Queen of Bollywood
Indian leading lady Aishwarya Rai leads the charge as Bollywood bids for global dominance
Character Building
Bollywood's Rebel Leader, Aamir Khan
Viewpoint: Bewitched
You don't have to be Indian to be seduced by Bollywood's charms

10 Indian Films to Treasure
TIME picks the best of classic Indian movies
The Players
A portrait of Bollywood's brightest stars

The Leading Lady
Actress and former Miss World Aishwarya Rai
The Legend
Amitabh Bachchan, Bollywood's "Star of the Millennium"
The New Wave
India's alternative hitmaker Rahul Bose
The Trailblazer
Producer/director Ram Gopal Varma
The Young Turk
Bollywood's most respected young actor, Aamir Khan

Asian Heroes: Virender Sehwag
A man and his bat carry the hopes of a nation
[4/28/2003]
India's IT Revolution
Opportunity knocks for India's huge talent pool
[10/16/2000]
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ATUL KASBEKAR FOR TIME
Singular: As a method actor, Khan is an Indian rarity

Character Building
Bollywood's Rebel Leader
Email or Print this article print article email TIMEasia Subscribe

Posted Monday, October 20, 2003; 21:00 HKT
There's something familiar about the barefoot figure with shoulder-length hair and full beard, wearing tatty jeans and a loose linen shirt, padding across Aamir Khan's minimalist Bombay apartment. Only when he curls his legs onto a chair and waits expectantly for the questions to begin does it become clear that this is not one of Khan's friends but rather the latest incarnation of India's most respected and versatile young actor himself. Gone is Aamir Khan, the hipster in a tight-fitting silk suit, outrageous tie and boyish close-crop whom millions watched stride the red carpet outside a score of premieres. In his place, meet Aamir Khan, Jesus Christ Superstar. In a few weeks, Khan will star opposite Aishwarya Rai as the rebel leader Mangal Pandey in The Rising, Ketan Mehta's $10 million epic about the 1857 Indian mutiny against British rule. But despite Pandey's pivotal place in Indian history, says Khan from beneath his straggly growth, no one knows what he looked like. "So I thought if I grew everything, then the makeup and hair people would have a full palate to make him look however they wanted."

Spending months to prepare for a character might be routine for a method actor in the West. But in Bollywood the idea that any actor would take even a weekend off—let alone four months to read history books and grow a beard—is verging on the revolutionary.

Khan, however, is just that. After a stereotypical start in Indian film—a breakthrough smash-hit song-and-dance romance in 1988 followed by eight forgettable musical extravaganzas in three years—Khan broke ranks and, as he says, "began to swim upstream." He became the first Indian star in memory to pick and choose roles by artistic merit. By carefully mixing commercial hits with experimental releases, Khan built a name as both a bankable star and a credible actor. His simultaneous conquest and transformation of Bollywood was cemented with the 2001 releases of Dil Chahta Hai (Do Your Thing), a groundbreaking portrait of middle-class Bombay, and Lagaan (Land Tax), about Indian villagers struggling against 19th century colonialism—which earned India's third-ever Oscar nomination.

By the time he steps onto Ketan Mehta's set, Khan, now 38, will not have appeared before a movie camera for more than three years. It is a measure of how highly he is regarded that a hiatus that would have snuffed out lesser stars has only bolstered Khan's reputation for Stanley Kubrick-like discernment. "For a star of Aamir's size to have chosen to work the way he did, when he did, created huge waves," says Mehta. "He is responsible for bringing realism, passion and joy back to Indian film."

Although his fame has grown increasingly global, Khan says he has no intention of leaving Bombay's bright lights for more earnest Western environs. He tells a story of taking Lagaan to Los Angeles in 2001 and meeting a Dreamworks executive who liked to watch Bollywood movies with his children and who pleaded with Khan to stay on in Bombay and produce more "wonderful, innocent films." The executive need not have worried, says Khan. "I'm very happy doing Indian films and working with the musical form we have," he says. "When it's done right, it's like opera. It can be truly great." Indeed, the idea of taking part in a film with prospects he judges as anything less, he adds, "is something I just can't do." It's been Khan's personal code for a decade. And, as the rest of Bollywood is finally realizing, it's also a mantra that distinguishes mere movies from art.



Bollywood: Frequently Questioned Answers [August 12, 2003]
Richard Corliss gets an education in Indian cinema from his readers

Bollywood FAQs [July 30, 2003]
Richard Corliss is back, with questions about his favorite new national cinema. You provide the answers

That Old Feeling: Bollywood Fever [June 19, 2003]
Richard Corliss rekindles his obsession with the seductive madness of Indian musicals

Married to the Mob [October 14, 2002]
Bollywood stars are in a shotgun wedding with top gangsters. Sometimes the bullets are realÊ

Going Bollywood [August 20, 2002]
Can those exotic, rhapsodic, all-singing, all-dancing Indian film dramas appeal to American tastes?

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FROM THE OCTOBER 27, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2003


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