The 'invisible' man was in the audience.
On stage, a woman
grappled with the choices she’d made. “Yeh kaisi uljhan?” she asks. The
audience watched as the dilemmas unfolded and he, the invisible man, was
among them, submerged in darkness, wondering if this was the world for
which he was destined.
Vijaydan Detha's play Uljhan is
about a woman who falls in love with a feral man and leaves her husband
to live with him. It was while watching a performance of Uljhan
in New Delhi’s Mandi House, years ago, that Nawazuddin Siddiqui's tryst
with acting began. Today, he is pitched as the anti-hero, a method
actor, and someone who paddles comfortably in the mainstream and
alternative cinema in India, holding his own in the presence of Salman
Khan (not once, but twice, in Kick and Bajrangi Bhaijaan).
And now the trailers of Manjhi – The Mountain Man have been released.
The 'invisible' man was in the audience.
On
stage, a woman grappled with the choices she’d made. “Yeh kaisi
uljhan?” she asks. The audience watched as the dilemmas unfolded and he,
the invisible man, was among them, submerged in darkness, wondering if
this was the world for which he was destined.
Vijaydan Detha's play Uljhan
is about a woman who falls in love with a feral man and leaves her
husband to live with him. It was while watching a performance of Uljhan
in New Delhi’s Mandi House, years ago, that Nawazuddin Siddiqui's tryst
with acting began. Today, he is pitched as the anti-hero, a method
actor, and someone who paddles comfortably in the mainstream and
alternative cinema in India, holding his own in the presence of Salman
Khan (not once, but twice, in Kick and Bajrangi Bhaijaan).
And now the trailers of Manjhi – The Mountain Man have been released.
Siddiqui
plays a man who pits himself against nature, a relentless mountain.
Based on a true story – of a man who chipped away at a mountain for 20
years, fuelled by his love – Siddiqui is in his element in this film.
“That's the toughest role so far. I stayed in the village for one and a
half months,” says Siddiqui of Dashrath Manjhi.
Short, lean,
dark-complexioned and a cigarette dangling from his dark chapped lips,
Siddiqui is complete antithesis of a Bollywood hero, and not just in
terms of his appearance. He has no pedigree – Siddiqui is from a village
in Uttar Pradesh and comes from a poor family. It took him 14 long
years to be noticed. There were days when he could have given up. Now he
travels business class, is chased by the media, and gets invited to
events where other speakers include Prime Minister
Back in 2007, Siddiqui was noticed in Black Friday, written and directed by Anurag Kashyap. This was followed by films like New York, Peepli Live, Kahaani, DevD, Paan Singh Tomar, Firaaq, Patang, Chittagong and Miss Lovely.
At the 65th International Cannes Film Festival, Kashyap’s two part Gangs of Wasseypur
and Ashim Ahluwalia’s Miss Lovely, both starring Siddiqui, were
applauded. Finally, everyone noticed this thin, short man who may have
been from nowhere in particular, but was intent upon becoming someone
significant in Bollywood. There is much ugliness in the Indian film
industry. There is intense competition and there are petty fallouts. He
is still learning his way. “Even if you fall, you must hit the floor
with grace,” says Siddiqui.
In one scene in Uljhan,
the woman cuts the feral man's hair, his beard; she teaches him how to
speak, read and write, to literally stand on two legs. The man goes on
to conquer kingdoms. She becomes pregnant with his child, but the feral
man's desires have grown beyond her. He is attracted to others. The
woman wonders why she even made him the man that he is now and left her
world to be with him. The play asks us to consider the ambition and
drive that characterizes so much of what defines success. Siddiqui has
no dilemma on this account. “Desire knows no limits,” he says. “For
myself, I only need two rotis and maybe a cigarette after that. That's
all.”
He doesn't want to be inaccessible. But there are certain
things an actor must do, he says. “An actor must remain exclusive,” is
Siddiqui’s conclusion from his recently-discovered stardom. Now, though,
Siddiqui enjoys a kind of exposure that is perhaps unthinkable for
someone with his beginnings. He has graced the pages of fashion
magazines, dressed in ornate suits, and looking every bit an aristocrat.
On the sets of The Lunchbox,
a few passersby called him a junior artist. He only smiled and
corrected their misconception: “I am the leading man.” It isn’t a
presumptuous statement from the actor. Siddiqui is quick to explain that
he had signed The Lunchbox before Gangs of Wasseypur.
He
learned to give autographs -- at least the way stars do – only in 2013.
“At first I used to give my signature,” he says. “Then I saw others
writing other things like 'love' and 'best' and now I know.” His
autographs are disjointed. Words do not follow trajectory. They are
often scattered and confused. Like the actor. His rise in Bollywood has
challenged longstanding notions of who can be an actor.
That play Uljhan
made him want to be an actor even though at 5 feet 6 inches, he didn't
fit the bill. He is dark, and skinny. No toned muscles, no fabulous abs.
During those years when he lingered around, hoping for small roles for a
few hundred rupees in commercials, he was mostly roped in to enact a
victim, a thug, or sometimes just to fill space. In most such roles, he
would try and avert his face when the camera panned to him, because he
desired so much more.
He was born in Budhana, in Muzzaffarnagar
district of Uttar Pradesh. His parents were poor and the roof dripped
during the monsoon. He hadn't thought of acting then. Those weren't
options available to the poor, he says. All that mattered was getting
out, finding a job and leading a life of less deprivation. Siddiqui
attended college, studied pharmacy, and could have been a chemist – but
for Uljhan. That's when he decided to go to National School of Drama in
Delhi.
Once, his father saw Siddiqui getting beaten up in a film (Munnabhai MBBS).
He switched off the television and called his son. In their small
village, it was shameful that all Siddiqui had amounted to was getting
beaten up in front of the world.
Today though, Nawazuddin Siddiqui is being celebrated.
For
years, he would act in solitude. Not even in front of a mirror. For six
years, when he had a lot of time to himself, he would try and act in
his room for hours. “I have never acted in front of the mirror,” he
says. “When you look into the mirror, it destroys the inner self. You
only see the outer and it distances you removes you from the inner,” he
says. In life, he had to learn to dare the mirror. “In the beginning
there's frustration, then there is depression, and then there is
nothing. Nothing affects me,” he says.
At Nizamuddin Dargah in
Delhi, during a photo shoot with Delhi-based designer Arjun Saluja,
Siddiqui effortlessly slips into the character of someone who has come
to the pilgrimage site to seek unity with self. Saluja stands on the
side, marveling at the ease with which the actor owns the fashionable
ensembles, inspired by shrines and spaces sacred to Saluja.
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