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The Big B Interview, Part
I: 'I have never been confident about my career'
Amitabh Bachchan: The man behind the legends unspools his life and times
to Vir Sanghvi The Bachchan Interview: The Big B Interview, Part I: 'I
have never been confident about my career' The Big B Interview, Part II:
'What has age got to do with acting?' The Big B Interview, Part III:
'Beggars can't be choosers' The Big B Interview, Part IV: 'I don't have
many friends' The Big B Interview, Part V: 'I will leave when I feel that
people don't want me' May 17, 1999
There was a time when Amitabh Bachchan gave no interviews at all. Then
suddenly he began giving too many. Any journalist who called, any TV crew
that happened to be passing, any publication that had the time, they all
got their interviews. The trouble with these interviews was that they were
all the same. The great man would sit in his office and listen patiently
as he was asked the same question for the 100th time. Then he would offer
a quick response on auto-pilot. You never had any sense that his heart was
in it or that any of the interviews actually reached the real Amitabh
Bachchan. Nor did the interviews help with his image. Before Mrityudata,
his comeback film was released, the media raised expectations to a fever
pitch. When Mrityudata bombed, they wrote him off. It was all over, they
said, and arranged the facts to fit that scenario. When Major Saab was a
respectable hit, the media focussed on its poor performance in the Bombay
territory, and ignored its success elsewhere. When Bade Miyan Chote Miyan
became a super-hit, this success had to be acknowledged, but the
acceptance was grudging. The film, the Press said, was a hit only because
of Govinda, quite forgetting that Govinda had never had a hit of this
magnitude before in his career.
Several months ago, Bachchan stopped giving full-length interviews
again. Vir Sanghvi had to coax him into granting this hour-long chat. But
the effort was worth it. Here, at last, is the real Amitabh Bachchan: sad,
angry, reflective, vulnerable and all too human.
Major Saab was a hit. Bade Miyan Chote Miyan was a hit. And even Lal
Badshah - which is not a great film by any standards - seems to have done
well in the interiors. Are you now feeling more confident about your
career?
I have never really been confident about my career at any stage. So at
this stage I feel very hesitant to say what the fortunes of my career are.
But I am happy that I have traversed the 30 years of my career.
Are you saying that you've never been confident? There was a phase when
you gave hit after hit. Were you pessimistic then?
Yes. Every day I used to think tomorrow is the end of the world and of
my career.
Is this your nature? Or do you know something that we don't?
No, I quite honestly felt there were a lot of shortcomings in what I
was doing and how I was looking. I never believed the product would
succeed.
After the release of Khuda Gawah in 1991, there was a gap till the
release of Mrityudata. Why did you stop signing films?
I had been working continuously at a feverish pace, and I felt that I
was stagnating - I feel I've been stagnating for 30 years, but that's
another issue - and I felt I had reached a stage where I needed to take a
break. I just stopped signing films. I just did what appealed to me. If I
decided to travel, and if I liked sleeping it out then I slept it out.
That was my attitude. Then, after a break of five years, I got back to
looking at what I must be doing. There were other things that I had
noticed. During those five years I travelled a lot and in some of the
cities I visited, there was a kind of immediate recognition, whether it
was Egypt or the Middle-East, or Russia or Africa. This kind of surprised
me. It wasn't so much a reflection on me. It was a reflection on the Hindi
film industry. People didn't know me by name they knew me by my film name.
They sang my songs when they saw me on the street, and came up to me and
called me Vijay, for instance. I felt that if there is so much recognition
of this medium and this industry in totally non-traditional regions of the
world, why is it that something is not being done to market this or to
promote it at a much larger scale? This is when I thought of the idea of
forming a corporation much like international corporations worldwide to
get a kind of professionalism and a kind of corporate attitude to the
entertainment industry in this country and to be able to exploit it in all
parts of the world. That was the attraction. That really brought me back
again.
You are saying that you came back to acting partly because you wanted
to set up ABCL?
That's right.
Tell me more about ABCL. The intention was to bring in some kind of
corporate discipline into an industry that is really huge. Till now,
Indian cinema has kept itself within Indian shores, and I felt that if
there was so much interest outside India, why wasn't it being exploited?
I'm going to quote you the public perception of ABCL: it was a huge money
making enterprise for you.
Was that the intention?
Never, ever. On the contrary, the idea was to bring some semblance of
professionalism, some discipline in this very undisciplined region.
What about the ads you did for BPL? Who got that money?
The profile of ABCL was that it was meant to be involved in film
production, distribution, TV software, audio, event management and allied
profiles. The investors felt that I was an actor and a brand that could be
exploited to put money back into the company.
Are you saying that when you did Mrityudata for ABCL, you didn't get
paid for it? When you did the BPL ad campaign...
That was what the corporation was. I was the brand that was earning
money for the corporation. Every ad I did, whether it was BPL, Pepsi or
anything else, it went into the corporation. I didn't get any money.
Are you saying that you did the ads because ABCL needed capital?
Absolutely.
Why haven't you said this before?
Nobody has asked me.
The Bachchan interview continues: 'What has age to do with acting?'
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