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According to Vidya Balan, Mani Rathnam's Guru is Abhishek Bachchan's show all the way.
The child-man at the center of unstoppered attention is delighted. "Did Vidya really say that? So sweet of
her. Any actor getting to work with Mani is lucky. I've worked with him twice and I feel twice lucky.
He's a sheer pleasure to work with. Rest assured when you work with a director of Mani's caliber
he's going to challenge you into discovering new areas of your personality. This is what has happened in
Guru. Working with Mani is a huge learning experience.
Even as the wah-wahs for his performance in Kabhi Alvidaa Na Kehna reach a crescendo, Abhishek was
seen letting his hair down in Dhoom 2.
"It's the same genre as the first Dhoom flick. I'd like to believe that we've managed to make it bigger and
better. Dhoom 2 and Umrao Jaan are my two back-to-back releases. The two are worlds and cultures
apart."
Abhishek has just shot for Shaad Ali's Jhoom Baraabar Jhoom. "I'm here with Shaad Ali, Preity and Lara
Dutta...all friends. It's great fun. I'm absolutely relaxed as long as I get to work with friends. It's very
important for me to be work in a comfortable atmosphere.
Fortunately I've worked mostly with
friends so far. Or directors who've become friends in the course of a film being made. That explains why I'm
doing Shaad's next and Goldie Behl's second Drona."
Now that Abhishek is being recognized as a star to reckon with, what would he rather be known as : a star
or an actor? "An actor of course. Because once you're a capable actor the stardom happens automatically.
Isn't that what happened in my dad's case? "
Abhishek hasn't signed any new films. "No one wants to sign me on, what to do," he mock-sighs, and then
gets serious. "No matter what you say about my career I'm not satisfied.
We creative people are
very sefish. Every time you see a film that doesn't star you, you wish you had done it. When I look around I
feel there's so much good work being done and how little I've achieved. I'd like to do a lot more
work.
I see the kind of work my dad is doing at his age. I can only hope and pray I'm able to do
that caliber and quantity of work when I reach dad's age."
Abhishek's found his dad's role as 'Sexy Sam' in KANK to be awesome. "I don't think anybody but dad
could've done it. I think it was the toughest role of KANK. To handle a role that can be tagged risqué with
such dignity and grace and to pull it off with such emotional resonance, is very commendable"
Abhishek and his father have played father and son in two films. "Yes, Ramu's Sarkar and now KANK. I'd
say our relationship in real life is very similar to how we are in KANK. Karan has known me from when I was
a child.
He has spent loads of time with me and Dad. He has observed us together and
incorporated a lot of the traits from my bonding with Dad in our on-screen interaction in KANK. But no, I
don't call dad 'dude' in real life. That's Karan's cute little innovation."
Abhishek doesn't feel Sexy Sam's role went too far. "It's a character he's playing, we must remember that.
Unfortunately when it comes to Dad people tend forget the man on the screen isn't Amitabh Bachchan but a
character.
It's hard to put aside his real-life persona even when gets completely into character as
Sam. What I loved about the relationship between Sam and Rishi was the role reversal. It's the dad who
seems to be the womanizer. And the son isn't angry or upset about it because the father has always been
very open about his feelings.
And my dad's character redeems himself in the sequence when he
confesses his loneliness at the party. Such moments come so naturally to dad. I want to get there one
day."
Tuesday, December 12, 2006 11:07 IST