank Shah Rukh for once more giving me much more
than I expected, and that's the very marvel those coming to the biggest
live Bollywood event can expect: the unexpected. His back-catalogue lists
the best films of recent times and the spark in his eye hints that this
is just the beginning.
"I'm very proud to be a part of some of these films and very proud
that Devdas too now is going to Cannes. It's great to see good cinema
coming down from India and being appreciated as the faxes and emails reflect
and Inshallah we'll be able to explain Indian cinema better to them."
You have been warned. Shah Rukh Khan is coming to town and this time he's
a man on a mission.
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