Kolkata
January 26, 2018
Expressing her admiration for Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray,
veteran actor and theatre artist Shabana Azmi on Friday said she would have
loved to act in all the films Ray made.
"Every single one of them...
Anything he would offer me," Shabana said at a session on Ray's film "Shataranj
Ke Khiladi" (1977) at the Tata Steel Kolkata Literary Meet here.
Shabana,
who herself acted in the film based on Munshi Premchand's short story, said she
was overwhelmed to get an offer from Ray at such an early stage of her career.
"I was so overwhelmed that the great Satyajit Ray was offering me anything
at all. I put down the phone and picked it back up and put it down again, to
actually believe that it was Ray talking to me," she exclaimed.
"I was
very young then. I had just entered the film industry and I must say that I
wasn't even familiar with the story except for the surface because Premchand was
somebody so revered that time. So what I concentrated on was the only three days
that I worked in the film."
Talking about Ray's mastery in cinema, she
said the innovative change at the end of the film was so wonderful that it
evoked discussions on how much creative freedom can be given to a filmmaker
without destroying the essence of a book.
Reminiscent of her first
interaction with the prolific filmmaker on the film set, Shabana explained how
Ray's suggestions and thinking fascinated her.
"When I reached the studio
on the first day, I was in jeans and T-shirt. Ray shook my hand, said get into
your costume, then we will talk.
"I did not have the courage to ask him,
why wasn't he saying anything to me? Then when I got into my costume, I realised
that the costume demanded a certain posture with which I sat.
"Then he
came into the room and said in those jeans and I don't think I would have been
able to communicate with you about what I want from the character. I thought
that was fantastic," she said.
Though her screen time in the film was
less, the actress said she considers herself to be lucky to have made the cut.