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The High Life
By Lavina Melwani
These Indians turn work into
play and play into work.
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Raj Kanodia’s home is a $9 million
mansion in Bel Air Estate, Los Angeles,
with a private guesthouse for VIP friends.
His nearest neighbors? First Lady Nancy
Reagan, Liz Taylor, the King of Saudi
Arabia and the Sultan of Brunei.
Meera Gandhi lives in a historic townhouse
in Manhattan that was once the home
of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, and
pictures of Mrs. Roosevelt in India
are right in the foyer.
Vikram Chatwal and his buddy Sean Puff
Daddy Combs party together and the King
of Morocco sent out his private jet
to transport them to celebrate Puff
Daddy’s birthday in style.
Raj Bhatia spends his days in his rolling
horse farms in Connecticut and when
he needs a change of pace, he takes
off in his private jet to Martha’s
Vineyard or East Hampton.
Poonam Khubani’s 27,000 sq ft
mansion in New Jersey has 9 bedrooms
and 17 bathrooms! And when she has to
talk to family members, it’s just
easier to use the intercom than to walk
to their rooms!
Kamal Dandona knows so many beautiful
and powerful people, from Sharon Stone
to Amitabh Bachchan, that if he were
to name drop, it would cause an avalanche
or a traffic jam.
Bharat Jotwani is a hi-roller whom
casinos love, courting him with limousines
and luxurious rooms for exclusive soirees.
If he wants to head out to Atlantic
City, he is flown in the casino’s
private jet.
Not your usual 9 am to 10 pm, wake-up-work-eat-sleep
existence, you’d say! All these
Indian Americans have learnt the tricky
art of eating their samosas and having
them gilded in gold too. They turn work
into play and play into work, having
a great time even as they almost print
dollar bills by the pile. Their lifestyles
have a lot to do with their work but
are also about fun and living the good
life.
The casinos may not be exactly what
amma would have approved of, but their
siren song is heard and heeded by thousands
of Indian Americans who head out for
Atlantic City or Vegas. While most go
just for a lark, transported in casino
buses or family cars, often surrendering
their quarters to the one-armed bandits,
there are a sizeable number of big players
who spend — and sometimes make
— big bucks at the casinos.
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Bharat Jotwani has been a hi-roller
for over 20 years. For uninitiated,
a high roller is not a device at Home
Depot to apply paint on hard to reach
places, but a daring, either very brave
or very foolish soul, who takes on the
casino and hopes to win. Hi-rollers
are people who gamble $50,000 to $100,000
in a night and live to tell the tale.
Understandably, the casinos love these
brash guys (and they are mostly guys),
plying them with comps, free luxury
suites, limo rides, star studded shows
and more gourmet food than they could
eat in a lifetime.
Jotwani, who plays baccarat and craps,
is classified as a high roller in several
casinos, including MGM in Las Vegas
and Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City.
“I used to be very big, though
now I don’t play that much. Now
I’ve toned down but it can go
up to $20-30,000 a night. In fact that’s
on the low side. Six figures and up
is considered a true high roller,”
he explains.
In all his years of casino hopping,
has he seen other Indians playing high
stakes? “Yes, there are high roller
Indians in both Atlantic City and Las
Vegas, but most don’t want their
names to be known. There were quite
a few hi-rollers about 15 years back
when the casinos started in Atlantic
City, but now a lot of them have tapered
off, because it’s just a myth,
being a hi-roller — chances are
you’ll end up losing.”
The dotcom bust made a lot of people
lose their appetite for high risk, but
in recent years, says Jotwani, the casinos
have been attracting people who have
done well in the hotel/motel industry
as well as convenience stores.
The casinos know how to take care of
their high rollers. When The Bargada
opened two years ago, Jotwani, because
of his high roller status at the MGM
in Las Vegas, found himself as the only
Indian invited to the exclusive opening
night party in Atlantic City, where
Billy Crystal was flown in specially
to entertain the guests. At yet another
party held for 200 special guests, legendary
singer Paul Anka was flown in just to
perform at the gala, and once again
Jotwani was there.
Jotwani, who brings in star-studded
Bollywood shows from India to the tri-state
area, liked the casinos so much that
pleasure soon turned into a work relationship
and he started doing his live shows
at Trump Taj Casino. In fact, he says,
he opened the casinos to the ethnic
show business. Since the Trump Taj has
a theater capacity of 5,000 people and
he’s moved on to bigger shows,
Jotwani now does his shows at the Boardwalk
Hall in Atlantic City, which can accommodate
14,000.
The casinos often sponsor his Bollywood
shows and also purchase tickets from
him for their hi-roller ethnic clients.
