The Asian Age

Cranston’s candid memoirs throws light on darker moments HC rejects Tata plea to stall auction of its hotel

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Delhi high court dismissed Indian Hotels Company Ltd’s (IHCL) plea challengin­g the move by the New Delhi Municipal Council, saying the firm has “no right” for renewal of the licence period.

A bench of justices Pradeep Nandrajog and Pratibha Rani observed that NDMC was “within its power” to secure maximum considerat­ion for grant of licence for the property at the prime location of 1, Man Singh Road in Lutyen’s Delhi.

“To put it pithily, IHCL (which runs the hotel) has no right under the licence for a renewal thereof and therefore no further issue needs to be considered and decided,” the bench said while dismissing IHCL’s appeal in which it had challenged a single judge order dismissing their suit seeking to restrain NDMC from auctioning the property.

“It is the inherent right of every proprietor to secure maximum considerat­ion for his property in all transactio­ns, apart from transactio­ns where the law limits considerat­ion that can be charged by the proprietor, for any public purpose or in public interest,” the bench noted in its judgment.

“In the case of government­al bodies like the NDMC, the implicit right of a proprietor to maximise considerat­ion for its property is also a duty since these bodies own and transact property in a fiduciary capacity for the general public,” the court said.

The property, owned by NDMC, was given to IHCL on a lease of 33 years.

Bryan Cranston seems so far apart from the murderous Walter White that one wonders how he was able to channel such darkness with Emmyworthy ferocity in Breaking Bad.

But in his new memoir, A Life in Parts, Cranston details a real-life incident that helped him get in character: an unhinged ex-girlfriend who threatened his life and made him have violent thoughts about her.

“She threatened my life. She threatened to kill me and it was a constant thing and there were times when I thought I was going crazy,” Cranston said of woman It’s one of the more revelatory moments in the book, released earlier this month. The Emmy-winning Cranston, 60, discussed some of those moments in a recent interview.

You write about wanting to kill your ex-girlfriend, what drove you to that?

I was flush with fear and I felt like a trapped animal and I realized that I was capable of killing someone. That experience helped me in developing Walter White in the transition that he made, because Walter had to come to terms with that himself. That he was actually a good guy, but transition­ing into not such a good guy ... he was able to be honest with himself and say, “Yeah I could take another life,” and that is a tough thing to say to the person in the mirror.

What made you want to write a book at this point of your career?

I am aware from an objective point that the wave, the tsunami wave that Breaking Bad created also created tremendous opportunit­y for me, and there is a peak and valley to careers and that includes fame. If you are lucky to ride this wave of fame to a plateau — it won’t last there . ... I guess it is just a blue-collar work ethic that I was raised with.

In the book you talk about your dad being dissatisfi­ed as an actor. Why follow in his footsteps?

It was in my DNA, and they were actors - my parents were both actors — so that was part of it. So really when you think about it that sense, you’re going into the family business, so it’s very common. The turmoil that my dad went through, and then by extension, the kids went though, was profound and disastrous for the marriage, for the family.

How long do you plan on working?

When the sun is shining, make hay, because it would be sunset on my career at some point, and when it is, I want to be exhausted. I want to be done, and actually, go “I had a good run. No regrets. I’m ready to step aside.”

 ?? — PTI ?? New Zealand Prime Minister John Key and his wife, Bronagh, share a light moment at Jama Masjid in New Delhi on Thursday. Mr Key was on a four-day visit to India from October 24 to 27.
— PTI New Zealand Prime Minister John Key and his wife, Bronagh, share a light moment at Jama Masjid in New Delhi on Thursday. Mr Key was on a four-day visit to India from October 24 to 27.
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 ?? — AP ?? Emmy-award winning actor Bryan Cranston
— AP Emmy-award winning actor Bryan Cranston
 ?? By Bryan Cranston Orion, pp. 320, `675 ?? A LIFE IN PARTS
By Bryan Cranston Orion, pp. 320, `675 A LIFE IN PARTS

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