The Truth about Rajesh Khanna, seedi, saanf story - Page 5

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poppy2009 thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#41

Originally posted by: Kal El


He would indeed make a fascinating character study on film. And I recommend Rajeev Khandelwal for the role. He can act but he isn't a big star so that his stardom would threaten to overshadow the role and film (like it would with the Khans, Hrithik, etc). Plus he even has an uncanny resemblance to the young Rajesh Khanna.

The only problem is that I don't think RK's family would allow such film to happen or even if they did, I doubt they would let it be too faithful to the story of his life.

Kal,
Rajeev does look quite similar to Rajesh Khanna in his younger days! Wow...now that you mentioned it, actually the resemblance is quite close!
Rajesh Khanna's meteoric rise and sudden fall (both professionally and personally) is just the stuff that make a great story!
Somehow, I have a feeling that a film on his lifestory would be made pretty soon...there is a wave of RK nostaglia hitting the industry and the people in bollywood are always ready to cash on anything worthwhile!
Kal El thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#42
Yeah I've heard stories like these from my mom long ago. The craze RK created was unbelievable. And this was before the internet and before television was common place, etc. Even the Khans haven't seen anything like this IMO. I doubt it'll happen again with another actor.


BTW, is it bad that I'm a little disappointed that the suicide count in that article is "only" 75? 🤓
poppy2009 thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#43

Originally posted by: -ksh-

If Sharmila didnt like working with RK why wouldnt she refuse? Btw even I was thinking RK would be a good subject for a film...or maybe even a Balaji Telefilms serial with so many women and extra marital affairs thrown in.

Sharmila did the maximum films between 1969 to the mid 70's...the exact time period when Rajesh Khanna was a superstar! Its like an actress (however popular she might be!) in today's time refusing to work with Salman Khan...you know very well, where that would land her?😆 (And just imagine a time, when there was no other star other than just one!)
RK was supposed to be so powerful at that time (the power which he massively misused too) that he used to select everything from the music to the location of the shooting...there was no question of any heroine, even one as popular and talented like Sharmila refusing to work with him during that time! When Rajesh Khanna's success run was going on, there was virtually no other competion...there wasn't a single male competitor who stood a chance against him! How could Sharmila refuse to work with the only hero in bollywood?
Actually, RK did not have that many flings...I mean, nothing compared to what Amitabh did later on! RK was more notorious for his ego and other professional tantrums...the only actress he was linked with was Mumtaz, something which they both have denied. I think she was in love with him and wanted to marry, but he was too traditional minded to marry someone out of his religon. (She does sound quite besotted by RK in her interviews!) Considering how huge a star he was, the number of women in his life were actually pretty few in comparison! (Anju, Dimple, Devyani and Tina and if this Anita Advani woman is saying the truth, lets add her too!)
Rajesh Khanna sounds far more intriguing and interesting as a person than say Amitabh, who is just too diplomatic and hypocratic. RK literally lived his life on the edge and the very fact that he did not know how to handle his success (and later his failure) makes him a far more tragic / fallen hero type figure than any other actor!
Edited by poppy2009 - 13 years ago
BheegiBasanti thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#44
You have completely glossed over how Rajesh Khanna treated Anju Mahendroo just before and after he left her! Try researching that before painting him out to be a saint...he was anything but!
poppy2009 thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#45

I had no idea that Akshay produced movies too!😕 And that he took Dimple as a star in it? Yeh, kaunsi movie hai, bhai?

Coming to Akki, he shared a great rapport with RK! He was the one who paid up all of Rajesh Khanna's tax dues and cleared his massive debts! He also got his bunglow Ashirwad repainted and done up, because RK couldn't afford to maintain it anymore.
Whatever, Akshay's reasons might be for helping his father-in-law, from what I can see, he was pretty decent towards RK and it was only due to his efforts, that the entire family reconciled and Rajesh Khanna could be with his family in his last moments.
Alternatively, there have been some articles that Dimple and her daughters reconciled with Rajesh only after knowing that he has a short time to live, so that his property doesnt' get away from their hands! Don't know, what to believe and what not to believe!
PS: I personally thought that Dimple (and Anju) looked genuinly grieved at the funeral and Chautha pics of Rajesh Khanna...and so did Akshay.
Edited by poppy2009 - 13 years ago
xROBINx thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#46
Yup akshay is producing movies

2012 : Joker
2012 : Khiladi 786
2012 : Oh My God
2011 : Speedy Singhs
2010 : Khatta Meetha
Kal El thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#47
Akshay has only started producing for the last 3-4 years and I think the only movie where Dimple had a role was Patiala House IIRC. In what way was that a comeback for her? 🤔
poppy2009 thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#48
I am reading such juicy tidbits on Rajesh Khanna!
This article below mentions that in the film Aradhna, when Rajesh Khanna appears on-screen in his second role as the son, dressed in a Flight Lietutant's Uniform, many women actually got orgasms watching him!😆

'Few paid attention to Rajesh Khanna's debut film'

When Rajesh Khanna made his Hindi film debut in 1966 with Aakhri Khat, a low budget film, few paid attention. Even fewer must have imagined that the 23-year-old would go on to become the first ever superstar of the Hindi film industry and cause mass hysteria of epic, unprecedented levels.

