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(This is a repost from The Quint’s archives. It was originally published on 24 February 2018.)
“When Nagina, the movie, released, I was young and impressionable. I witnessed Sridevi break into a ‘naagin dance’ when Amrish Puri aka the ‘Snake Charmer’ had come to disarm her. Her dance unconsciously portrayed my angst. I was mad at the world for trying to condition me. I was more than just a man. My feminine side wanted to be like her,” said Harish Iyer, remembering Sridevi as the only actor who portrayed the dilemma of the Queer community.
Veteran actor Sridevi passed away on Saturday night in Dubai due to accidental drowning in a bath tub. And while her unexpected demise is being mourned country-wide, the Indian gay community seems inconsolable. They have lost a hero, an artist, a star who unconsciously helped them deal with their dilemmas.
Sridevi has been a loved actor and a national favourite for over 50 years. However, her popularity among the Indian queer community is lesser known.
Sridevi started acting at the tender age of four. Although she compromised on her education, she educated herself on film sets and modeled herself as the ‘woke’ actor of her time. She effortlessly played roles that spoke to every community. Her movies may or may not have worked at the box office, but her characters were never without depth.
Sridevi’s unconscious portrayal of the ‘conflict’ found resonance among the Queer community. It was probably first of the very few attempts that Bollywood has ever made to portray angst, confusion and dilemma in an unbiased way. Sridevi probably realised that very early on in her career and used the ‘grey’ character persona is all her movies.
She was the obedient yet ‘shamelessly’ greedy wife in Judaai. She was the child stuck in an adult’s body in Sadma, and in English Vinglish, she was a mother who pined to know a language that eluded her, yet maintained a critical perspective throughout the learning process.
Her feminine side was what many members of the community related to.
Why was only Sridevi able to achieve this with the community? Why not a Madhuri Dixit or a Hema Malini? Pat comes the reply:
In her third-last movie, English Vinglish, she admonishes her fellow batch-mates for making fun of their tutor who identified himself as gay. She very aptly said:
Sridevi was an icon for the previous generation and will be an icon for generations to come. He work has been emulated by young actors and she has inspired budding filmmakers. Yash Chopra called her a ‘director’s dream’, and Sridevi was indeed a viewer’s dream too.
For all that she has done for the industry and for the Queer community, we salute her.
Rest in Power, Sridevi!
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