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Wearing a sparkling-white dhoti in
Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi,
the Mahatma’s role player Sir
Ben Kingsley not only made the film
an international box office hit, but
also forever established the magic this
traditional Indian men’s wear
can weave on the silver screen.
Bollywood heroes in dhotis can not
only beat up smart suit and tie-wearing
villains troubling Indian damsels, they
can even ride motor cycles or jump from
horse back to perform any other act
of ultimate chivalry. They can even
win the hearts of ultra-sophisticated
heroines with comfortable ease in their
ancestral dresses. In Lagaan, Elizabeth
(Rachel Shelly) falls head over heels
for dhoti-clad Bhuvan (Amir Khan). And
dhoti-sporting Shah Rukh Khan wins over
hearts of every stripes in Devdas.
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The dhoti can be traced to the first
Bollywood talkie Alamara in 1931. It
baptized fame on Mithun Chakravorty
in Mrigaya, although he traded it in
for suits and tie subsequently in his
career.
Over the years, the silver screen has
played hide and seek with the dhoti,
featuring it on Amitabh Bachhan, screen
world’s ever smiling “laughing
Buddha” Govinda, Amir Khan, Shah
Rukh Khan, Akshay Kumar and Anil Kapoor.
Amir wears the dhoti in Sarfarosh, disguising
himself as a Rajasthani gaon while trying
to bust a terrorist network. Evergreen
Dev Anand might now be identified with
his trademark full sleeve shirt and
pant, even jeans, but he performed his
dhoti clad shtick in four block busters
of yesteryears — Hum Ek Hai, Jeet,
Age Bado and Mohan. |
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Bollywood’s super character artists
“Dadamoni” Ashok Kumar,
Raj Kapoor, Raj Kumar Guru Dutt, Dilip
Kumar, Bharat Bhooshan, Rajendra Kumar
and Manoj Kumar all romped through Bollywood
in the dhoti.
Remember Raj Kapoor driving a bullock
cart with Wahida Rahman on the rustic-rural
roads in Teesri Kasam chanting “sajan
re jhoot mat bolo, khuda ke pas jana
hai…” (darling, do not tell
a lie, we have to answer for them to
the god)?
Or Balraj Sahni who spun magic in the
early 1950’s in the dhoti in Do
Bigha Zamin. Now was it Rawalpindi style
or Lahore style? No matter. So who introduced
the firangi dress, pant and shirt, which
displaced the dhoti in Bollywood? Incredibly
the man to do so, is the dhoti icon
of Indian films, Ashok Kumar, who in
1941 first wore the suit in the film
Naya Sansar. |
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The dhoti trend
among males ebbed around 1974-75. Indian
films turned urban and the dhoti all but
vanished, even though the saree stayed.
But the dhoti returned with a bang around
1982 with Anil Kapoor in Ishwar, and later
Who Saat Din and Virasat. |
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The dhoti now holds a special appeal
even among NRIs, a la the success of
Amrish Puri in Pardes. In Aankhen, Bollywood’s
laughing Buddha Govinda successfully
indulged in all sorts of pranks efficiently
managing his dhoti, rousing jealosy
among trouser-wearing super heroes.
Dhoti zindabad!
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| Dhoti
Rising |
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| Actor
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Movie |
Shah Rukh
Khan:
Govinda:
Suhail Khan:
Amir Khan:
Venkatesh:
Jackie Shroff:
Arjun Rampal:
Abhisekh Bachhan:
Salman Khan:
Akshay Kumar: |
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Asoka, Devdas,
Karan, Arjun
Raja Babu, Coolie, No.1, Aankhen,
Bade Mian Chotte Mian, Jis Des
Mein Ganga Rehta Hai
Ab Ke Baras
Mein Ne Dil Tukhko Diya
Lagaan, Sarfarosh
Anadi
Phool aur Pathar, Devdas
Pyar- Isq-Mohabbat
Yuva, Mumbai se Aya Mera , Dost
Karan Arjun, Tumko Na Bhul , Payenge,
Har Dil Jo pyar Karega, Hum Dil
De Chuke Sanam
Sabse Bada Khiladi |
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| Dilip Kumar
and Saira Banu. |
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