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For the last so many years, Navratri festival has been very special for the film fraternity, thanks to dancing to Bollywood tunes in garba pandals for nine days. Producers nearing October releases make sure to distribute audios of their forthcoming films to these venues so the soundtracks become popular with the audience.
Not any longer, because in the last few years copyright has become a major issue and organisers can no longer afford to play film songs. Therefore, star performers like Falguni Pathak have gone back to singing original Gujarati garbas. In a way it is a blessing in disguise because the new law has brought the festival back to its original avtaar.
Sanjay Leela Bhansali, who portrayed vibrant garbas in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, is a much-in-demand director during the festival because he makes it a point to travel all over Gujarat during these nine days to study and appreciate new dance forms of India. Bhansali believes that if we can travel across continents to attend film festivals, why not cities to absorb our festivities and culture.
As the city gears up for nine musical nights, I list my memorable navratri moments on the big screen.
Almost a decade later, it needed another Gujarati director to convert the household folklore Hey rang lo into Hey ram re featuring Rekha and Amitabh clicking dandiyas in Manmohan K Desai’s Suhaag.
In the ’80s Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla comfortably converted the folk dance in to the universally accepted disco dandiya for Love Love Love and in the ’90s, filmmaker Vinay Shukla celebrated Shabana Azmi’s victory as a political leader with a robust all female dace Raja ki kahani in Godmother.
Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Dholi taro in Hum Dil de Chuke Sanam ushered a new era of magnificence in melody, costumes and choreography, representing a vibrant Gujarat and the audience was mesmerised. Bhansali lived up to the promise again in Ram Leela also based in Gujarat.
Bengal’s Durga uja has been a recurrent motif in parallel cinema, be it Satyajit Ray’s Devi or Aparna Sen’s Paroma. Hindi mainstream cinema too has portrayed myriad moments of the mighty goddess through the decades, be it Shakti Samanta’s Barsaat Ki Ek Raat, Rakesh Roshan’s Karan Arjun, Kalpana Lajmi’s Daman, Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Devdas or recently Vidya Balan’s Kahani.
Down south, Navratri is celebrated as Gollu when the goddess comes home and the host invites friends and family to seek her blessings. The extraordinary custom was beautifully portrayed in Naya Din Nayi Raat, where the heroine Jaya Bhaduri meets Sanjeev Kumar as nine remarkable characters on one single night. In the climax, all the eight characters reappear to bless Jaya Bhaduri and Sanjeev Kumar at their wedding and Jaya sitting before the fire discreetly briefs her groom about all of them.
(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 4 October 2016. It is now being republished to mark Navratri.)
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