The Sunday Guardian

Why the star biography is still a fail-safe literary formula

The star biography is always in great demand in the publishing world, with leading authors and journalist­s now willing to pen down life stories of celebritie­s, writes Nirmala Govindaraj­an.

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other sphere of public life—is not meant to be a ballad, hagiograph­y or the record of a court chronicler. A living subject may or may not allow a scathingly honest account of his or her life depending on the cultural moorings, but reliving and sometimes willingly revising and altering personal histories could be a cathartic process. A star who has passed on provides the leeway for a speculativ­e reconstruc­tion of his or her life without being around to either corroborat­e, challenge or censor the presentati­on. Much depends on a biographer’s ability and willingnes­s to provide multiple perspectiv­es, and the subject’s willingnes­s to be open to public scrutiny.”

Christina Daniels is the author of I’ll Do It My Way, a book about the “incredible journey” of the actor Aamir Khan, published by Om Books. Aside from being focused on Khan’s life and work, the book is also an expression of Daniel’s own love for cinema. It is a kind of tribute to Hindi cinema. The other interestin­g thing is that the author hasn’t interacted with Khan for this book and yet she does justice to her subject by successful­ly bringing it alive on the page.

I’ll Do It My Way is a worldwide bestseller, and has recently been translated into Turkish. “This book reflects my concern that not enough is being done to document India’s cinematic history,” says Christina.

Award winning author Jerry Pinto, too, has written a biography of the yesteryear ac-

tressHelen­tress Helen. His book, Helen: The life and Times of an H-Bomb, was also written without any real interactio­n between the author and the subject. “My book was not about Helen’s personal life. It was about her life as a screen icon,” says Pinto. “If she had agreed to talk to me, I am sure she would have given me a great deal of anecdotes about filmmaking; this is what Hindi film stars do best. I love reading about

how Raakhee jij ji maded fi fishh curry for the wh whole set and how Rajesh Khanna put on a cap to cover his singed hair in a song. But that’s not what I am interested in writing about. I am interested in the constructi­on of identity. What is it that makes a hero? How does the soundtrack introduce him? What emotions are we expected to invest in him?”

The idea of writing about Helen was born when Jerry was having dinner with his

Rpublisher­bli h and d editordit Ravi i Singh. “He said, ‘Who do you think could write a book about Helen?’ and I said, ‘Me’ without thinking, and the next day, I started,” recalls Jerry.

He adds: “In retrospect it may have been because Helen was a Christian by name and by identity. She played a parade of Rosies and Jennies and they were all women of questionab­le morals while the heroine was always a white-clad vision with no sex drive at all, just a heart full of l love. I was interested in how B Bollywood used minorities, h how it portrayed the Muslim a and the Christian. And so I g got to write about those ideas w while working on the book.”

Pinto’s Helen has gone on to w win the National Award for B Best Book on Cinema, and so a an even longer shelf life.

“The shelf-life of biograp phies is directly proporti tional to the interest and cur riosity the subject sustains in the readership,” observes D Dipa Chaudhuri, who has p personally intervened as a an editor in the making of I’ll Do It My Way, and the newly launched biographie­s Anything but Khamosh by Bharathi S Pradhan, and The Hit Girl by Khalid Mohamed.

Talking of her role in shaping such books, Dipa says: “An editor melds with the biographer to get to the book that is finally published. Bharathi and Khalid, both perfection­ists, know their terrain very well, and are not first-time biographer­s. Exigent as editors are expected to be, that made the rest of the tweaking into place easier for me. Given the power stars wield over our lives, their biographie­s shall always been well received by readers, more so when they are well researched and examine all angulariti­es. Of course, great writing and storytelli­ng only add to the charm of such biographie­s.” Nirmala Govindaraj­an is the author of The Community Catalyst: A Novel Inspired by the Life of a Civil Servant

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