Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

REKHA: THE ETERNAL DIVA

Rekha struggled to become the ultimate star. Yasser Usman, author of a new book, suggests that Bollywood’s cruelty made her a recluse

- Yasser Usman letters@hindustant­imes.com

Inever was a huge Rekha fan. She wasn’t high up in the pecking order of Bollywood stars for a child of the 1980s. But I am intrigued, even moved, by her: Rekha seems wracked by loneliness and sadness, but it wasn’t always this way. Something drastic happened around 1990 that fundamenta­lly changed her. Rekha went from being the Kim Kardashian of the 1970s and ’80s – attention-seeking and sexually frank to a degree not seen in India even today – to a Greta Garbo-esqe figure, tragic and reclusive. So what happened to make Rekha clam up? The exhaustion of years of combating vicious sexist attacks by colleagues in the film industry and the press, at a scale unimaginab­le today, had finally caught up with her. Had Bollywood ultimately managed to break Rekha?

It all started when she was born in 1954. Bhanurekha was the “illegitima­te” daughter of the polygamous Tamil film star Gemini Ganesan. She was unrelentin­gly teased in school as a “lotta”, Tamil for bastard. Such cruelty was to be her fate for years to come. When she was pulled out of school and hustled into films in her early teens – she was eaten by her brother when she refused – Rekha discovered that acting came with a generous dose of sexual harassment. And when she moved from Madras to Bombay in 1969 to support her bankrupt mother, Rekha was jeopardize­d by the absence of a godfather. In the maledomina­ted world of Bollywood, this gave licence to lecherous directors and producers. In her own words, “It was one of the most frightenin­g phases of my life… Guys did try and take advantage of my vulnerabil­ity.”

Perhaps the most egregious example of the harassment -- assault, really – that Rekha had to endure took place on a film set when she was 14. At a shoot for Do Shikari, producer Kuljeet Pal, director Raja Nawathe and lead actor Biswajeet conspired to force Rekha into a kissing scene. When the director called “action”, Biswajeet grabbed Rekha and forced himself on her while the camera was rolling. The director didn’t call “cut” for five long minutes. Rekha couldn’t protest for fear of the consequenc­es; and rather than being damned and proceeded against by the law, the producer was celebrated

for the discovery of a “bold sex kitten”, that most obnoxious of phrases.

If this wasn’t outrageous enough, consider the harrowing body-shaming Rekha was subjected to. Her 33-inch waist was much commented on, as was the colour of her skin. When Navin Nischol found out that Rekha had been signed as his co-star for Sawan Bhadon, he complained to the producer: “From where did you pick out this namoona [character]? Itni kaali-kalooti [So dark and ugly]!”

That Rekha seems lost in public memory; she underwent a dramatic make-over and weight-loss in the years after she met Amitabh Bachchan. But during those days of humiliatio­n, Rekha put up a brave front. She withstood the shaming and ridicule, and even the demeaning body-painting to make her skin lighter in films. She later said that though she felt “deeply hurt” at the time, it also steeled her resolve to “make it big”. Indeed, Rekha was irrepressi­ble. And this, perhaps, unsettled people even more. Rekha’s sexual openness, too, was revolution­ary, and won her yet more ire. It is impossible to imagine a young starlet today saying some of the things Rekha said four decades ago: “You can’t come close, really close, to a man without making love”, and “Premarital sex is very natural. And all those prudes who say that a single woman should have sex only on her suhaag raat are talking bull”! Rekha was totally open about her boyfriends. But the backlash for her candour – and sexual independen­ce -- was immense, and painful.

Rekha’s reported first marriage to Vinod Mehra in the early ’70s ended with a violent confrontat­ion with her mother-inlaw on the landing outside Vinod’s apartment, before Rekha could even cross the threshold. Mrs Mehra, in Rekha’s words, couldn’t stand her “rotten past and reputation for being a sex maniac”.

In typically sexist style, the film industry and the press repeatedly singled out Rekha and maligned her, never her partners, for her supposed relationsh­ips. After reports of affairs with Jeetendra, Dharmendra, Sunil Dutt and Amitabh Bachchan, among others, Rekha was projected as a woman who posed a “threat” to the happiness of married couples in Bollywood. The press uninventiv­ely called her a “man eater” and a “nymphomani­ac”. Even someone of Nargis Dutt’s stature unwisely pitched in: “She gives the impression to men that she is easily available... She’s lost. She needs a strong man.” Dimple Kapadia was pithy and direct: “Stay away from my husband,” she said, as if her husband Rajesh Khanna had no agency in the matter. Even with no one seemingly on her side, Rekha went on to become a superstar, and the highest paid actress of her time.

But perhaps the most devastatin­g blow, the proverbial last straw, was the reaction to the suicide, in 1990, of Mukesh Agarwal, Rekha’s estranged husband of a few months who had been clinically depressed for years. In spite of Rekha having worked in Bollywood for two decades by that time, Shashi Kapoor was the only industry insider who condoled with her. The rest were either coldly silent or nastily and baselessly blamed Rekha for the suicide. Subhash Ghai railed: “Rekha has put such a blot on the face of the film industry... No conscienti­ous director will work with her ever again.” A prominent male co-star thundered: “She’s become the national vamp. Profession­ally and personally, I think its curtains for her. I mean I don’t know how will I react to her if I come face to face with her”. Film magazines tried to implicate Rekha using flimsy and unverified trivia like that Mukesh hanged himself using her dupatta, and ran irresponsi­ble and scurrilous headlines like “The Black Widow” and “How Rekha drove Mukesh to Attempt Suicide”. Her film that was playing at that time, Sheshnaag, was boycotted, and vandals blackened her face on its posters.

Rekha, understand­ably, withdrew deep into a shell after this witch-hunt. And who could blame her? Her shocking story seems without parallel. Bollywood just couldn’t stomach the idea of an outspoken, sexually independen­t and successful woman. And so they chipped away at her till she clammed up and became the recluse we know today. Order was restored once again: that troublesom­e and vulgar woman was nowhere to be seen. Rekha had finally been subdued and broken.

 ??  ?? Rekha and Naseeruddi­n Shah on the sets of Umrao Jaan (1981), the crowning glory of her career. Rekha won the National Award for best actress for the film
Rekha and Naseeruddi­n Shah on the sets of Umrao Jaan (1981), the crowning glory of her career. Rekha won the National Award for best actress for the film
 ??  ?? Author Yasser Usman
Author Yasser Usman
 ??  ?? Rekha: The Untold Story Juggernaut Books ₹499; 240pp
Rekha: The Untold Story Juggernaut Books ₹499; 240pp

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