Bollywood reels from deaths of 2 stars in 2 days

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Bollywood reels from deaths of 2 stars in 2 days
Irrfan Khan in New York 2012. Khan, the celebrated Indian actor who became a crossover star in Hollywood, died on Wednesday, April 29, 2020, in a Mumbai, India, hospital. He was 53. Khan started his career playing small roles on Indian television in the 1980s. He found critical and commercial success later in life, with roles in movies like “Slumdog Millionaire,” “Life of Pi” and “The Namesake.” Chad Batka/The New York Times.

by Jeffrey Gettleman



NEW DELHI (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- In less than 24 hours, Bollywood has lost two legends, back to back.

On Wednesday morning, Irrfan Khan, a beloved actor who broke through to Hollywood and seemed to resonate especially well with fans, died at age 53. Khan had cancer and was admitted to a hospital in Mumbai for a colon infection last week.

Then, Thursday morning, India was shocked to learn of the death of Rishi Kapoor. Kapoor, 67, was a Bollywood giant, a handsome, charming matinee idol who starred in dozens of films in the 1970s and ’80s, and hailed from an illustrious film family.

Kapoor found out he had leukemia in 2018 and was admitted to a hospital in Mumbai on Wednesday, but an exact cause of death was not immediately given.

“It seems like we’re in the midst of a nightmare,” tweeted Akshay Kumar, one of Bollywood’s most successful actors.

“One blow after another,” Ajay Devgn, another star, posted.

India is under a strict coronavirus lockdown — and already beleaguered by fear and hunger — the country has had no choice but to turn to social media to express its grief.

Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp have been deluged with tributes and condolences from all walks of life — from the prime minister, other leading politicians, fans, fellow stars and lots of ordinary people, many of whom have shared clips of the actors in their primes.

Television stations have run wall-to-wall coverage. All day Thursday, Kapoor kept appearing in the richer hues of 1970s film stock — singing, dancing and winking across the screen of nostalgic Bollywood classics.

Under the lockdown rules, large gatherings have been banned, including funerals. So when Khan was buried in Mumbai, where he lived, it was a quiet affair. A few famous directors and actors stood at his graveside with masks over their faces.

“Many people would have wanted to say goodbye, but this is how Irrfan would have wanted it," said Vishal Bhardwaj, a director who attended the funeral, which was held Wednesday. “He never made a show about anything. Success never changed him.’’

The two stars were so different. Khan, who was featured as a police inspector in the hit “Slumdog Millionaire,” was an actor’s actor. Known for his intensity, studiousness and approachability, he came from humble roots. His father sold tires.

He was not considered as classically handsome as a typical movie star, and many Indians felt an affinity with him — a fine actor (he has been described as India’s Philip Seymour Hoffman) who was also a regular guy.

Film directors said Khan reliably undersold himself, asking for less money for parts than he could have commanded. And to help out his filmmaking friends, he sometimes took on roles that other actors avoided.

He gravitated toward Shakespeare, starring in “Maqbool,” a retelling of “Macbeth," and playing a ghostlike figure, a prisoner who had survived a notorious torture chamber, in “Haider,” a film inspired by “Hamlet” but set in Kashmir.

Many of his friends — and his fans — feel that destiny cheated him, plucking away his life at a relatively young age, as he was reaching the peak of his career after decades of working his way up.

“He was perhaps one of the best actors we had,” said Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, a filmmaker who runs a film preservation foundation. “But beyond that, he was a lovely person.”

“Just look at the posts on social media,” Dungarpur said. “These are not fan photographs. They are people who had worked with Irrfan, who had done something with Irrfan, who connected with Irrfan in a very different way than that of most superstars.”

Khan grew up in a Muslim family and was laid to rest in a Muslim graveyard. In recent years, the divide between India’s Muslim minority and its Hindu majority has widened and grown more treacherous.

But what was striking Wednesday, as the news of Khan’s death spread, was that for once, it was as though religious differences did not matter. Several commentators said it was like the old India. Tributes for Khan flooded in from all directions, including from Hindu nationalist politicians.

Mihir Fadnavis, a film critic and filmmaker, said: “Irrfan had this humbleness and the image of the common man, which connected people to him. He put himself in people’s shoes, and they could see themselves on TV screens.”

“When as amazing a person as this passes away, the whole structure of politics and religious differences goes away,” he added. “It doesn’t exist anymore, even if it’s temporary.”

The outpouring of grief has been perhaps even more enormous for Kapoor.

He was filmmaking royalty. His grandfather, Prithviraj, was a pioneer in India’s pre-independence film industry, and ever since the Kapoor clan has played a starring role in one of India’s greatest exports and stamps on the world: Bollywood.

Kapoor’s father, Raj, was also a film star. So is his son, Ranbir, and several nieces.

One Indian news channel lauded him with the headline: “Unparalleled, Unmatched, Forever.”

Kapoor acted practically his entire life, appearing as a toddler in his father’s films (his father was also a director) and continuing work until just recently. His Bollywood heyday was several decades ago when he sang and danced as one romantic hero after the next.

His last important film was “Mulk,” a 2018 courtroom drama written and directed by Anubhav Sinha that tackled the rising Islamophobia in India.

Kapoor played a lawyer, the patriarch of a large Muslim family, and delivered a memorable performance as his character fights for the honor of his family after his nephew is charged with being a terrorist.

Taapsee Pannu, who co-starred in the film, tweeted: “That laugh, that sense of humor, the honesty and even the bully he was, will be missed. No one like you #RishiKapoor.”

Kapoor was cremated Thursday afternoon in Mumbai, where he lived. That, too, was a small ceremony.

The one-two punch of Khan’s and Kapoor’s deaths hits an already fatigued and dispirited India. The country, like everywhere else, has been feeling the weight of the coronavirus.

For the past five weeks, 1.3 billion Indians have been under one of the strictest lockdowns in the world, with just about everyone instructed to stay indoors. Many emerge only a few times a week to buy food. All airlines have been grounded, train service has stopped and most businesses shut.

India has reported around 34,000 infections and 1,100 deaths, still relatively low for such a populous country. But with testing also low, public health experts suspect that the virus is lurking unseen.

The lockdown has thrown legions of poor people out of work. Many live hand-to-mouth and have no way to feed their families except for the charity of others.

So the passing of a pair of cherished actors has shifted the focus, for a moment. For hours, television news channels took a break from shots of masked people trudging out of hospitals or police officers blocking roads to show the two at the top of their careers in films like “Bobby,” Kapoor’s breakout hit, or “Slumdog Millionaire,” with Khan, which became a worldwide sensation.Still, many people said they felt especially sad that the two men were sent off without a befitting crowd of those who loved and adored them.

“My Chintu darling has gone,” wrote Simi Garewal, a famous actress, on Twitter, using one of Kapoor’s pet names. “My dearest friend … my co-star … my playmate. The one who used to make me laugh till I cried! Now there are only tears. No last goodbye. No funeral. No consoling embraces. Silence. Emptiness. Grief.”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










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