Avijit Ghosh's piece, The God Of Romance, in the book Bollywood Top 20: Superstars of Indian Cinema charts the dramatic rise and tragic fall of the Bollywood's first superstar.

Here's presenting an excerpt from the essay:

A lot happened in Bombay cinema in 1966. Dharmendra bared his beefcake torso and scored both at the box office and with heroine Meena Kumari in Phool Aur Pathar. Shammi Kapoor, despite a protruding paunch, danced like a dervish to the boisterous tunes of R D Burman in Teesri Manzil. And lyricist Shailendra produced a classic, Teesri Kasam; the movie's failure broke his heart, took his life.

Few paid attention to Aakhri Khat, a low-budget quickie that, in hindsight, appears to be a precursor to Hollywood's cutesy 1994 box office smash, Baby's Day Out. Directed by Chetan Anand (of Neecha Nagar and Haqeeqat fame), the movie was weaved around the escapades of a fifteen-month-old wandering the city streets and vanished like smoke in the wind.

The only thing that endures in popular memory is the melodious track, Baharon mera jeewan bhi sanwaron (gorgeously rendered by the combined talents of Lata Mangeshkar, Kaifi Azmi and Khayyam), that Vividh Bharati plays to this day.

The film's hero was a twenty-three-year-old debutant named Rajesh Khanna; it was his reward for winning the United Producers Talent Contest. He played a city-based sculptor who falls in love with a gaon ki gori. She conceives after a hesitant sexual union-as innocent belles invariably did in 1960s' Hindi movies. Complications arise; they separate.

When the hero comes to know through her aakhri khat that his beloved is somewhere in the city with his child, he desperately looks around. The role required the young actor to showcase an array of emotions -- tenderness, anxiety, guilt, frustration -- and he wasn't found wanting.

But the following year when he starred in three more box­ office turkeys -- Raaz (the movie's opening credits says, G P Sippy proudly presents Rajesh Khanna), Baharon Ke Sapne (superhit director Nasir Hussain's first flop) and Aurat -- one wondered whether the judges who declared him a winner had made a serious error of judgment.

Then, much like a blizzard without advance warning, director Shakti Samanta's Aradhana arrived on 7 November 1969. A goulash of drama, romance and some of the finest music that S D Burman ever composed, the movie turned out to be a monster hit.

A month later another romantic family drama created a similar box office tsunami: director Raj Khosla's Do Raaste with Mumtaz as the young hero's leading lady. But the impact of these two movies was much more than the megabucks raked in.

Together they unleashed the Rajesh Khanna phenomenon, creating a fresh hierarchy of stardom in Bombay (now Mumbai). One shake of his head was enough for financiers to write out blank cheques for distributors to buy a movie before a single shot was canned. Producers, directors, writers -- everyone became secondary to his star power.


The route to the audience's heart is complicated and mysterious. Nobody really knows how an actor-of ordinary build, average height and a face often sprinkled with pimples-induced such messianic mania and hypnotized an entire nation.

Groping for a phrase to capture the zeitgeist, the industry finally coined a new term: superstar. Rajesh Khanna had become the omphalos of a new world order in the Hindi film industry.

Born in Amritsar on 29 December 1942, Rajesh (his original name was Jatin) was adopted by a childless couple related to his own parents who were more affluent than them and lived near Girgaum, Bombay. By all accounts, he was pampered as a child. As a teenager he was interested in theatre. When he wanted to join films, the young actor went around asking for roles in 'an MG sports car', say Dinesh Raheja and Jitendra Kothari in The Hundred Luminaries of Hindi Cinema.

Maybe it was written.

Aradhana came at a time when Bombay cinema badly needed a fresh face. Raj Kapoor, Dilip Kumar and Dev Anand had aged, though the last two were still playing lead roles. Shammi Kapoor had grown obese and Rajendra Kumar's appeal had gone stale.

True, Dharmendra, Manoj Kumar and Jeetendra had delivered runaway hits but there was still plenty of room at the top.


And when Rajesh, sporting a black Nepalese cap, rode an open jeep and serenaded heroine Sharmila Tagore with the song, Mere sapnon ki rani kab aayegi tu, a generation of girls had found their pin code to heaven. Women now in their fifties claim they got the biggest 0 of their lives when the film's second Rajesh Khanna made his entry in the famous airport scene.

