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Ringside View & Scene
Stealers All life, elsewhere, appeared to be on hold on the evening of January 23. Mumbais showbiz glitterati and the hoi polloi rubbed shoulders, setting aside other mundane preoccupations, even threats of sabotage by the underworld, to witness the SCREEN Videocon Awards nite at the Shahaji Raje Krida Sankul, Andheri. It was a spectacle they wouldnt have missed for the world. And miss it, they didnt. SCREEN presents glimpses and keepsakes from the event, as it unfolded... The Seven Wonders of the World, elaborate replicas all painstakingly crafted by R Verman, formed the backdrop to the stage. As did the visages of the movie greats, smiling benignly on the goings-on. A befitting tribute, perhaps, to the millennium that was, our collective legacy, as we sit on the threshold of the new. Befitting, because, the sixth edition of the SCREEN-Videocon Awards was an effort to look back and ahead back to a century of cinema, and ahead to the exciting cinematic vistas yet unseen. And snippets of everything thats added sugar and spice to our movies and our lives music, dance, comedy, action and melodrama, livened up the proceedings on stage, between each much-awaited award. Its what theyd yearned to see, and got. Relentlessly, all evening. Pop sensation Rageshwari set the stage for the nights events with her zingy, aptly-titled incantation to the Y2K bug. Pleased as punch, the bug stayed away all night, leaving the evening free of glitches and goof-ups. But not practical pranks, as it turned out. Host Cyrus Broacha had the stadium rise to its feet for a moments homage to cinematographer, Jehangir P Candlewallah who died that morning. Then had it in splits a whole minute later, announcing it was only a hoax there never was a cinematographer by that name. Only goes to show how easily the entire industry can be taken for a royal ride!, he quipped, rubbing it in. Adding insult to injury. Hostesses Lisa Ray, Namrata Baruah and Rajeshwari Sachdev introduced the people who made it all possible, the venerable showbiz veterans who comprised the members of the jury. Thereafter, the Marathi Awards gave way to nearly half an hour of Can Can, courtesy the Paris-based troupe, with its supple men and shapely lasses and their elaborately colourful gig, Birds of Paradise. The Indo-Swedish Bombay Vikings took the stage, following the awards in the non-film music category. Predictably, they treated the audience to a session of pop-reggae, making rumbunctious love to Mona Lisa, with their explicitly suggestive lyrics and choreography. The TV awards followed, setting the stage for the happening Falguni Phatak, with a live demo of her chartbusting patakha routine. Giving away some of the technical awards was the chairman of the film jury, Manoj Kumar himself, the self-styled Panchayat Ka Sarpanch, with his trademark brand of humility and patriotism. He hailed the organisers on giving the members of his jury complete freedom to decide the winners, and never once interfering with their decisions. The SCREEN-Videocon Awards are the closest we shall ever get to awards for the industry and by the industry, he said, to a round of ready applause. Lights, Camera, Action!, ordered Cyrus Broacha. And indeed, action it was that followed, setting the stage literally on fire, courtesy the fire-spouting King of Action, Akshay Kumar. The sessions paying tribute to music, dance and action over, it was time for comedy. Comedy of the side-splitting, belly-aching kind from mover and shaker Suman, who treated the audience to his brand of Mumbais bhai bhai humour. Mast girl Urmila Matondkar had the audience in gasps with her splendidly choreographed dances. As did Manish Malhotra, the man who graduated from designing costumes for Mumbais heroines to decking out international celebrities of the likes of Michael Jackson in designs of his creation. And then, of course, there were the winners. And presenters. But more of them elsewhere.
Offering a pooja, Lata who had turned up in an immaculate black and white silk saree, showered a few rose petals onto the stage.
She was at her soulful best, rendering a shloka that
moved the audience to tears. The doyen of singing concluded her tribute,
with a message of peace to millions of her fans.
LIFETIME IN A NUTSHELL The man who joined films as a pianist, and stayed on to work with the likes of General Film City, Ranjit Movietone and Banatwalas Recording Company, before becoming a music director who bewitched us with his classic tunes in films like Mela, Darshan, Mother India, Mughal-e-Azam and Baiju Bawra deserved no less. But the composer himself was humility personified: Im grateful to God for making me what I am. And to the filmmakers who gave me opportunities to work, he said.
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