Mala Sinha boycotts Phalke Academy Awards

Mumbai, May 1 (IANS) Legendary actress Mala Sinha, who not only wowed Indian viewers but also impressed Hollywood so much that they offered her roles in the 1960s, is upset with the committee that has just bestowed the Dadasaheb Phalke Academy Award upon her.

The award function was April 30.

She said: “I won’t accept the Phalke award. They have been discourteous and insulting to me. Is this any way to treat an artiste?”

“They’ve done grave injustice to me. They haven’t even mentioned my name on the invitation card! When members of the Phalke committee, including their chairperson, came home to request me to take the award for being what they called a legendary artiste, I was happy to accept it. But when I saw the invitation card for the event, I was shocked. My name was not there with the other winners of the award,” she said.

“Asha Bhosle and Pam Chopra (who was to receive the award on behalf of her late husband Yash Chopra)… This is insulting. It would be better if they had straightaway slapped me physically instead of insulting me in this way,” she added.

Mala Sinha regaled generations of Hindi cineastes with her powerhouse performance in Guru Dutt’s “Pyasa”, B.R. Chopra’s “Dhool Ka Phool” and “Gumrah” and Ramanand Sagar’s “Geet”.

“They had informed me that I was to get the award a month ago. Though I don’t go out too much these days, I did agree to come. They had a press conference in a small restaurant on Linking Road to announce the awards. None of their winners – not Ashaji, not Pam Chopra – came to the press conference. I went. They came home with the invitation last week. Only to insult me in this way.”

“Forget my picture, they haven’t even put my name in the invitation card. I told them to pick up their invitation cards and leave. I don’t want their award. This is an insult to me as an artiste. I can’t tell you how upset I am about it. I agree Asha Bhosle and Yash Chopra are great artists. But am I so small an artiste that my name should be left out? Then don’t give me the award. I don’t want it.”

Looking back on her career, Mala Sinha says, “Just the other day I was watching ‘Dhool Ka Phool’ and I was quite impressed by how ahead of its times it was…I’ve done some notable films… aur mere saath aisa anyaay! I’ve been around from the 1950s and I did films till the end of the 1990s.”

“Do you know I got two offers from Hollywood in the 1960s as the main lead? My father, who looked after my work, refused, saying, ‘Our culture doesn’t allow our daughters to work in that atmosphere of intimacy that prevails in Western cinema. So please excuse us.’ That’s the kind of respect I got in Hollywood. And look at how I am treated at home! I think I was not given my due. Kya karoon? Jitna bhagya mein likha utna hi milega na?”

Mala Sinha now 76, lives a life of semi-retirement with her ailing mother and daughter Pratibha, who featured in films like “Military Raj”, “Deewana Mastana” and “Tu Chor Main Sipahi”.

Talking about her father, she said after he passed away, “I lost interest in my career.”

“But while he was around, I only thought of my work. I knew nothing about the business side of cinema or about marketing myself. I was just a simple artiste who wanted to work, work and work all my life. I worked in the best of films and repeatedly with filmmakers like B.R. Chopra, Vijay Bhatt and Ramanand Sagar.”

“Once an artiste, always an artiste. I do miss the arclights. But one has to make sacrifices. I am happy looking after my mother. My daughter Pratibha also lives with me. She now does social work,” she said.

“I cut down on my work when she was growing up, as I wanted to give my attention to my role as a mother and then as a daughter to my ailing mother. As for me, I’m open to roles provided they are not routine mothers’ parts. An artiste never dies.”

“My last film was with Govinda and Juhi Chawla (‘Radha Ka Sangam’). Daddy passed away. And I became responsible for the entire family. He used to look after the home and my career. Mummy is bedridden, so I can’t be too active outside the home. But I’d love to work again.”

She singles out B.R. Chopra’s “Gumrah” and “Dhool Ka Phool” and “Jahan Ara” as her most memorable films.

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