Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Reliving his school days in ‘Funny Boy’

Thespian Hidaayath Hazeer talks to Purnima Pilapitiya on how he landed the role of Diggy, the brother of the protagonis­t Arjie in the muchawaite­d film version of the well known novel by Shyam Selvadurai

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Hidaayath Hazeer’s first taste of acting was not on the stage. It was not even on the screen which is becoming familiar turf for the 24-yearold who will make his feature film debut in “Funny Boy” directed by the internatio­nally acclaimed Deepa Mehta. It was around the glowing campfires as a boy scout at Royal College where he first discovered the joy of creativity and drama.

Although he loved writing and performing skits for the school scouting Jamborees (his father Rauf Hazeer is also a well-known poet writing in Tamil), the performing arts barely crossed his mind until he joined the school cast for the Shakespear­e Drama Competitio­n back in 2014. In his last year he sported a bowler hat and Inspector Clousseau- esqe accent to play the charmingly comedic Passeparto­ut in a school production of Around the World in Eighty Days directed by Thushara Hettihamu (2016). The same year, his role as Mark Antony in their take on Julius Caesar for the All Island Shakespear­e Drama Competitio­n got him a nod for

the Best Actor Award.

It was a year after he left school while performing in the Studiolusi­on production of Chatroom that Hidaayath knew he wanted to explore theatre. Since then he has appeared in a plethora of roles- from actor to assistant director and crew member for both local and internatio­nal production­s, writer, trainer and even music director. The young artist still holds fast to his sense of self and mellow optimism that has led him to opportunit­ies arising in the strangest of places.

It was a random phone call from The Film Team back in 2017 that led him to his first on screen credit on the ITV series “The Good Karma Hospital”. Initially cast in a non-speaking role as an ambulance driver, Hidaayath was offered a speaking role as a young police officer following his audition. The experience opened his eyes to profession­al acting and production work. “It was the first time that I saw this as an option to follow profession­ally.” Enthusiast­ic yet cautious, the young thespian has learnt to see through the glamour of the industry and pursue work which is nearer and dearer to his heart; valuable advice he got from others in the industry. In 2019, veteran filmmaker Deepa Mehta

began production on Shyam Selvadurai’s enduring novel; Funny Boy. Written more than two decades ago, the coming of age story follows protagonis­t Arjun “Arjie” Chelvaratn­am on his journey through a childhood imbued in racial tension and civil war while discoverin­g and understand­ing his own sexuality in Selvadurai’s warm and familiar language and setting. Published in 1994, the novel won the Books in Canada First Novel Award.

When Hidaayath got yet another serendipit­ous phone call from The Film Team, he was understand­ably taken aback when he heard Mehta was at the film’s helm; he had been a fan of several of her other films such as Midnight’s Children and Water. “But I didn’t hear back,” he says, still smiling. Hidaayath was neverthele­ss asked to do a few workshops for the children in the cast. It also meant meeting the veteran filmmaker to discuss his involvemen­t in the process. And so, Hidaayath found himself seated in the lobby of the hotel she was staying in Colombo one evening back in 2019. “She was the centre of the room,” he recalls the moment he met the dynamic filmmaker. While Mehta left an understand­ably lasting impression on Hidaayath, the enthusiast­ic youngster seemed to have done the same, for he was immediatel­y cast as Diggy; the older brother and foil to the quietly sensitive Arjie.

“I excused myself, went to the bathroom

and just stared at myself for about two minutes”Hidaayath laughs. He sheepishly admits to never having been a voracious reader; he hadn’t read Funny Boy. But it worked to Mehta and Hidaayath’s advantage, allowing him the freedom to explore the toxic masculinit­y of Diggy and his often conflicted relationsh­ip with his younger brother. “It was the first time I was exposed to such a different narrative,” and Hidaayath quickly fell in love with the story and the different voices that needed to be heard in a version of Sri Lanka that he too was coming of age in.

For his role, Hidaayath found himself literally going back to his clean-shaven, school uniform days and reliving what it meant to be a ‘boy’ growing up in Sri Lanka. “It made me look back at the way I viewed masculinit­y and homosexual­ity

when I was in school,” he says candidly. The child’s eye view of violence, war, race and sexuality made the filming process and the film itself a personal experience for the cast. “The story is soft and intimate,” Hidayaath explains, and is one with family and nuanced, three-dimensiona­l characters driving the plot. The compelling and frustratin­gly real storylines make it difficult for Hidaayath to pinpoint his favourite; with every role hitting a familiar note for any Sri Lankan.

Even the current pandemic fails to dampen Hidaayath’s enthusiasm. “The most important thing is to be open-minded,” he adds, thinking back to chance encounters and experience­s that have opened the door to opportunit­y and a chance to learn. “Everything you do will be interconne­cted at some point.”

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 ??  ?? On TV: A role as a policeman in The Good Karma Hospital.
Pic courtesy The Good Karma Hospital
On TV: A role as a policeman in The Good Karma Hospital. Pic courtesy The Good Karma Hospital
 ??  ?? On stage in school: As Passeparto­ut in Around the World in Eighty Days. Pic by Malaka Mp
On stage in school: As Passeparto­ut in Around the World in Eighty Days. Pic by Malaka Mp
 ??  ?? As Diggy: Hidaayath on the set of Funny Boy. Pic by Maithili Venkataram­an
As Diggy: Hidaayath on the set of Funny Boy. Pic by Maithili Venkataram­an

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