For the recent Shahrukh Khan Temptations
2004 Show, the casinos actually bought
front row seats at $1,000 a pop for
their favored clients. A small price
to pay to please a hi-roller they could
later relieve of $100,000 at the tables!
For Jotwani, work and play have conflated
as show business has permeated his lifestyle.
He says, “Everyone knows I put
in a lot of hours, because I’m
a hands-on guy who runs the show himself.”
After having been in the airlines business
many moons ago, he says his new schtick
is definitely superior.
Normally people have a one-way relationship
with the stars: you see them on the
giant screen and they don’t see
you or know you or care. But in the
business of live shows, Jotwani has
hosted the biggest stars and forged
friendships with many of them. When
he goes to Bombay, Shahrukh will greet
him with a hearty handshake, Salman
Khan will drive him in his own car and
Sanjay Dutt spotting him at the Marriott
promptly invites him to join the party
at his table.
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The man who gets the title of the Bollywood
Badshah is Kamal Dandona, New York based
impresario of the Bollywood Film, Music
and Fashion awards, where’s he
brought in every big name from Aishwarya
Rai to Kareena Kapoor. Over the years
he’s donned many roles from commercial
pilot to savvy businessman to publisher
to showman.
Dandona’s Rolodex should be an
interesting book to read from cover
to cover for he rubs shoulders with
so many powerful people, including the
Hindujas. Nine years ago at his very
first live show he managed to get the
Big B to turn up on stage, and since
then each year he seems to get the most
biggest names in showbiz: Sharon Stone,
Richard Gere, Michael Jackson, Harvey
Weinstein, Steven Seagal, Jean Claude
Van Damme and Diane Von Furstenberg.
At the fashion awards he’s had
everyone from Tyra Banks to Jerry Hall
to Nicky Hilton.
A mover and shaker in the truest sense,
he’s always where the moving and
shaking is taking place and has met
every U.S. president from Ronald Reagan
to Bill Clinton to both Bushes, and
every New York mayor from Ed Koch to
Michael Bloomberg.
For Dandona, the good life means trips
to Monte Carlo, Cannes and Nice every
year, and his show business has taken
him to meetings with the president of
Guyana, and Princess Ocansie of Ghana
He was a state guest in Haiti under
General Avril, probably the only private
Indian to be invited by the government.
One strange result of all this hobnobbing
with celebrity power is that some of
it gets transferred to Jotwani and Dandona
too and in the exalted role of Entertainment
Provider for the Indian Community, they
find themselves being feted at political
fundraisers, social soirees and community
events. After all, for our film-mad
desis, the impresarios of live Bollywood
shows are right up there with the inventors
of Penicillin and Phone Cards, shucks
even God!
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Out in California, Dr. Raj Kanodia
is also brushing with stardust. As a
celebrity plastic surgeon in Beverly
Hills, he has gained quite a reputation
and his lifestyle has taken on some
of the glitter of the stars that he
chisels. Many Hollywood and Bollywood
stars come to him for treatment, but
you’re not going to learn who
they are. “It happens all the
times,” says Kanodia, but he’s
not about to let any secrets of the
faces or breasts of the rich and famous
he has sculpted our of the bag.
So he must be surrounded by beautiful
people all the time? “That’s
my life,” says Kanodia cryptically.
In a typical day he does about 25 botox
treatments and lip enhancements, and
out of that at least five orsix6 will
be prominent Hollywood people. Patients
fly in all the way from London or Switzerland
for injections and surgery and occasionally
he’s asked to fly out to treat
them in their homes.
Now he’s actually become somewhat
of a star himself, starring in Doc 90210
on the E network as himself and actually
performs surgery on the show. The show
is seen in 100 countries, and is No.
1 in several of them. In one segment
he removed some moles from Cindy Crawford’s
body and the gorgeous supermodel endorsed
him right on TV.
One of the perks of keeping Hollywood
celebs looking good is that they pamper
him with parties and invitations. “I’m
at all the major events in the world
and I attend them in full glory and
style, because my patients and my friends
have 150 foot yachts and tickets to
the events. So I do indulge in all those
fun, luxurious things.”
Does he get to date beautiful women
too? He says with a mock blasé
air, “All the time!”
But he doesn’t want to be made
out to be some kind of a playboy. Kanodia,
who is single, believes in fun. “That’s
my middle name,” he says. “That’s
absolutely my middle name. As hard as
I work, I play equally hard. I love
fun, because that’s the way I
balance my life for my work is very
serious.”
