Darlingji

“Darlingji: The True Love Story of Nargis and Sunil Dutt” by Kishwar Desai
HarperCollins, Rs 395
Fifty years ago, when a 28-year old Sunil Dutt rushed to save Nargis from a fire that broke out on the sets of “Mother India”, the two actors – who were playing mother and son in Mehboob Khan’s 1957 epic – went on to fall in love and eventually marry. It became the best known “true love story” of the movies, alluded to and echoed as recently as in this year’s Diwali release, Farah Khan’s “Om Shanti Om” when Shahrukh (playing a junior actor) saves Deepika (playing the star female lead) from a circle of burning haystacks.
As Kishwar Desai remarks in “Darlingji”, her account of the extraordinary relationship of Nargis and Sunil Dutt, some skeptics assumed that it was star and showman Raj Kapoor who remained the great love of Nargis’s life, and that she married the less successful Sunil Dutt on the rebound; or that Dutt was marrying Nargis for her star status. Typical reactions to a choice made by a successful woman - and Nargis was, after all, the daughter and grand-daughter of strong-willed women who made their own choices in matters of profession and relationships. Her grandmother, Dilipa Devi, a Brahmin widow at thirteen, went on to make a life as a gaanewali, living with a Muslim musician. Dilipa’s daughter Jaddanbai became a successful singer, entered the then-new field of the cinema, and moved to Bombay where she began to make her own films. Soon Jaddanbai’s apartment in Chateau Marine on the city’s famous Marine Drive became a hub for film people.
This was the family background in which Nargis grew up, acquiring a carefully polished Bombay education even as she began an acting career, first as a child actor in her mother’s films and then, when she was 14, beginning her career as female lead with Mehboob Khan’s “Taqdeer”. And “Darlingji” is really the story of this intelligent, affectionate and altogether remarkable woman. In the course of her film career Nargis would play both the westernized woman and the conventional “bharatiya” nari, but her iconic role would be as Radha in “Mother India”. In her life after cinema, she would involve herself in meaningful social work, a tradition that Sunil Dutt would continue after her death (the Nargis Dutt Critical Care Centre at the Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, a project of the Nargis Dutt Memorial Foundation, has benefited innumerable cancer patients in India). Desai’s book shows how, despite the skeptics, Nargis and Sunil Dutt went on to build a happy and lasting partnership that would endure the ups and downs they would face in their life together – including Sanjay’s drug habit and Nargis’s battle with cancer.
One of Desai’s main sources of information, and a most interesting one, is the Dutt family archive. For this is a chattery, communicative family whose members are constantly writing not only to each other but also for themselves, especially as a record of memorable times – on postcards, letters, telegrams, diaries, baby books, and more. Sunil and Nargis were writing little notes to each other all the time, addressing each other in different ways: often playfully, as “Pia” and “Hey There”; occasionally decorously, as “Dutt Sahib” and “Mama”; and once, days before their wedding, deeply hurt that she had not told him about her Filmfare Best Actress award for “Mother India”, Sunil wrote a letter addressing her as “My Dear Padma Shri”, signing as “A Junior Artiste”.
The children continue the tradition of writing to communicate their feelings and preserve their memories. Nine-year old Sanjay writes to his mother from his boarding school at Sanawar (”10 kisses to Yourself, papa, Anju, priya, rabbit, ringo and the chicks”); at 13, with painful observation and childlike accuracy, Priya records her mother’s illness in her diary. Kishwar Desai’s account of the Dutt love story, a warmly personal but never voyeuristic account, is enriched by these glimpses into the life of this close-knit family.

I saw Nargis in “Awara” in the 1950s; her presence was radiant and enchanting. It is good to learn a little more about her in real life. Her compassion was obviously not confined to the screen.
Comment by Candadai Tirumalai — November 24, 2007 @ 4:19 pm
It was quite a fascinating work about a remarkable couple! Well written, and most enjoyable.
Comment by dipali — January 27, 2008 @ 7:47 am
Sunil Dutt is one of the cultured actors of bollywood who always has been respected by a large section of the filmlovers. He got decent role in Bimal Roy’s Sujata, opposite Nutan,
Comment by souvik — February 24, 2008 @ 4:24 pm