Dressed in a flight-lieutenant uniform, the actor looks arresting as he walks towards girlfriend Farida Jalal, muttering words of love, and takes her in his arms. Few women wouldn't have liked to swap places with Jalal. If there was one game-changing moment in his career, this was it.

They say shrieking college girls smeared his car with lipstick, wrote letters in blood, married his photograph. Once when he had fever, a group of college students spent hours taking turns to put ice water on his forehead in a photograph, as the actor recalled in an interview to Gulf News in October 2007.


Men admired and aped everything he did. When he slapped a belt over his shirt for Binaca Geetmala's top 1971 track, 'Zindagi ik safar hai suhana', it spawned a million imitators.

His round-collared guru kurtas, an intelligent fashion ploy that also hid an expanding waistline, too became a rage. Even kids, especially after Haathi Mere Saathi (1971), adored him. His smile sold toothpastes (Macleans), a rare case of celebrity endorsement those days.

Navin Nischol, a star in his own right, had a first-hand experience of the frenzy. He told the Star and Style in the September-October 1980 issue: 'Believe me, the kind of mass hysteria he aroused in his day, I don't think even Amitabh has seen. And I was a witness to it. I had gone for a wedding reception at the Taj. Kaka [Rajesh was nicknamed Kaka much before a Brazilian footballer got that name] was coming out of the hall while I was going in.

We crossed each other on the way, and-this is the incredible part-the whole damn hall walked out behind that guy! It was such a stunning sight-that whole sea of humanity simply following him as he made his way out. It was unforgettable... Look I'm getting goose pimples just talking about it.'


That's why Jack Pizzey's 1973 BBC film documentary on Rajesh Khanna, Bombay Superstar, introduces him 'as the biggest star of the biggest film industry of the world.'

He is described as someone with 'the charisma of Rudolph Valentino and arrogance of Napoleon'. You can understand where the last bit came from: the filmstar cancelled five appointments with the makers of the documentary -- including inviting the crew home and promptly forgetting-before giving them audience.

He was acting big because, strictly going by box office statistics, he was the biggest thing to have happened to mainstream Hindi cinema. His finest hits came with Sharmila Tagore, Mumtaz and Asha Parekh (in that order), although overall, he did a dozen movies with Hema Malini too. Statistics put out by Boxofficeindia.com show that between 1969 and 1971, Rajesh Khanna delivered superhits by the sackful.

In 1969, apart from Aradhana and Do Raaste, the year's two top grossers, Bandhan was another big box office smash, while even Doli and Ittefaq, a songless murder mystery, earned profits. In 1970 the superstar had four of the year's top-ten winners: Sachaa jhutha, Aan Milo Sajna, Kati Patang and Safar.

That year The Train and Anand also earned profits.

The next year he bettered himself delivering four of the year's five biggest hits: Haathi Mere Saathi, Dushman, Maryada and Andaz.

Among the other of his films released that year, Amar Prem finished eighth. Everything he touched turned to box office gold: The dream run was finally broken when Mehboob Ki Mehndi (1971) collapsed at the cash counters.


Few top actors till then, with the exception of Ashok Kumar and Dilip Kumar, had endeared themselves in equal measure to the masses, the classes as well as the critics.

Rajesh Khanna found that fine balance. In his early days, he displayed a penchant for intelligent, off-beat movies such as lttefaq and Aavishkar (1974).

Barring Dharmendra, no other big hero took such risks in the late 1960s and early 1970s. There was symmetry to his performances in Khamoshi (1969), Safar, Anand and Amar Prem that won him critical accolades. He surprisingly got the Filmfare Best Actor Award for Sachaa Jhutha and, more deservingly, the following year for Anand.

In the awards ceremony held in 1973, despite two impressive performances in Dushman and Amar Prem, he lost out to Manoj Kumar's thoroughly forgettable Be-imaan. That was also the year when Hema Malini's Seeta Aur Geeta was preferred to Meena Kumari's Pakeezah for the Best Actress Award.

And incredibly, Be-imaan also swept the Best Film, Best Director and Best Music categories over contenders from Pakeezah, Shor, Amar Prem. So much for Filmfare being India's answer to the Oscars!


Songs were the soul of Rajesh Khanna's movies. And he enacted them in his trademark style: rhythmically shaking the head and gently lowering the eyelids as if offering an invitation: His hands would often go up in the air as if striking a mudra. Even flops such as Mehboob Ki Mehndi, Mere Jeevan Sathi (1972), Mehbooba (1976) and Aashiq Hoon Baharon Ka (1977) had chartbusting tracks.