While the good doctor may work very
hard at the operating table, but away
from it, his life has the trappings
of a movie star. His mansion in exclusive
Bel Air Estates has more highflying
neighbors than any other neighborhood,
since it’s home not only to stars,
but also sheikhs and kings and a First
Lady. Many Bollywood stars come and
stay with him; he has a guesthouse separately
on the grounds for all his high-powered
celebrity friends
Kanodia drives a Porsche Ceyene Turbo
and a Mercedes 600 CL and he says with
the evenhanded, fair touch of someone
picking between two children, “They
are both really fine cars.”
He loves clubbing and dining out. He
travels to Europe ten times a year,
to St. Moritz for skiing, to Wimbledon,
to Cannes, attending all the parties
surrounding the events. In Hollywood
he can be spotted at the Academy Award
bashes. He may never win an Oscar, but
his handiwork is out there ever so often
when one of his clients gets up to pick
one up.
When AJ and Poonam Khubani of Telebrands,
a large international infomercial company
based in New Jersey, decided to build
their home from scratch, it metamorphosed
into a 27,000 sq. foot mansion on four
acres of property, with 9 bedrooms,
17 bathrooms, a great room, a dining
room seating 20 for a sit-down dinner,
a pool and a 6-car garage. Russell Simmons,
the head of Def-Jam Records, lives down
the road from the Khubanis and other
neighbors include the best-selling novelist
Mary Higgins Clark and the actor Danny
Aiello.
American sitcoms on TV draw laughs
when family members line up to use the
sole bathroom, with the teens hogging
up the space. Well not in this house!
There are more bathrooms than there
are people!
Why 17 bathrooms? “I just wanted
an attached bathroom for every bedroom,
two in the foyer and two in the basement
since the house is so big,” explains
Poonam Khubani. The pool house also
has a couple of bathrooms and as for
AJ and Poonam, they have three —
his, hers and ours! Laughs Khubani,
“I wanted my space and he wanted
his.”
The house is so big that family members
could live in it without actually meeting
up and use the intercom a lot. Says
Khubani, “When we built the house
I didn’t think it would be such
a difficult thing to run over, but human
beings always try to find an easy way
out, so we use the intercom to get hold
of each other!”
The 6-car garage houses some pretty
snappy horsepower with both speed and
beauty. AJ Khubani has a passion for
fancy fast cars — an NSX, a Hummer,
a Mercedes S 55 and a BMW 745. A green
Lamborghini is joining the stable soon.
AJ also has a yacht, which he sails
on the lakes and the Hudson in the summer.
In the winter they can hook up on a
friend’s private jet for skiing
trips.
As president of international sales
for Telebrands, Poonam Khubani travels
extensively in Europe, South America,
Australia and India: “I have to
make sure the show is on the air, the
retail is right, the penetration is
right and that right from the beginning
to the end everything works smoothly
for the products that we sell all over
the world.”
A talented singer who performed on
Doordarshan in India, Khubani produced
her first pop album three years ago,
which made No. 3 on the SUB TV charts
in India. As a pop singer, she will
be producing another album soon.
Telebrands recently diversified into
filmmaking and is currently producing
a movie in India called Aryan, starring
Sohail Khan, Sneha Ullal, Kapil Dev
and Fardeen Khan, for which Khubani
is recording two songs. This unusual
film revolves around boxing and Australian
boxers and fight experts were flown
in from Down Under.
All this hectic activity means constant
jet setting to different cities in different
time zones, from very hot to freezing
weather.
And that brings us to the closets!
Khubani has such a huge shoe closet
loaded with footwear that her friends
tease her, “This is worse than
Imelda Marcos!” She has one huge
walk in closet just for her Indian outfits,
another for her western outfits, yet
another closet for her winter clothes
and a cedar closet for her furs.
The reason is purely practical, insists
Khubani: “It helps to keep my
life organized, because I run around
all the time and I’m just hopping
from one country to another so it helps
to figure out the season, pick up my
clothes and get out of the house. It
keeps me mentally straight on line and
it’s a big time saving factor
for me.” Sure.
The Khubanis love entertaining and held
a party last year for 150 people with
a safari theme. A cigar person rolled
fresh cigars for the guests and entertainment
was provided by feisty fire dancers.
Everything was safari themed from the
servers to the food, and short of importing
elephants on to the property, they did
everything to transport the guests to
Africa.
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The king of the party scene, of course,
is hotelier Vikram Chatwal. He’s
had lots of practice. In fact, at times
it looks as if partying is his main
profession! Clubs, bars, lounges, and
restaurants — he knows them all
and probably could take you on a guided
tour of every hot spot in New York City!
He parties with Sean Puff Daddy Combs,
Alex von Furstenberg and Gotham Chopra
and often lands up in society columns.
