Lets screen to celebrate 35 years of the movie Sparsh and watch/listen
together. The JNUForum could organize this on Godawari Dhaba what say
Pankaj? or we could have the screening at Delhi University.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/mumbai/entertainment/sparsh-touched-a-chord-shattered-stereotypes/article8174368.ece


Sparsh touched a chord, shattered stereotypes
Radha Rajadhyaksha Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh was Hindi cinema’s first
realistic portrayal of a visually impaired man.— Photo: Special
Arrangement
Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh was Hindi cinema’s first realistic portrayal of
a visually impaired man.— Photo: Special Arrangement The woman sitting
with the blind man gently berates him for refusing to accompany her
and their friends to a Bharatanatyam recital she wanted to attend. “So
you should have gone,” he tells her, his voice slightly on edge. “Not
without you,” she responds. The man’s sightless eyes dart agitatedly
from side to side. “Dekho Kavita, main nahin chahta hoon ki tum mere
liye Gandhari ban jaao,” he says tensely.

This pivotal scene in Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh encapsulates what the
film did when it was released 35 years ago — it subverted, in one
stroke, every stereotype that Bollywood had built up about visually
challenged people over the decades. Cinema has its classics as well as
its path-breakers — and Sparsh , though underrated on account of not
getting a proper release, belongs to the latter category. Not only did
it combat the cliché of the blind as objects of pity, it had Hindi
cinema’s first realistic portrayal of a visually impaired man —
Naseeruddin Shah’s mind-blowing act, famously described by Gulzar as a
“textbook performance” for actors to follow.

Till Sparsh came along, blind characters in Bollywood were something
of a bad joke. The popular enactment of such a character was someone
who stumbled around, fluttering his eyelids and rolling his eyes
heavenwards (notably, the female blind characters all wore eye
make-up). After the pathos of the sightless condition had been
sufficiently milked by the director, the blind person would regain his
or her eyesight in a stock scene — the bandages would come off slowly
and suspensefully followed by one or two out-of-focus shots and then a
joyful “Doctor saab, main dekh sakta/sakti hoon!” to the sound of
violins.

Against this sort of caricaturish backdrop came the blind characters
of Sparsh to make a stunning impact. Most of them were adorable
children from the Blind School, Delhi, aided by remarkable
professionals like Om Puri. And then of course there was Naseeruddin
Shah in what is arguably the best performance of his lifetime.

Born of a blend of insightful writing and extraordinary acting,
Naseer’s Aniruddh Parmar is an unforgettable character — a poised and
fiercely independent man who nevertheless harbours a complex about his
handicap and is constantly wary of what he perceives as pity from
sighted people. Every time I watch Sparsh , I’m mesmerised anew by the
way Naseer (under)played the character… downcast eyes, eyeballs
darting rapidly when excited or perturbed, cautious walk, white cane
moving in a sweeping left-to-right arc. It was not so much a
performance as masterful character authenticity on display.

Naseer has consistently rated Sparsh as one of his most fulfilling
roles because of “the simple beauty of the script that was written
with truth”. True. Sparsh is a narrative that seamlessly merges vital
issues relating to the world of the blind with a unique love story in
which the sighted Kavita, far from becoming Gandhari, journeys from a
visual to a more tactile understanding of love and her lover’s world.
Indeed, Sparsh subtly establishes parity between their two worlds: if
Aniruddh is visually handicapped, Kavita is emotionally so; Pappu, the
sighted child wants to be blind because Kavita pays more attention to
his blind friend; and Kavita rues to her friend that her being
‘normal’ is her biggest disqualification in Aniruddh’s eyes. Here, the
blind are not pitiable, and the sighted are not superior — they share
the same vulnerabilities and human frailties, the same joys and
sorrows. The universe of Sparsh is a beautiful, inclusive one.

Sparsh won three national awards: best screenplay, best Hindi film,
and best actor for Naseeruddin Shah, who had gone all out to prepare
for the difficult role. Told by Sai Paranjpye that her protagonist was
inspired by the suave and erudite principal of the Delhi Blind School,
Ajay Mittal, the actor asked if he could spend some time with him.
“Mittal was most flattered,” recalls Sai. “He agreed instantly and
Naseer went to Delhi 10 days before the shooting began.” By the time
the rest of the unit landed up, however, things had changed somewhat.
“When Mittal met me, he was totally agitated,” recalls Sai with a
chuckle. “Naseer had been trailing him everywhere from the classroom
to the bathroom, and he was at his wits’ end. ‘Sai, I can’t take it
anymore,’ he expostulated. ‘Please get your hero off my back!’”

Interestingly, it wasn’t Naseer but Sanjeev Kumar who was Sai’s first
choice for the role. Impressed by her script, the actor, who’d
brilliantly played a deaf-and-dumb man in Koshish , agreed instantly.
Later, however, he backed out, and Sai had to replace her original
lead pair of him and Tanuja with Naseer and Shabana Azmi.

Sanjeev Kumar’s brief association with the film has an interesting
epilogue. “Sanjeev and Naseer were on a set in Bangalore when the
national awards were announced,” says Sai. “Sanjeev, generous as he
was, threw a party for Naseer, at which he casually asked him which
role he’d got the award for ( Sparsh was yet to be released). Naseer
told him it was a blind man’s part — and as he filled him in with more
details, it suddenly dawned on Sanjeev that this was the role he’d
withdrawn from. ‘Hell, I was supposed to do this one!’ he exclaimed.
And then added good-humouredly, ‘Agar main karta, shayad mujhe hi
national award mil jaata!’”

Some things are meant to be, and today it’s inconceivable to think of
Aniruddh Parmar as anyone else but Naseeruddin Shah. In a beautiful
piece of cinema that allowed audiences a sparsh of a world so
different from their own.

The author is a freelance writer and editor


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU


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