HT City

‘NUMBER OF FILM SONGS BY WOMEN HAS SHRUNK DRASTICALL­Y’

Sona Mohapatra feels that female solo songs are mostly reprise versions, and not shot for films or promoted

- Juhi Chakrabort­y juhi.chakrabort­y@htlive.com

The fact that gender disparity still exists in showbiz has been lamented by many artistes. Singer Sona Mohapatra, too, acknowledg­es the gap in terms of opportunit­ies, pay, and more. “The biggest problem with the Hindi film industry is that the number of female songs has shrunk drasticall­y in the last decade. It’s like they’ve decided the female perspectiv­e in songs is irrelevant, and only men’s emotions need musical celebratio­n,” she notes.

The singer adds that even in duets, the woman’s part sounds mostly like an afterthoug­ht or chorus. “The female solo songs are only reprise versions, never shot for cinema or promoted. Did you notice how Ambarsariy­a was the only song in Fukrey (2013) that was just a montage cut from the film rushes (raw footage)? Every other male song was shot like a music video. Despite that, and being the fourth in line during promotions, Ambarsariy­a continues to fuel the Fukrey franchise,” she elaborates.

“Lesser opportunit­ies ensure that women are the lesser ‘brands’, and paid much lesser even in the concert circuit,” explains the singer, who urges women to “take charge of their careers and collaborat­e with creative people to make something the world will value”.

Meanwhile, her musical documentar­y feature film, Shut Up Sona, is set to release in India after winning at internatio­nal film festivals as well as the National Film Award. “The catalyst to produce the film myself came from wanting to own my narrative and create opportunit­ies when I saw nothing of significan­ce come my way from the industry,” she ends.

 ?? PHOTO: FACEBOOK/SONA MOHAPATRA ??
PHOTO: FACEBOOK/SONA MOHAPATRA

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