Last summer he vacationed with Puff
Daddy on a private yacht to Ibiza, an
island in the south of Spain. On Puff
Daddy’s birthday, the King of
Morocco sent his private 747 to transport
them to Morocco. Recalls Chatwal, “The
party started on the plane and when
we landed, there was a full circus with
camels and the whole country stopped
for this one guy!”
So what does it take to be a master
at partying? “Partying takes energy,
takes a good sense of humor and more
than that, it takes good people around
you. So it doesn’t have to be
a great party, if you have some fun
people and you can be together and have
fun, then you’re having a good
party.”
Looks of course can be deceiving, for
Chatwal has a MBA from the Wharton School
of Business and is managing a mini-empire
of boutique and specialty hotels at
Hampshire Hotels and Resorts. The son
of hotelier Sant Singh Chatwal, Vikram
has his finger on the pulse of the happening
crowd and brings that energy to the
boutique hotels that he creates and
manages.
His Time Hotel in Time Square was a
real showstopper, wildly popular with
the fashion circles. Now his new Hotel
Dream is also creating a big buzz. It
has a spa designed and operated by Deepak
Chopra.
Because of his insider status in the
happening crowd, Chatwal has succeeded
with the K Lounge concept in New York
(the K stands for Kamasutra and the
fun lounge has the exotic touch) and
he is planning K Lounges in Las Vegas
and Los Angeles.
The recent opening of Dream, in Manhattan,
was a big bawdy celebration with hundreds
of beautiful people swarming the place,
moving around 30 foot high glass aquariums
filled with glow fish. Inside, he’s
created more party places — the
Ava Lounge at the penthouse level with
a view of glittering Time Square and
Sub Conscious, a space for the young
and restless. As a partner in Joe’s
Pub, one of the city’s happening
lounge and performance venues, he stays
connected to the music world.
So Chatwal has a legitimate reason
for partying. After all, he’s
just doing his research! He says, “My
business carries into the night, the
hotels, the bars. So sometimes when
I’m out, it looks like I’m
partying, but I’m actually checking
on business.” Then he admits,
“Well, that’s the excuse
I use, ‘I’m working!’”
For Chatwal, the good life also means
trying on different lifestyles, almost
like a new wardrobe. He’s been
a model for Italian and American Vogue,
Brook Brothers, Banana Republic and
has done catwalk modeling for Valentino.
Now he’s starring as the hero,
a Sikh immigrant in Paris, in the movie
One Dollar Curry. He says life is a
mix of things and so he tries to balance
it all. And if life requires some serious
partying, modeling and acting with beautiful
actresses, then he’s ready to
take it on!
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Indeed, New York is a town where partying
is serious business, especially with
the champagne and caviar crowd who attend
benefit galas. In fact, it’s almost
a social obligation! There are literally
hundreds of charitable organizations
and every high society diva has a favorite
cause.
The evening sparkles as guests mingle,
sip champagne and nibble on hors d’ouevres,
while plugging causes from AIDS research
to children’s charities. All the
great museums, art galleries and theater,
dance and music institutions are supported
by the black tie crowd, who raise an
astounding amount of money for an astounding
array of causes.
A handful of Indian Americans are part
of this social whirl and they include
New York socialite Meera Gandhi and
her investment banker husband Vikram
Gandhi. When it comes to partying, Gandhi
is the pro, renowned for her own great
parties too. The Gandhis live in a beautiful
historic townhouse, which once belonged
to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, which
they have spent years restoring. It
is decorated according to Vaastu principles
and is crowned with a roof garden.
Meera Gandhi, who is on the board of
ValKill, the summer residence of Eleanor
Roosevelt, has held events at her home
for the First Lady’s grand daughter
Anne Roosevelt and many fund raisers
for different causes. Mike Wallace,
Paula Zahn, Robert Thurman, Steven and
Kimberly Rockefeller and actress Phylicia
Rashad are some of the big names who’ve
attended parties at the Gandhi residence.
An MBA from Boston, Gandhi worked as
an investment banker with Banque Nationale
du Paris and Banque Indo-Suisse, before
switching to fashion, becoming a buyer
for Lord & Taylor and then worked
for Calvin Klein, Armani and Oscar de
la Renta, collaborating with her mother
in India.
Currently on a long break from work,
Gandhi is concentrating on her family
and on doing some good, while having
an outrageous amount of fun. And that’s
the benefit of attending a benefit —
you feel saintly while you’re
having a wicked amount of fun! Meera
is on the board of several organizations
— the United World College, the
Grameen Digitial Partners Foundation
and Safety Net — and her way of
supporting them is by raising funds
and awareness through events.
