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Cannes film ‘reward for good choices

SIDDIQUE’S MOVIE MANTO IS SHOWING AT FESTIVAL

WHEN Indian actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui walks the red carpet at Cannes, he may take a moment to ponder just how far he has come and where he is headed.


In just more than a decade, Sid­diqui has gone from a struggling bit-part actor worried about pay­ing his bills to an acclaimed inter­national star coveted by directors for his versatility across all genres.

“When your film gets selected in a good category, you feel confi­dent that you are on the right track and your choice of films is good,” Siddiqui said in an interview.

His latest film sees him play the lead role in Manto, a biopic about the troubled life of Indian-Paki­stani writer Saadat Hasan Manto.

Directed by Nandita Das, the movie has been selected for the Un Certain Regard category of the film festival which opened last Tuesday (8).

“I enjoy Cannes because it is such a big and prestigious plat­form. It’s a whole world revolving around films,” said Siddiqui.

Manto (1912-1955) is considered to be one of the Indian subconti­nent’s greatest-ever short story writers. He was lauded for being bold and progressive and a propo­nent of free speech, writing truth­fully about the brutal violence that followed the partition of British India in 1945.

To others, Manto was a subver­sive troublemaker whose stories featuring pimps and prostitutes broke too many taboos.

The author was charged with obscenity a total of six times by authorities in colonial and inde­pendent India. He died from or­gan failure caused by excessive alcohol consumption aged 42.

“Manto was an honest man who wrote what he saw. He was transparent and there was no hy­pocrisy in his life,” said Siddiqui, who is 43.

“He thought about things in the 1940s which we fail to see or think about even today. He spoke and wrote the truth, and truth never gets old. To play him you have to be truthful too,” he added.

Siddiqui is one of Hindi cine­ma’s great success stories. A poor man from humble beginnings in a village in the northern Uttar Pradesh state, he defied the odds to make it big in Bollywood after moving to Mumbai in 2000.

By his own admission, the chances were stacked against him. “I’m a five-foot six-inch, dark, or­dinary-looking man. People didn’t imagine I would make it,” he had said in 2015.

But after years of playing small parts, Siddiqui achieved his break­through in 2012 with Talaash, Gangs of Wasseypur, Miss Lovely and Bajrangi Bhaijaan. He has not looked back.

“I spent 10-12 years struggling. My lowest point was to find food and survive. Now I can do the work according to my choices,” he said at his office in Mumbai, a col­lection of posters from his biggest hits hanging on a wall behind him.

Siddiqui has held his own with superstars like Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan and also suc­cessfully crossed over into Holly­wood with the 2016 hit Lion.

He is considered to be one of the few actors who can straddle both commercial Bollywood and independent film genres, putting him in high demand.

After Manto, Siddiqui will be seen in the Netflix adaptation of Vikram Chandra’s novel Sacred Games. It will be released on July 6 and will be the site’s first original Indian series.

He is currently shooting for what he describes as his “most dif­ficult” character yet, that of divi­sive Mumbai politician Bal Thack­eray, who died in 2012.

Thackeray founded and led the Shiv Sena party, which has cam­paigned against Muslims and sought to bar migrant “outsiders” from Mumbai. Siddiqui is both.

“Credit goes to the family and the producer who must have real­ised I could do justice to this com­plex and difficult role,” he said.

Siddiqui is in Cannes until Tues­day (15) before returning to India to finish shooting Thackeray which will be out in January 2019.

He has become a fixture on la Croisette since debuting with Gangs of Wasseypur (2012), walking the red carpet more than half a dozen times. The Lunchbox was screened there in 2013 while Raman Ra­ghav followed in 2016.

A suit that Siddiqui had made by a Indian tailor for his first visit to the festival has been a feature of all of his appearances.

This time, however, he is ditch­ing it for a stylish tuxedo fash­ioned by one of India’s top design­ers – symbolic, perhaps, of how far he has come. “The suit has its own story. But there should be change. We can’t hold on to the past,” said Siddiqui. (AFP)

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