This Article is From Sep 02, 2014

Rohini Hattangadi: Shooting For Gandhi Was A Revelation

Rohini Hattangadi: Shooting For Gandhi Was A Revelation

Gandhi was Rohini's first international film.

Mumbai:

Actress Rohini Hattangadi (Kasturba Gandhi) says working with the late director Richard Attenborough in Gandhi was a revelation for her. She said that the Oscar-winning British film director gave a bound script to everyone and wouldn't "allow us to deviate" from it. Mr Attenborough died at the age of 90 on Sunday.

"I still remember vividly how I got Kasturba's role in Gandhi. At that time I was doing Marathi theatre when the casting agent Dolly Thakore contacted me to meet Mr Attenborough ," said Rohini.

"He was going from Delhi to London via Mumbai. Luckily, I was in Mumbai that day. I met him for an hour. We spoke about theatre and then he left. I later got to know he had so many other actresses for Kasturba's role. So I didn't really bank on getting the role. But the very next day Dolly called to say I had to leave for London to shoot immediately," she added.

It wasn't easy for Rohini to pack her bags and hop on the plane, but thankfully things fell into place. "I was booked for the coming weeks for my play. I didn't even have a passport. So how was I supposed to leave for London all of a sudden? But Dolly said she'd help me with all the travel details. In eight days, I got a temporary passport and the producer of my play was very accommodating. Everything just fell into place."

Gandhi was Rohini's first international film. "Shooting for Gandhi was a revelation for me. We were all given scripts and then we were asked to do our homework. I searched for books on Kasturba, but I found only two books, that's all. So I had to rely on my own skills.

"At the same time Mr Attenborough did not allow us to deviate from the script. He was very clear on how he wanted my English pronunciation. He didn't want me to put on an accent. At the same time, he didn't want any Maharashtrian or Marathi pronunciation in my speech. Since I had gone to a Marathi-language school, I had to take elocution classes as preparation for my part as Kasturba.

"Mr Attenborough also made me and Ben Kingsley to learn to spin the charkha. We spent two-and-a-half months learning both," she said. Released in 1982, the biographical film brought the life of Mahatma Gandhi on celluloid and appreciation that he film garnered across the world was phenomenal. It also won two Oscars.

"Did I expect the film to have such an impact? Frankly, when I was doing the part, I was too young to understand the importance of it. It was just a role for me. And it all happened so suddenly. Mr Attenborough would often allow me to interpret certain scenes in my own way. He gave me a lot of freedom because he said I understood the culture better than he did. I remember one sequence where a man comes visiting Gandhiji in Champaran. I was supposed to be in the background. The question was, what was I supposed to do? I suggested I could be making rotis in the background. So a chulha, tawaa, and all the ingredients were arranged. The scene came out so well. The importance of what I had done occurred to me much later," she said.

Remembering the film's release, Rohini said, "After release we were suddenly thrown into this situation of tremendous impact. I found myself travelling all over the world with the film for the premieres. The impact was immense. In 15 days we did six premieres." The success of Gandhi opened many doors for Rohini. "After Gandhi, Bollywood offered me mothers' roles. I played mother to heroes older to me like Amitabh Bachchan and Mithun Chakrbaborty. When I came into the movies, I was 27-years-old. I had the choice of playing the mother or sister. I chose mother," said the actess who was seen in films like Saraansh and Agneepath.
 

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