Gulf News

On set with Akshay

Actor opens up about what makes him happy and why he feels lucky

- By Manjusha Radhakrish­nan Chief Reporter

In between his costume change into an ornate black kandura near a stretch of desert close to Al Qudra Lake in Dubai, Bollywood superstar Akshay Kumar was discussing his idea of true happiness.

As if on cue, his phone rings. It’s his mother asking if her 52-year-old son had eaten a hearty breakfast before he got busy filming a song for his comedy

Laxmmi Bomb in the UAE.

He assures his mom Aruna Bhatia, 80, in Punjabi that he was well-fed and had his glass of water, before turning to this journalist and exclaiming: “See, this is what I was talking about, darling.” It’s these little things that make him richer. (Kumar and his family share a home with his mother back in Mumbai, though the two have separate kitchens.)

“I come from a Punjabi family and to play a board game like Snakes and Ladders with my kids and wife is very important for me. You don’t need money for that and that’s happiness for me,” Kumar said in an exclusive interview with tabloid last month.

Eating a ghee-laden paratha and working out for at least an hour to burn his indulgent breakfast off is another source of happiness for this star, who has acted in more than 100 Bollywood films.

Ironically, this top-earning actor — he’s reportedly worth $240 million (Dh881.4 million) — was seated in a swanky black Mercedes-Benz SUV during this sit-down interview when extolling the virtues of those little pleasures in life.

It was his third day filming the song in the UAE in mid-January, facilitate­d by Dubai Film TV & Commission and local company 7Media. Kumar and

“I have seen good, well made films not working at the box office. My Jaaneman was a beautiful love story, I loved it and thought it was ahead of time. But it didn’t work. Lamhe was another such good film that didn’t work."

— Akshay Kumar on the box office fate of Bollywood films.

“We had a chance to interact more and I got to know Mr Kumar. His humanity is touching despite being such a big star. The way he treats his team and his people around him is brilliant,” said Saeed Al Janahi, Director Of Operations, Dubai Film & TV Commission.

his co-star Kiara Advani had been up since 6am to capture a song-dance sequence set in a desert with a gleaming, golden skyscraper cut-out erected in the sand. A dozen or more background dancers in equally sparkling outfits were learning to shimmy to the beats of a song.

So does dancing come easy to him?

“I am not that good a dancer. Hrithik [Roshan], Shahid [Kapoor] and Tiger [Shroff] are good dancers. I just react to the mood. I do more of aerobics than dance … But I am always relaxed,” said Kumar with a laugh. This journalist can vouch for his sunny dispositio­n.

Unlike actors who are usually nervous during filming a scene and prefer to avoid distractio­ns like an interview on set or a selfie with a fan, Kumar, who has acted in the Indian National Award-winning film Padman, was a portrait of calm as he took us around the location.

“My wife keeps asking me how I have so much patience. I don’t like violence or fighting,” Kumar said.

This actor, who last year famously interviewe­d Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with soft questions like ‘how he likes to eat his mangoes’ and has often acted in films that seem to push Modi’s political agenda, expressed his anguish at the anti-CAA protests in India. At the time of this interview, India was witnessing unpreceden­ted protests against a new citizenshi­p law, which many consider discrimina­tory against Muslims.

“There are many sides to what’s happening. All I have to say is please don’t destroy anybody’s property or hurt anybody. Violence is not the answer. Everything can be sorted out. There is no point to giving a comment to it … Don’t hit anybody or each other, that’s my only request,” Kumar said.

He’s equally pragmatic when it comes to his personal success. In 2019, Kumar delivered four back-to-back blockbuste­rs including Good Newwz, Housefull 4, Mission Mangal and Kesari.

“I am one of the lucky ones in this industry. I always say that in my field luck is 70 per cent and hard work is 30 per cent … Although I am happy and humbled, I never take success too seriously. It’s a very dicey thing and I want to stay away from it all,” he said.

At the time of the conversati­on, Kumar’s latest comedy Good Newwz was still playing in UAE cinemas and raking in the moolah. His comic timing was being lauded especially in a scene where his character had to look high on substances and laugh uncontroll­ably on screen.

“That wasn’t an easy scene to do where I had to look high, especially since I am a person who doesn’t even smoke a cigarette in his real life. I don’t drink often either,” he said.

Kumar is often described as one of Bollywood’s most discipline­d self-made stars. Unlike other celebritie­s for turn up late during filming and keep the crew waiting, actor-producer Kumar is a stickler for punctualit­y. All he wants to do is act in films that entertain and engage.

“I play such an interestin­g role in Laxmmi Bomb. It’s a role of a eunuch and it’s such fun … I am one of those people in life where I get to play so many characters in a lifetime. Imagine, I played a naval officer in Rustom, a guy who talks about toilets in Toilet: Ekk

Prem Katha … What else can I ask from God?”

According to Kumar, his films invariably teach him about issues he was unfamiliar with and gives him perspectiv­e on larger issues.

“My films are like a study for me … Why I did a film like Airlift ,I learnt about the evacuation of Indians during the Gulf War. When I did Padman, I learnt all about the man who made low-cost sanitary pads. With Good Newwz,

I understood so much about IVF treatments and about a man who has a baby that’s not his own in his hands and his life changes,” said Kumar.

While Airlift was filmed extensivel­y in Ras Al Khaimah, Good

Newwz was a comedy about how two couples learn that their bodily fluids got mixed up at the IVF centre and how they have to make peace with parenting a child that’s isn’t fully biological­ly theirs.

“I said yes to this film after three minutes of hearing the narration. Remember, it’s not his semen and it’s a complicate­d scenario where he becomes a father to a child that is in some other woman’s womb … It was so complicate­d and was based on a truelife incident.”

Good Newwz was one of the most successful comedies and money spinners of 2019.

Kumar is surprising­ly grounded about his accomplish­ments.

“When I come to my studio every morning and I look out of the window, there’s a better looking guy standing outside it who’s struggling. He’s a better dancer than me, a better actor than me and he can say lines better than me, has acted in plays before … But he is still waiting to get that lucky break. So I don’t take my success seriously. I take my work seriously.”

He compares his acting career and his life to the popular building game, a Lego set.

“Imagine you make a bridge from those Lego pieces, but you then bring it down,” he said. “It’s called de-constructi­on. I want to construct one image in a film, then break it fully and create some other image. I am all about deconstruc­tion. So sky is the limit for me.”

“Although I am happy and humbled, I never take success too seriously. It’s a very dicey thing...” AKSHAY KUMAR ★ Actor

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 ??  ?? ‘Airlift’ was shot in Ras Al Khaimah (2016). ‘Baby’ was filmed in Abu Dhabi (2015).
‘Airlift’ was shot in Ras Al Khaimah (2016). ‘Baby’ was filmed in Abu Dhabi (2015).
 ??  ?? Akshay Kumar on in Dubai. set
Kumar with producer line
Mini Sarma, who worked actor with the on ‘Airlift’.
Akshay Kumar on in Dubai. set Kumar with producer line Mini Sarma, who worked actor with the on ‘Airlift’.
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 ??  ?? Kumar and Kiara Advani in the Burj Khalifa.
Kumar and Kiara Advani in the Burj Khalifa.
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