Khan was among the 21 cine personalities who were remembered during the ceremony’s ‘In Memoriam’ segment.
Los Angeles :
The 2021 edition of the Producer’s Guild of America (PGA) Awards honoured the late Indian star Irrfan Khan during its “In Memoriam” segment but got his name wrong.
The awards, considered as an Oscar bellwether, were held virtually on Wednesday.
Khan was among the 21 cine personalities who were remembered during the ceremony’s “In Memoriam” segment.
However, the pre-taped production of the awards committed a gaffe with the actor’s name as it read ‘Irrif Kahn’ instead of Irrfan Khan, reported Variety.
Another typo was spotted when the name of “Minari” star Steven Yeun, who was one of the presenters at the event, was misspelled as ‘Steven Yuen’.
Khan, who straddled both Indian and international cinema with equal elan, died in April 2020 at the age of 54 following a two year-long battle with a rare form of cancer.
In Hollywood, he featured in blockbusters such as “Inferno”, “A Mighty Heart”, “Life of Pi”, “Amazing Spider-Man” and “Jurassic World”.
The “In Memoriam” segment of PGA Awards also paid to tributes to Hollywood great Kirk Douglas, who died at the age of 103 in February 2020, and “Black Panther” star Chadwick Boseman, who passed away in August at 43 after a private four-year-long battle with cancer.
Other prominent names in the segment included Harry Bring, Sue Bruce-Smith, Allan Burns, Kevin Burns, Stuart Cornfeld, Charles Gordon, Buck Henry, Thomas L Miller, Tom Pollock, Rebecca Ramsey, Carl Reiner, Gene Reynolds, Pamela Ross, Ronald Schwary, Lynn Shelton, Fred Silverman and Jamie Tarses.
source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Entertainment> English / by PTI / March 25th, 2021
Irrfan Khan has just returned from Macau with the best actor and best screenplay trophies for The Lunchbox at the Asian Film Awards.
What makes this award precious is that he beat Toni Chiu Wai Leung who was nominated in the best actor category for the Wong Kar Wai film, The Grandmaster.
“I’ve loved Toni’s work—Hero, In the Mood for Love, Chunking Express, Infernal Affairs and The Grandmaster. Even Ang Lee was impressed with The Grandmaster, which picked up the best film and best costume awards. Just being nominated with Toni was an honour,” he exults.
“What’s more encouraging is that The Lunchbox is growing everyday. It has released in around six countries, will open in 63 more. It’s just released in the UK, is growing bigger in the US, and has made a million in Hong Kong. This has never happened for an Indian film. It’s not patronised by only NRIs but the foreign market too.”
Still disappointed about missing out on the Oscar glory? “I was, for a day or two. Now, I’m happy the film is getting its due all over the world,” he asserts.
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Entertainment> Bollywood / by Roshmila Bhattacharya, Mumbai Mirror / March 29th, 2014
Kashmiri writer and journalist Basharat Peer has, after great struggle, got the smog of his painful past off his mind. Today, he admits, there is a clear sky above his head.
Sitting at a café in Delhi’s Khan Market, the 37-year-old revealed how a slice of his own life story made its way into Vishal Bhardwaj-directed movie, Haider , and his worthwhile journey from New York Times–India Ink to Bollywood.
In the middle of handling the desk at NYT and finishing his second book, Peer didn’t realise what was coming his way. One fine day, when he received an email from filmmaker Vishal Bhardwaj, he started taking films— Bollywood rather—seriously. The way the Indian film industry had traditionally represented Kashmir made him reluctant initially.
The director had read Peer’s internationally acclaimed memoir, Curfewed Night, about growing up during the early years of anti-India rebellion in his homeland, Kashmir. After adapting Macbeth (Maqbool) and Othello (Omkara), Bhardwaj saw the Curfewed Night could be the source of the third part of the Shakespeare trilogy, Hamlet (Haider).
After Vishal’s insistence, Peer went back to Hamlet, saying he read and never understood it better than this time.
“The moment Vishal mentioned Hamlet, I thought of one of the iconic lines from the play, which refers to the political and moral corruption and an unjust state of affairs in the setting of the play: Something is rotten in the state of Denmark. And I said, yes, of course you can set it in Kashmir,” said Peer, smiling and fingers fiddling with the tissue on the table.
He still remembers, sitting face to face with the director, his first reaction to the offer, “what?!”
“Vishal, then, gently pushed his case saying tum likh do. I hesitantly said I haven’t done it before,” Peer said. Basharat could relate to the play. He could find similar themes in his life— betrayal, abuse of power, justice, revenge and espionage. He had an image for each character in the play.
“Many political operators in Kashmir who have done terrible things to their own people and to others in pursuit of money and power came to my mind when I was thinking of Claudius, the villain of the play who murders his brother, King Hamlet, for the throne and to marry his wife Gertrude,” he said.
