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Much before Priyanka Chopra and Deepika Padukone got on to international projects, Shabana Azmi was the first Indian actor to work with John Schlesinger in Madame Sousatzka, Nicholas Klotz’s La Nuit Bengali, Jamil Dehlavi’s Immaculate Conception, Blake Edward’s Son of Pink Panther, Ismail Merchant’s In Custody, Roland Joffe’s City of Joy and Tony Gerber’s Side Streets.
Her career transcends all genres of films and all languages on theatre (Waiting Room, Kaifi Aur Main, and Broken Images).
She has done television (Anuradha in the past and currently Ammaji), did playback singing for music director Khayaam/Anjuman and last week recorded Tagore songs for Aparna Sen’s Sonata.
On her 68th birthday Shabana Azmi talks, what she is most passionate about, acting.
Shabana Azmi: Versatility, I imagine. Like someone once said, “Acting is not like a sprinter’s race, where one who runs the fastest in the shortest period of time comes out the winner.” A most definitive Hamlet can turn out to be a disastrous Macbeth.
Shabana Azmi: I am nowhere near achieving the facility exhibited by the really great performers. Like a writer must at least know the alphabet to qualify as a writer, I am capable of being sometimes good, sometimes bad and sometimes average. I need to be pushed hard to rise to the level of potential that I believe I have. I approach every part with anxiety and a hopeless sense of inadequacy. I need an excellent script, a talented director, and terrific co-stars to shine.
Shabana Azmi: Theatre is much more an actor’s medium than the director’s. When I did The Waiting Room at the National Theatre in London or Nora at the Singapore Repertory Theatre, I realised that deep down inside me, I am more a film actor than a theatre actor. Many years ago, when I accepted to do Safed Kundali, and later Tumhari Amrita, it was because theatre prevents you from getting complacent. Believing in one’s own greatness is the biggest stumbling block towards an actor’s growth. Mercifully, I come from a family of artists who are hugely critical, so my sanity remains intact.
Shabana Azmi: Yes, but after playing complex roles where characters are forever struggling against injustice and oppression, a time came when I could no longer treat acting as a 9 to 5 job. The residue of the characters’ lives that I had inhabited, started leaving their marks on me, and sub-consciously I began to get involved with their concerns.
Shabana Azmi: Not when we were shooting the film. Then I was only concerned with my part. When the film was released, the reactions were overwhelming. Suddenly I had women walking into my house, relating to me not as “fans” of a “star,” but in sisterhood. They expected me to resolve their marital conflicts. I was humbled by their faith in me and also frightened. Slowly I rose to the occasion, became conscious of causes related to women.
Shabana Azmi: I get withdrawal symptoms and severe cramps in my stomach. The anxiety comes out of creating a character I think. The biggest and the best actors have denied thinking about their roles, denied doing home-work. I do. Other actors are organically capable of competent performances, I’m not. I’m an extremely hard-working actor.
Shabana Azmi: There’s nothing wrong with being an idealist, but I’m pragmatic too. Statistics have proved that rapid industrialisation leads to degradation of the environment. When bamboo was discovered, we ravaged the forest instead of recycling it. The tribals, on the other hand, cultivate forest land and then leave it for five years to fallow.
(Bhawana Somaaya has been writing on cinema for 30 years and is the author of 12 books. Twitter: @bhawanasomaaya)
(This article is from The Quint’s archives and was first published on 17 September 2016. It is now being republished to mark Shabana Azmi’s birthday.)
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