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  • Shekhar Kapur

    Shekhar Kapur

    The internationally recognized producer and director shares his thoughts.

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    • The sweet acrid nostalgic smell of Delhi winter

      November 24, 2009, 5:5 AM

      Walking the streets of Delhi just as dusk has set in. The slight smell from the fog mixed with the smell of traffic fumes on Janpath. Memories. Of my mother, always in her colorful saris, red shawl, her carefully bobbed hair just down to her neck. And laughing, always laughing as if she feared if she did not, somehow the demons of unfulfilled child hood dreams would get to her. As they ultimately did.

      But God, I loved that laughter - and the streets and smells of Delhi were filled with her laughter this evening. And my father, quite and often brooding, a compassionate smile on his face as he watched his life partner laugh, hiding his pleasure at it, but feeling it's warmth just as me and my sisters did.

      And when my mother passed away he missed it so much that he gradually too let go. The laughter that filled our lives had gone - but we the kids were off on our own adventures - our own dreams, heartbreaks, ambitions - the family house empty of laughter and hope - still lies there languishing - waiting for someone to fill it with the bubbling excitement - so it's walls can lose the forlorn dampness that is spreading everywhere.

      And this evening as I walk through Janpath to my hotel - the restored and magnificent Imperial Hotel - the sweet acrid nostalgic smell of Delhi winter - brought tears to my eyes - as passerby's saw me and stopped "wasn't that Shekhar Kapur who also cried on TV" ?

  • Anuvab Pal

    Anuvab Pal

    Co-writer of the global comedy hits Loins of Punjab Presents and The President Is Coming blogs about food, what feeds the nation and about the general elections.

    Latest Post
    • 1-888-Dial-India

      July 01, 2009, 4:48 AM

      I began the journey for 1-888-Dial-India a long time ago when I was struck by 3 things. 1) That I've always wanted to write a play set in an office and 2) I have always wanted to write a play about outsourcing and 3) I've always wanted to write a play featuring my friend Kunaal Roy Kapur, the director of President Is Coming.

      This is not because he is talented (he is not). It is because he cut so many of my lines in President, it only seemed fitting to write a whole bunch for him and request him to say it.

      Outsourcing is interesting because it combines all the things I love about the world. Half-baked knowledge of different cultures, aspirational western business milieu, fake pomp and gibberish that passes for corporate speak. In short, a remixing of the English language for uniform globalization. Like the Anne Taylor of language. And to top it all off, it fuels my other favorite subject, New India

      A generation of India is now deriving a new way of life with business and occupations that didn't exist 10 years ago. It's fueling a slow social and economic revolution, less velvet, more neon. These people, 700 million of them, will carve a way of life far more distinct than the British or the Mughals or the Rajputs or the Dravidians before them and we will seep into it because it won't involve bloodshed but buying. More and more consumer stuff. This India is what will remain and it especially intrigues me because it is going to the core of 4000