Hindustan Times (Patiala)

‘I want to remember him as he was: handsome, warm and considerat­e’

Veteran actor began his career in 1960s and acted in more than 140 films

- SHABANA AZMI (As told to Subhash K Jha)

“It was not unexpected. Photos showing an ailing Vinod Khanna — a pale shadow of his dashing former self — had insensitiv­ely been circulated on social media a few weeks ago. And now he is gone.

Farooq, Om Puri, Vinod — three actors with whom I worked a lot — have passed away in quick succession. Makes me come to terms with my own mortality.

I first worked with Vinod in Aruna-Vikas’s Shaque. I remember being terrified because Aruna and Vikas, who were married then and co-directing the film, demonstrat­ed how they wanted a particular­ly intimate scene to be done. I was awkward and very embarrasse­d.

Vinod, who sensed this, came to my rescue. When we started rehearsing he put his arm around me and asked the directors: “If I hold her in this position will I miss the camera? Would it be better if I hold her arm higher?” Suddenly I felt ‘oh this is such a technical thing, no need to be embarrasse­d’, and I started breathing again.

I will always be thankful to him for this. He was a big star and I a rank newcomer. If he had asked me to relax I would have got even more tense... What a considerat­e thing to do...

We did many films together. He was different from most movie stars. On outdoor schedules it’s common to have fans shower hospitalit­y on stars, bring homecooked food and generally be at the stars’ beck and call. We are happy to partake of their hospitalit­y but avoid their phone calls when they come to our city. Vinod would not only be accessible, he would also invite them on the sets and be extremely courteous. It was a rare quality.

I did a whole gamut of films with Vinod, from Shaque to Khoon Ki Pukar, and particular­ly enjoyed doing Parvarish with him.

One day Manmohan Desai turned up at a studio I was shooting in and said in his inimitable manner, “I’m producing a film for the first time. It’s called Amar Akbar Anthony and I want you to be a part of it. Frankly there’s no role for you but woh Vinod meri jaan kha jayega that Amitabh and Rishi have heroines opposite them, I need one too!” I was utterly disarmed and said yes right away.

I’ve watched Vinod through various phases in his life. His Rajneesh phase in the prime of his stardom. He had lost his mother and a close cousin almost simultaneo­usly and was battling metaphysic­al questions about life and death. He felt cut off and disconnect­ed with everything and everybody. Rajneesh aka Osho gave him the solace he was seeking.

He became the butt of ridicule in whispers around the film industry. “Such a handsome successful star... what’s wrong with him? Sab kuch toh hai, kyun panga lena?” tittered an industry not used to people who didn’t conform.

And then one day he just upped and left for Oregon, leaving behind angry producers with some incomplete films. I wonder if anybody other than Mahesh Bhatt and Johnny Bakshi understood the turmoil Vinod was going through...

He came back some five years or so later and the film industry opened his arms to him once again. He did some substantia­l work but he needed to do more than just be a Hindi film actor. Inevitably he joined politics and was overwhelme­d by the huge mandate he got... He gave himself wholeheart­edly to politics — even became a minister of state for external affairs.

I had political difference­s with him but we continued to be fond of each other. I learned he often enquired after me from common friends but we lost touch.

And now he is gone...

I regret not going to see him after I learned about his illness. Perhaps because I want to remember him as he was — handsome, warm and considerat­e.

Actor Vinod Khanna, once acknowledg­ed as one of Bollywood’s most handsome heroes, passed away at a Mumbai hospital on Thursday at the age of 70. He was suffering from advanced cancer of the bladder.

Officials at the HN Reliance Hospital said he breathed his last at 11.20 am, weeks after he was hospitalis­ed . “Doctors and family were expecting a recovery but somehow his condition deteriorat­ed,” a hospital source said.

Millions of Indians had reacted with shock and sympathy after a photograph of a frail and haggard Khanna in the hospital was leaked on social media weeks ago.

Khanna, born in Peshawar in present-day Pakistan, was a sitting BJP MP from the Gurdaspur constituen­cy in Punjab.

Khanna, who studied commerce at Mumbai’s Sydenham College before moving into acting, started his Bollywood career in the roles of villains in late 1960s. But once he started playing the lead roles, Khanna became a darling of the masses and is credited with making macho look good.

After giving several hit films, Khanna quit films in 1982 – when he was at the peak of his career – and joined controvers­ial guru Osho Rajneesh. Though Khanna returned after five years and did more films, other actors had by then moved in to fill the vacuum.

Khanna acted in more than 146 films. He was adept at handling both romantic and action films with ease, getting under the skin of his characters comfortabl­y.

Khanna was married to Geetanjali between 1971 and 1985 and has two sons with her, actors Rahul Khanna and Akshaye Khanna. He married Kavita Khanna in 1990 and has two children with her — Sakshi and Shraddha.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Vinod Khanna. n
GETTY IMAGES Vinod Khanna. n
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 ?? PTI ?? Actor Akshay Khanna during the cremation of his father Vinod Khanna in Mumbai on Thursday.
PTI Actor Akshay Khanna during the cremation of his father Vinod Khanna in Mumbai on Thursday.

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