His career thrived on some of the most popular numbers composed by R D Burman -- in films like Kati Patang, Amar Prem, Namak Haraam (1973), Aap Ki Kasam (1974) -- and Laxmikant-Pyarelal-in movies like Do Raaste, Haathi Mere Saathi, Dushman. The two music directors, along with Kishore Kumar whose singing career was revived by Aradhana, synergized Rajesh's movies. They invariably reserved their best for the superstar. Once the slide began, the songs ceased to be as great as before. Without them, Rajesh Khanna became an actor without his best lines.

Romance was his core competence. As the 1973 BBC documentary noted, 'Rajesh has found more ways of implying love than the Kama Sutra has of making it.' But the truth is that the actor brought no revolution to the art; he just gently tweaked the existing formulas.

He blended the playfulness of Dev Anand with a fraction of Dilip Kumar's intensity; to this he added his own charm and style. The characters he played had a touch of poet-philosophers. The forest officer of Kati Patang, with eyes clearer than spring water, recites poems to a 'widow he has fallen in love with. As a man, the actor evoked a melange of possibilities. He could be a sensitive lover, a naughty but reliable husband, an eye-candy neighbour, an indulgent brother, even a great lover, if you wanted a 'Roop tera mastana moment. He could be intense without being suffocating.


Which is why few actors profited more from a broken heart. It is easy to empathize with the smiling-laughing cancer patient Anand. The melancholia of Anand babu in Amar Prem seeps to the audience.

You understand why the bhadralok visits the brothels. And you know he is not lying when he tells the golden­hearted prostitute (played by Sharmila Tagore), 'Tumne is kamre ko mandir bana diya.' There is a style with which he says: I hate tears. Rajesh's acting was defined by style.

He wooed both urban and rural India, playing characters from the city as well as the hinterland sometimes both in the same film as in Manmohan Desai's Sachaa Jhutha.

He looked dapper in finely tailored suits; he could also carry off a dhoti-kurta-tabeez with ease. Just watch him play the country bumpkin in Bandhan (written by Salim-Javed) and dance to the paisa vasool track, 'Bin badra ke bijuriya kaise chamke'.


In his biggest hits, the characters he generally played belonged to the comfortable side of middle class: the flight lieutenant of Aradhana, the forest officer of Kati Patang, the bhadralok of Amar Premo Some characters he played also came from the underclass.

In the title role of Bawarchi (1972), he cooked food and served love in the mode of a proto-Munnabhai. The honest clerk of Apna Desh (1972), the rustic musician of Sachaa Jhutha, the unemployed youth of Baharon Ke Sapne, the working-class hero of Namak Haraam were again lower-middle-class representations.

But Rajesh's strength lay in his ability to represent things he didn't even seek to. In the best tradition of the 1970s' hero, he was always pro-poor, a do-gooder.

In Aan Milo Sajna, he pulls a horse-cart out of the mud to help an old gentleman and his five daughters. That's typical of the screen image he carefully fashioned.


Edited by poppy2009 - 13 years ago
TheRager thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#49
@Poppy: Akshay has been trying to get RK to patch up with Dimple for a while now. Its not something recent. He has tried bonding with his father in law I think soon after his wedding with Twinkle. Even his intentions was to save his wife's inheritence atleast he ensured that RK was surrounded by his family and well-wishers in his last days. I am sure he died a safisfied man. And I dont think this would have been possible without Akshay's persistent efforts.
Coming to Ms. Advani even if what she claims is absolutely true after reading about RK in the past few days I think he would want his daughters only to inherit his property rather than anyone else.
Btw about Big B he seems to have led a colorful life atleast in his younger days. But no one in the media absolutely speaks about that. He has reached sainthood now.
dodosri thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#50
even i also consider him the GREATEST OF ALL...HE is my fav...i jus wanted to say...why people,other actors,filmmakers are talking about him now????????when he is not even here to listen good words about him...i m 20...in the past 7 yrs...i did nt even heard his name...but 2 ys ago when i statred listening old melodies...and saw AMAR PREM ,...i realised That he is a GEM...and old is gOLD...then my father told me about him...and my father used to copy his hairstyle and all...then i saw most of his movies..ARADHANA..ANand,,,kati patang..bandhan...and got mesmerized by his acting...ways of emoting..eyes smile...other actors are no way near him...HE is certainly EPITOME of acting...but what i feel bad about is how his near ones..collegues..treated him...as far as i know...when he was alive...no actor ever accepted the he is gr8test...but when he died...suddenly...everyone started..tweeting...about his gr8ness..dad told me..how every director..like shakti samanta...hrishikesh mukherjee...yash chopra...left him...when his movies statrted flopping...nd everyone...is coming to his funeral...where were they at the time of his lonliness...???

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