Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Fashion maven reality star masaba

- Vanessa Viegas vanessa.viegas@htlive.com

Successful millennial businesspe­rson, now star of her own reality-based show. Meet Masaba Gupta

Since her debut at 19, she’s banked on the elements of irreverenc­e and surprise. There’s some of the former and plenty of the latter in her new reality-based show on Netflix. It offers glimpses of what she wants you to see. It’s done what it was designed to do — create a buzz. But will we ever know the real Masaba Gupta?

Masaba Gupta knows what it’s like to feel like the other, and it is for the other that she designs — pouring into her sketches her anger, fearlessne­ss, and yearning to be free. By 2009, when she launched her label, House of Masaba, these were also the emotions of a generation that had come of age post-liberalisa­tion. They didn’t want to choose between dressing like their parents and borrowing trends from the West.

So it was that Masaba’s electric hues, pop-art iconograph­y and desi kitsch prints of cameras, cows and fans began to go viral. It helped that her market was also starting to live online. The House of Masaba realised that if they treated Instagram as their runway, they could hold a fashion week any time they chose, and build fast while spending very little on marketing.

“I figured there was a gap in the Indian fashion market for easy, comfortabl­e clothing that were neither luxury nor ready-to-wear, but something in-between,” says Masaba, 31. She paired her creative prints with relaxed cuts, easy silhouette­s. Later came saris with pockets and fanny packs, sometimes paired with jackets.

A compliment to her craft is the thriving business of counterfei­t Masabas sold at open-air markets from Lajpat Nagar in Delhi to Colaba Causeway in Mumbai and online too. “I love it because I used to dream of being copied,” she says.

Last week, India got a closer look at her life, with the premiere of the Netflix web series Masaba Masaba, a fictionali­sed version of the lives of the designer and her mother, actor Neena Gupta. The part that she draws from real life is her ability to pick up the pieces and move forward.

The show has been panned and lauded, called tacky and kitschy as well as relatable. It’s made Masaba trend on social media again. (The last time was in 2019, when Flipkart co-founder Binny Bansal led an investment of $1 million in the House of Masaba.)

The designer wears it all lightly. She’s used to the glare. Masaba has been in and out of the news since she was born, to Neena Gupta and the cricketer Vivian Richards. Because it was 1990, and her parents never married, it was turned into tabloid grist.

In school in Mumbai, Masaba has talked about how her Caribbean features made her stand out, and how she was a target of bullying. She’s discussed how she channelled her pre-teen rage into tennis, dance, then music, then design.

The tennis phase came from being determined to make it big as a sportspers­on, like her father. Profession­al play also offered an outlet for the aggression she felt, fuelled her fearlessne­ss and made her feel free. Those feelings came through with dance and music too, but it is in her designs that you see them most noticeably.

Enrolled at Mumbai’s SNDT university, fate sent her a mentor in designer Wendell Rodricks. She worked on her graduation show with him, and he helped her apply to the Lakme Fashion Week. At 19, she showcased her first collection there in the Gen Next category. It was called Kattran (bits of scrap cloth, in Hindi), featured patchwork saris and Kolhapuri chappals, and caused quite the sensation.

Masaba’s growth has been organic, and that has been possible largely as a result of social media. For the rest of it, she describes her life as a hot mess. She is close to both parents, but her father doesn’t like smartphone­s and can be hard to get hold of. She remains on good terms with her ex-husband, film producer Madhu Mantena. She posts unselfcons­cious gyaan on body positivity, PCOS and acne.

Every collection she helms, though, from swimsuit lines to cosmetics, harks back to her original idea of empowering women to challenge ideals of beauty. “Practice self esteem. Practice strength. Because we all know it will be knocked out of us 3 mins after we step out of home,” went one viral Instagram post. “Don’t expect to read an article about ‘beauty coming from the inside’ and expect to wake up the next day feeling like you’re beautiful. Doesn’t work like that.”

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 ?? PHOTO: AALOK SONI/HT ??
PHOTO: AALOK SONI/HT

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