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Why Manoj Kumar doesn't make movies anymore

Last updated on: July 24, 2021 19:12 IST

'Sadly, I don't have the comfort of working with Manoj Kumar the actor anymore.'
'He is capable of telling home truths in the most understated manner.'
'So I've to select from the stars today.'

IMAGE: A poster for Manoj Kumar's Shor. Photograph: NFAIOfficial/Twitter
 

Manoj Kumar turned 84 on July 24 and Subhash K Jha locates an interview from his archives to mark the occasion.

Why haven't you directed a film for so long?

I haven't been able to make any film because of my back problem.

Do you miss working with like-minded actors?

Sadly, I don't have the comfort of working with Manoj Kumar the actor anymore. He is capable of telling home truths in the most understated manner. So I've to select from the stars today.

Akshay Kumar is a big fan of yours and many see him as the Bharat that you played.

He has great respect for me. In his film with Katrina Kaif, Namaste London, he said, 'If you want to know what India is all about, take a look at a DVD of Purab Aur Pachchim, and you'll know. In fact, Purab Aur Pachchim is the mother of many subsequent films.

You worked with some of the finest talents.

I have an eye for talent. Do you know in Shor when Sharmila Tagore ditched me -- she was supposed to play my wife's role that Nanda finally played -- I had offered that role to Smita Patil. She politely told me she was not interested in acting at that point of time. God has given me honest eyes and pure ears.

How did Manoj Kumar the star become a director?

I never intended to be a director in the first place. I became one by default when during Shaheed I had to direct the film unofficially. Then Lal Bahadur Shastri raised the slogan of Jai Jawan Jai Kisan. That's how I made Upkar. I give credit for my success to my parents.

Your parents must have been very proud of your achievements.

My father was a poet-philosopher. I came to Bombay with two targets. One was to be a hero, the other was to make 3 lakh rupees, 1 lakh each for my parents and 1 lakh for my siblings.

When I had left home in Delhi in 1956 to come to Bombay to become a hero, my father gave me a letter. In that letter, he said, 'My blood can never commit blunders, only mistakes'. I made mistakes in my career, but not blunders.

Why haven't you acted or directed for so many years?

I am not a greedy film person even as an actor. While my contemporaries Dharmendra and Shashi Kapoor acted in nearly 300 films each, I've done hardly 35 films in my entire career.

What went wrong with your last directorial venture?

According to me, Kalyug Aur Ramayan was my best script. But because it went through a lot of changes it lost its sheen.

The moral police took offence. Some people in our society specialise in stopping creative people from doing what they do. The censor board threatened to ban the picture.

I changed the title from Kalyug Ki Ramayan to Kalyug Aur Ramayan. The film was not the same any longer.

You've directed masterpieces like Upkar, Shor, Purab Aur Paschchim and Roti Kapada Aur Makaan. Which is your favourite among your films?

Shor in 1972. It was about a man and his son. I remember I had gone to sign Jaya Bhaduriji after seeing her in Guddi. I told her Shor is about a father and son. The son can't speak and the father pines to hear him. But the day that the son speaks the father can't hear any more.

No Indian film had been made on a such a thin storyline. And that is the only film I directed in which I was not named Bharat.

Shor's message on noise pollution was way ahead of its times.

Do you know they took one sequence from Shor and made an Iranian film in 1987 called The Cyclist which won numerous awards?

Shor was the first film that I edited myself. The great Hrishikesh Mukherjee, who was the chairperson of the editors jury, gave me the Filmfare award for best editor.

Do you feel isolated from today's cinema?

I am not brooding about it. But when I read the interviews of actors whom I gave major breaks to and they don't even mention me, dukh to hota hai.

Feature Presentation: Mahipal Soni/ Rediff.com

SUBHASH K JHA