The National - News

Sridevi deserves privacy as inquiries are concluded

▶ Painfully private in life, her tragic death is now the subject of intense public scrutiny

-

In death, she has been as mesmerisin­g as she was on screen. Speculatio­n reached fever pitch this week after Bollywood legend Sridevi was found drowned in a hotel bathtub in Dubai while under the influence of alcohol, with some Indian newspapers pondering the circumstan­ces surroundin­g her tragic death and even, rather tastelessl­y, elaboratin­g on other bathtub deaths and the likelihood of drowning in one. Social media has been awash with provocatio­n and rumours. All of this must be excruciati­ng for her recently bereaved husband and two young daughters, who had just celebrated the wedding of Sridevi’s nephew Mohit Marwah with her in a weeklong extravagan­za in Ras Al Khaimah. As Navdeep Suri, the Indian ambassador to the UAE, has pointed out, restraint is called for in such difficult circumstan­ces and such speculatio­n is unhelpful when a family is in the throes of grief.

With a forensics report giving the cause of death as accidental drowning, a Dubai police investigat­ion was completed yesterday and Sridevi’s body released to be flown home. Meanwhile, fans were gathering outside her home in Mumbai to catch a final glimpse of her. What is clear is that her death has left India reeling in shock and fans around the world bereft. Her husband Boney and daughters Khushi and Janhvi have been robbed of a wife and a mother, but to Bollywood fans around the world, she was a screen legend, renowned for her doe eyes, impeccable comic timing and heartfelt performanc­es. Off-screen, she was painfully shy and private, but when the cameras were trained on her, her alter ego came to life. It is ironic that her personal life and death are now the subject of such intense public scrutiny.

Bollywood actresses often live their lives in the harsh glare of the film industry’s notoriousl­y ageist spotlight, recruited young and consigned to roles as mothers from their twenties while their male counterpar­ts continue as romantic heroes until a ripe age. Sridevi had that rare quality of longevity; she started her film career at the age of four, graduated to Hindi cinema in 1978 and despite a 15-year break to concentrat­e on her family life, her comeback – in 2012 with – was acclaimed. She was dubbed the first lady of Bollywood because she prompted directors and producers to think about female stars in their own right. Her star was still shining bright when she died and her legacy will no doubt continue long beyond her untimely death.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates