Bollywood | Features | Interviews | Masala | News | Previews | Reviews | Screensavers | Galleria | Wallpapers
Profiles | Celebrity Corner | Music Mania | Southern Spice | Television
[]
  Movies –> Interviews –> Full Story

 




I have never seen Abhishek give an autograph in a standoffish or brusque manner - Boman Irani

Courtesy: IndiaFM
Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Boman Irani Say Boman Irani and the word 'awesome' comes to mind. He's the actor who made you laugh endlessly with his quirky characters in commercial cinema like Munnabhai MBBS, Main Hoon Na and Home Delivery and at the same time, held you spellbound with his effortless ride through myriad of emotions, from intense to frivolous, as he did in an experimental film like Let's Talk. Here's Boman Irani, in between his umpteen films, talking about the eagerly awaited Abhishek Bachchan-starrer, Bluffmaster.

Do you bluff in the film?
No, I don't bluff in the film. I'm the only character that is as straight as can be. I play a doc who gets bluffed on by the con man, Roy (Abhishek) but he's grateful to Roy for saving his money and tells him to come to him anytime he's in trouble. 'Zukham se leke Aids tak I'll cure you of anything.' And one day Roy does need the doc's help. The doctor is Roy's moral shoulder and guides him like a father.

Sounds serious! Is there going to be a laugh track with your role?
A laugh track is a conscious effort to provide comic relief. I am of the belief that sometimes the most serious segments can get you laugh because of the quirks in the character. Many scenes in Munnabhai MBBS, for example, are serious scenes. He's angry and you laugh, I don't think he was trying to make you laugh. The moment you try to make people laugh it's not funny. In Bluffmaster, the doc is the conman's conscience, but at the same time he has his little mannerisms. If you find that funny, then good!

You have worked with Amitabh Bachchan in Waqt and now you are working with Abhishek Bachchan. What has been your observation of the father and son duo?
They are so similar and yet so different. Abhishek is his own man, has his own personality, and yet there is so much of Mr. Bachchan in him. He's extremely well mannered, a real gentleman, and I have never seen him give an autograph in a standoffish or brusque manner. He always respects people that approach him. I find him so well brought up as a child (I don't know why I am calling him a child; he's a big man) he's so much fun, focused, and enjoying himself. Working with Mr. Bachchan is like working with an institution. Now what can I say? In Waqt we were going for each other's neck and now we are once again together in Vidhu Vinod Chopra's Eklavya.

How would you describe Bluffmaster?
BM is a charming film. It's got Abhishek who I am fond of. Riteish is also sweet and playing a charming character. During the script reading, when I was told that Riteish is doing the part, I said to myself, 'Ya of course, Ritesh... nobody else suits it better.' Priyanka, who again I am fond of (and worked with in Waqt), is so gentle and well behaved, sweet and kind... Honestly, this is a breed that is so focused in what they do, including the director Rohan Sippy. He knows what he wants and at the same time enjoys what he's doing. I am proud to be a part of BM even though my role is that not that big, but it's a key role and has remained so even after the first draft of the script was shown to me a year and a half ago.

Still from Bluffmaster You were first a photographer before taking on acting full time. Do you still pursue photography?
Photography was a hobby. But when I took it on as a career I took on another hobby and that is theatre. When theatre took precedence over photography, I took photography back as my hobby. I cannot do without photography - it's an important part of my growth as an actor. It made me understand lighting, lensing, and the movements of the camera. When you understand lens you understand to perform to the magnification of the lens. If it's a wide lens I'm going to shake my head that much more, if it's a tele lens I'm going to shake my head that much less. Cinema acting is far more technical than theatre acting; it's as we know a director's medium and theatre an actor's medium. But I love my photography and I carry my camera wherever I go. I couldn't have asked for more - doing both my hobbies and being paid for at least one of them.

Any message to your fans beyond India?
India and its films are now a global presence. The craze for Indian films around the world is exhilarating and all this has been due the audiences abroad. This is a far cry from my days as a youngster when watching Hindi films was not considered to hep. Today watching Hindi films is cool. We don't need an Ingmar Bergman. Our filmmakers have been doing a good job of making people laugh and helping them forget their worries in the two and half hours spent in the theatres. And if Indian films are cool today it's all because of the Indians abroad who encouraged and recognised the efforts of our filmmakers. God bless you and thank you for your support.


Send in your views on this interview

Also on Movies...
    Akshay-Deepika do martial...
    Niki, not now
    Planning a remake
    Desi film joins UN fight...
    Bollywood goes moist-eyed...
    TV stars go ga-ga over Shah...
    Young Tanay gives Ruslaan a...
    Where have the good old...



Recent Interviews
Mahesh Bhatt narrated Zakhm to me three years before the actual shoot and insisted that I do the film no matter what
Both Amitabh and Arjun stand out tall in Thailand as all the people out there are short - Bunty Walia
Kidnapping is a much larger business than even drugs - Amitabh Bachchan







More

Search Keywords