'Jodhaa Akbar' dominates Bollywood awards

By MIN LEE – 12 hours ago

MACAU (AP) — A historical epic about the romance between a Mughal king and a
Hindu princess dominated the 10th International Indian Film Academy awards
in the southern Chinese enclave of Macau on Saturday by winning six awards,
including best picture and best actor for heartthrob Hrithik Roshan.

"Jodhaa Akbar" creator Ashutosh Gowariker was also named best director. The
film also took home best music direction for Oscar-winning composer A.R.
Rahman, best song lyrics and best male playback singer — an award for
performers who record soundtracks for on-screen actors.

Former Miss World Priyanka Chopra was named best actress for playing a model
who stages a comeback in "Fashion."

Gowariker, who directed the Oscar-nominated 2001 film "Lagaan," said he was
advised not to make a film about the touchy subject of Hindu-Muslim
relations but went ahead because "I somehow felt it is the need of art."
"Jodhaa Akbar" describes how what was intended as a politically strategic
marriage between a Muslim emperor and a Hindu beauty evolved into genuine
love.

Picking up his award for playing the king, Roshan saluted Gowariker, saying
"This is as much yours as it is mine."

Chopra called "Fashion" "one of the most difficult films of my life."

Best supporting actor went to Arjun Rampal for "Rock On!!" — about the
reunion of an Indian band — and Kangana Ranawat won best supporting actress
for "Fashion."

The female star of "Jodhaa Akbar," another former Miss World, Aishwarya Rai
Bachchan from the Hollywood movie "The Pink Panther 2" missed out on best
actress honors, but it was still a big night for her family — the first
family of Indian cinema. The actress is married to actor Abhishek Bachchan,
the son of Indian screen legend Amitabh Bachchan.

Aishwarya Rai did pick up awards for best actress of the decade and
outstanding achievement in international cinema, joking that the second
award felt like a "mini-lifetime achievement award." Abhishek was named best
actor in a humorous role for the Miami-set comedy "Dostana." Accepting his
award, the younger Bachchan paid an emotional tribute to his father, saying
"I was a young boy watching the greatest actor alive."

The elder Bachchan presented the lifetime achievement award to veteran actor
Rajesh Khanna — who received a standing ovation from the audience of
thousands — recalling that Khanna's fanatic female fans would pick up dirt
from his car tires and place them in their hair as a gesture of worship.

"The word superstar in the Indian film industry was for the first time
coined for him," Bachchan said.

Gowariker's "Lagaan," about a group of Indian villagers who play their
British colonial rulers in cricket to decide the fate of their taxes, was
named film of the decade. Another heartthrob, Shah Rukh Khan won male star
of the decade. Roshan presented his father, filmmaker Rakesh Rohan, with the
director of the decade prize.

The nominees in the top categories were chosen by film industry insiders,
with the winners decided by an Internet vote.

The day's marathon festivities began with a three-hour long red carpet
ceremony along a 200-meter strip inside the massive The Venetian Macao
casino-hotel resort, with passionate ethnic Indian fans from as far as the
U.S. and South Africa pressing up against barricades, punching their hands
in the air as they chanted the names of their idols and their movies.

The awards ceremony itself was a freewheeling five-hour variety show ending
at 2:30 a.m. Sunday (1830 GMT Saturday) that combined a Cirque du Soleil
circus performance, skits, movie spoofs, and the elaborate song-and-dance
routines that Indian cinema is renowned for. At one point, the host waded
into the VIP section to get different stars to sing Hindi numbers
spontaneously.

The dance performances were a spectacular showing of fast-paced
hip-swiveling action in glittering costumes amid disco lights fireworks and
confetti.

Her head and body covered in silver jewelry, Aishwarya Rai was carried onto
stage in a golden sedan chair by barefoot men to the music of "Jodhaa Akbar"
and then performed with a group of bare-chested dancers. Her husband showed
up among the audience in a pink-striped kurta, slowly made his way to stage
while high-fiving members of the audience then shook his body with female
dancers in red bikini tops and red dresses.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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-- 
regards,
Vithur

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