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Aamir and I fought like cat and dog, says Pooja Bhatt

- Monika Rawal Kukreja monika.rawal@htlive.com

Unabashed, bold and fearless — this pretty much sums up actorfilmm­aker Pooja Bhatt. Not one to mince her words, Pooja, who was in Delhi recently for the theatrical recreation of her 1989 film Daddy, talks about the changing phases of filmmaking, actors being driven by PR machinery, and one of her iconic films completing

27 years.

It has been 27 years since Dil Hai Ke Manta Nahin released. What special memories do you have of your second film?

It was life-changing journey into my heart. All of us, felt a big vacuum once the film was over. Audiences still hold onto it, and the memories around it. It’s a film that’s ingrained in people’s hearts and minds; they connect their adolescenc­e to it.

How was it working with Aamir Khan for the first time?

Aamir and I were magic on-screen and a disaster off it. He was my favourite sparring partner. We fought like cat and dog. “Tom and Jerry” is how uncle Mukesh [Bhatt] described us. Guess we were both quite smitten with each other and that’s the only way we could display affection or emotion to each other when the camera was not rolling. We were as different as chalk and cheese, and that’s why our chemistry was so palpable onscreen.

Have things drasticall­y changed in the film industry today?

Moviemakin­g has become too impersonal — too many people, doing too many jobs. A star comes on set with eight people. We used to multi-task back then — no makeup vanity, no bullsh**. We went everywhere carrying the ice box ourselves and had one spot boy, if we were lucky. Today, actors come to my office and ask for a marketing plan first, before they read the script.

What about the PR machinery controllin­g the stars today?

I’ll not be controlled even when I’m 95 years old! No way am I going to give my life away to somebody else and say, ‘Now tell me what to do and how to do it’. But today, stakes are higher and, hence, young actors go out looking well-dressed and they’ve got a makeup man, hair guy, a personal trainer, marketing team, publicist etc.

Do you find all this overrated?

You see, people don’t want to reveal themselves. Things were more organic back in the day, but now, they’re more rehearsed. It’s funny how photo shoots today go through more production than a film did then (laughs).

 ?? PHOTO: RAAJESSH KASHYAP/HT ?? A still from Dil Hai Ke Manta Nahin Pooja Bhatt
PHOTO: RAAJESSH KASHYAP/HT A still from Dil Hai Ke Manta Nahin Pooja Bhatt

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