Farewell Sridevi
And thus it ends. The end of yet another era in the history
or timeline of cinema. It seems funny, even ironical to think of the fact that
she had been alive only a few days ago, attending her nephew’s wedding in
Dubai. It seems unbelievable that, only 5-6 days back, she had flown out of
India, all hale and hearty and excited and eager for her nephew’s wedding.
Indeed, if the video footage of the wedding functions were anything to go by,
she had been in perfect health, with one of the videos showing her dancing to a
song, happily swaying with that famous smile of hers on a radiant face.
Indeed, for a person so full of life and so very colorful,
to her last breath, it seems unfair to her great spirit that she perished in a
washroom, where she was found lying on the floor, near the bathtub.
As a child, growing up in the 2000s era, movies meant Anil
Kapoor (Beta, My name is Lakkhan, Nayak etc), Salman Khan (Mujhse Shaadi
Karogi, Hum Saath Saath Hai, etc), Govinda (Sandwich: Double Trouble, etc) etc.
Then, one day, when I was bored and had nothing to do, I happened to switch
on the TV and there she was, as a reporter fond of light colored skaters (a
type of frock- like apparel up to the knees) and looking for a house to stay.
That was my introduction to her. Her electrifying eyes, her expressions, all
had me from the moment I saw them. In case all of you still have not been able
to pin point the movie, the movie involved a certain watch which gave its
wearer the power to become invisible (by pressing a button) (it sounds very
Lord of the Rings-esque, but trust me, it was not exactly that). The one
condition upon or while being invisible was that the wearer could not or should
not come in front of red light, which would render the wearer visible. If none
of you have been able to still guess, then I should tell you the name. It was Mr.
India. All of Sridevi’s previous films like Sadma (Kamal Hassan) Chandni
etc had displayed her serious, passionate (as well as demure) and that
strong and independent side of her.
But it was with Mr. India that she revealed her
uncanny (and often perfect or on-point) sense of humor and comic timing with
her timeless rendition of Charlie Chaplin at the bar (often called the Charlie
Chaplin bar scene). That part where beer comes out of her ears owing to having
drunk too much is especially funny. Also, who can forget the scene with the
darts where she cleans her left ear with the dart and shoots it towards the
board?
Then Judaai happened, and that too, on this day. Yes,
on the 28th of February, 1997, exactly 21 years ago, that this
movie, starring Anil Kapoor and Sridevi was released. And it was after Judaai
that Sridevi took a 15 year long hiatus to raise her daughter Jahnvi, whose
debut film, Dhadak is o be released this year. For 15 long years, she
vanished from the silver screen (but not from our hearts) until, in 2012, she
marked her comeback with the critically acclaimed English Vinglish, a
heartwarming film about a homemaker (Shashi, played by Sridevi) who is often
mocked at by her husband for her lack of knowledge of English) who ultimately
learns English to deliver a standing-ovation worthy monologue, all in perfect
English. She won many hearts with that, thereby ultimately proving that she was
still, in every sense of the word, the queen superstar of Indian cinema and a
person, who had rightfully earned the epithet of India’s first ever female
superstar. Then in 2017, yet another powerful (and this time, gritty) film
released, Mom, a film about her daughter (in the movie) who was
kidnapped and how she (Sridevi) ultimately got justice for her daughter.
And yet, that was not destined to be her last film. For it
is Sharukh Khan’s Zero, in which he curiously portrays a dwarf, which is
to be her last and final appearance on the silver screen. Its tentative release
date is slated for the 21st of December, 2018.
Well, I have nothing more to say about this matter anymore,
for I find it very hard to come to terms with or believe that Sridevi is truly
no more. No more will we get to see that iconic smile, those iconic moves or
that grace, combined with an intensity that sparkled the silver screen.
I would also like to offer my sincere and genuine
condolences to her entire family, for it is a loss hard to fill. My best wishes
to Jahnvi for her upcoming film and who, I hope (as an ardent admirer of her
mother) carries her mother’s legacy forward.
Farewell, India’s first ever female superstar.
Adieu.

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