She hosted the fundraising Asia on
My Mind dinner for Asia Society with
the theme: “Passage to India”
with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, and
a couture sale by top Indian designers
at her home, which was organized with
the U.S. Ambassador’s wife and
raised funds for the Gujarat earthquake
through American India Foundation, chaired
by former President Bill Clinton.
A socialite’s life means all
the other trappings: Holidays are usually
spent in Ritz Carlton villas around
the world or traveling to India to meet
the family.
This year alone Gandhi has traveled
to Moscow, St Petersburg, Hong Kong,
Shanghai, Beijing, Bangkok, Chiang Mai,
Hua Hin, London, Bombay, Delhi, Bangalore,
West Palm Beach, Colorado and Los Angeles.
Needless to say, being a socialite
involves rubbing shoulders with celebs
on the red carpet, and Gandhi has rubbed
her share, including Queen Noor, Prince
Pavlos, Senator Hilary Clinton and actress
Reese Witherspoon. She is, in fact,
working on an exclusive event with Senator
Clinton for just 100 people, to raise
funds for Val-Kill. Yes, working for
the greater good is tough work, but
someone’s got to do it!
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It is safe to say that few Indian Americans
could be spending their evenings on
a horse farm! For real estate developer
Raj Bhatia, there is little separation
between his personal and the work lives
as he goes about creating an equestrian
community in the beautiful town of Southbury
in Connecticut. Willowcreek is a 103-acre
historic horse farm, and though Bhatia
bought it as an investment, he and his
wife Darcy quickly fell in love with
it.
The plan is to build 24 high-end houses
around the property and the project
will take about three years to complete.
Says Bhatia, “In Connecticut horses
are absolutely part of people’s
lives here and it is said there are
more horses here than any other state
in the country, per square unit. It
seems to be absolutely true.”
While Bhatia has “a healthy respect”
for horses, his wife Darcy is crazy
about them, having grown up on a horse
farm and riding since she was 3 years
old. So even as they build the equestrian
community, they have taken in boarders
on the farm, and presently have a total
of 48 horses, 13 of which belong to
Darcy. The rest of the horses are boarders,
whose owners pay for their stall and
upkeep.
The bonus is that the Bhatias actually
get to live on these rolling acres of
green with a huge pond on the property.
It’s very different from their
weekday home which is a penthouse in
Manhattan, where Raj is in real estate
development and Darcy is in wealth management
in partnership with a grandson of the
Nestle family.
How is waking up in the morning and
finding yourself in a cottage? “It’s
great,” says Bhatia. “You
wake up in the morning and you smell
the fire from the night before. It’s
incredible waking up and looking out
at the lake. The farm is only an hour
and 15 minutes from the city and that’s
really amazing.”
The Bhatias like to hang out with friends
at the Hunt Room, a dark oak paneled
room with horse prints and old English
antiques, which is also on the farm,
complete with a bar and a 600 sq foot
wine cellar.
Says Raj, who collects wines, “A
number of our friends are chefs and
sommeliers from the city at excellent
restaurants who would like to come up
and do wine dinners in the Hunt Room.”
While Darcy would rather be riding,
Raj prefers flying. He’s had his
pilot’s license since 1995 and
recently bought a single engine plane,
a Cirrus, which has the unique feature
of a parachute in the plane. In an accident,
the parachute shoots out of the plane
and actually brings the entire plane
down to the ground safely. It’s
all very hi-tech and Bhatia enjoys flying
to Martha’s Vineyard and Boston.
East Hampton, which would be four hours
by road, is just 20 minutes.
But more and more, he tends to head
for Willowcreek where he can go skeet
shooting or fly fishing: “It’s
like we’re on vacation even though
this is work. It’s work being
here, it’s work watching over
things but it’s incredibly gratifying.
You’re working and you’re
having a good time.”
Willowcreek is a large property, with
the occasional coyotes and bobcats on
it, so recently Bhatia went to the Bridgeport
state police to apply for a gun permit.
The man issuing the gun permit turned
about to be an Indian officer. Bhatia
recalls, “He said to me, ‘You
must be the only Indian horse farm owner
in the country!’ And I said to
him, ‘You must be the only Indian
giving out gun permits in the country!’”
As more and more desis make it in this
country and rachet up their lifestyle,
it is perhaps only a matter of time
before we see Indian Americans home
on the ranch in Crawford, Tex., not
just visitors to it, or living in a
hi-tech futuristic structure like that
of Bill Gates.
The good life has many interpretations,
and Indian Americans seem ready to try
it in all its avatars!
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