“It was like I understood Hamlet for the first time.” Only by transposing his world to the Shakespeare’s did the Bard’s real message reveal itself to Peer. “I called Vishal and said, listen, I have it. This is the story.”
Basharat always saw Bollywood from a distance. He also joked about how the famous dialogue from Sholay came to his mind every time somebody would talk about filmy lines. “Kitne aadmi thei,” he recalled, adding his wife also teased him about this once in a while.
A majority of Kashmiris believe Bollywood is a huge disappointment. They have a life beyond selling carpets and flowers on houseboats, said Peer.
Being a Kashmiri, and especially after having written a first-hand account of the conflict, Peer knew his approach had to be different so that the people of his troubled state are represented in a more responsible manner.
“This reminds me of the famous Merchant of Venice line: If you prick us, don’t we bleed; if you tickle us, don’t we laugh.”
Kashmiris are real people too, Peer insists. Haider is conscious of this fact.
“The film is an attempt to answer the stereotypical, jingoistic films Bollywood has made about Kashmir. Every character in the film is a Kashmiri—a doctor, a lawyer, teacher, a research scholar, a police officer. These are people who have agency and they’re not just victims.”
“It’s a story of their moral choices, their dilemmas, their courage, and their tragedies. I am hopeful that the film conveys a sense of what Kashmiris lived through, hoping there are images–never before shown in a Bollywood film—that will make the viewers think, ask questions.”
Talking about the controversial flag-hoisting scene in the movie which triggered protests in the valley, the author said, “Students weren’t protesting against Haider in particular. In general, they’re worried about how the state will be projected. Also, anyone who saw it from a distance wouldn’t know the context.”
“Irrfan Khan had something great to say. He said ‘these incidents are nothing in comparison to what they have suffered in the past 25 years’. I think Kashmiris have been very generous to the film crew,” Peer said.
Peer, along with other Kashmiris, is looking forward to the film. He is over the moon, as ten events from Curfewed Night have been incorporated in the film. “I hope those scenes survive censor board scissors and people get to watch them,” he said.
Another interesting feature about the movie is Peer’s cameo appearance as what he likes to call a “pareshaan (anxious) Kashmiri”.
“Vishal said ‘arey yeh ek aam aadmi, ek pareshaan Kashmiri ka role hai, tum karlo. I said, haan, iski toh bahut practice hai,” he chuckled.
Basharat is playing a regular man who is scared of stepping out of his house, something which was very common in the nineties in Kashmir. People carried their addresses in pockets with little hope of returning home.
“I grew stubble, wore a pheran and I was sorted. It was a proud moment to share 30 seconds of my role with an actor like Irrfan Khan.”
On the writing front, Peer is satisfied with the new crop of Kashmiri writers and their take on the conflict, the most obvious and dominant issue in Kashmir to be written about.
“Be it Waheed Mirza, Siddharth Gigoo or Rahul Pandita—all of us have written just one book on Kashmir. This is just the beginning. We’re dealing with the first rush. There is a novel by Shahnaz Bashir forthcoming. Two brilliant young writers, Feroz Rather and Arif Ayaz Parrey, are working on collections of short stories. Malik Sajad, a very young graphic novelist and cartoonist, is working on a graphic novel.”
Basharat Peer is currently busy working on his second book, Shadow of the Broken Dome: India and Its Muslims.
The book requires him to travel across India to research on the contemporary Muslim life and politics.
“The book has traumatised my mind at the moment,” he joked.
source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Life & Style> Books / by Subuhi Parvez, Hindustan Times, New Delhi / March 08th, 2014
Acclaimed Indian actor Irrfan Khan won the best actor award for his brilliant performance in ‘The Lunchbox’ at the 10th edition of Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF).
Irrfan won the award Friday in the Muhr AsiaAfrica Feature category, while films writer-director Ritesh Batra got a special mention for screenplay for the film about a lunch box, which becomes a symbol of hope, in the same category. World renowned Indian filmmaker Shekhar Kapur headed the jury.
Sandeep Ray won the best director award for his Bengali language film ‘Shirno Bahu’ (Thin Arms), which revolves around an octogenarian woman who undergoes treatment for a debilitating medical condition, in the Muhr Asia Africa shorts category.
DIFF chairman Abdulhamid Juma said that the sense of community this year was palpable.
“After 10 years, we are seeing recurrent visitors, both film professionals and cinema lovers, from the region and beyond. This year we celebrated the gains that have been made in Arab cinema in the past decade, the result of years of work from our team to discover, nurture and promote talent from the Arab world,” he added.
“There is a feeling that Arab cinema has ‘arrived,’ with increasing numbers of Arab films on the world stage, winning awards at the most prestigious festivals, and gaining currency even with audiences who have never visited the region.”
source: http://www.indiatoday.intoday.in / indiatoday.in / Home> Movies> Bollywood / by IANS / December 16th, 2013