Tuesday, January 31, 2006

CONVERSATION WITH A PATRIOTIC INDIAN

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Just the excerpts, friends. Would not bore you with the details. Pakitan are leading by 518 runs, yet some believe India can pull it off. At least get an honourable draw, that is. Never mind if Faisal Iqbal has scored a century and looks hardly ruffled. Never mind if Razzaq is giving him good company while Kamran Akmal, who gave so much grief to the Indians in the first innings, is yet to come.

BG: We are dead and gone. We have been murdered by a smart gameplan.
PATRIOT: Cricket is a game in which everything is possible. Remember that records are made to be broken.

BG: But a lead of 518 runs with two days to go? And, Pakistan still have five batsmen left.
P: If they can do it, why can't we? Our batting line-up is better than theirs.

BG: Too many problems, boss. Sehwag has a bad second innings track record, Sachin has not been in the best of touch to say the least. So, who will do the magic for us?
P: Dravid and Laxman. Don't you dare forget what they did to Australia. Then, there is Yuvraj. He has played some great innings. And Ganguly of course.

BG: Ganguly? But two days back, you are the one who called him a liability, a good for nothing, a man who does nothing but politics.
P: That was then. This is now. After watching him play the way he did in the first innings, I seriously feel he is all set for a big one. He will save India from losing the match and the series.

Dear readers,
You think this posting is fiction? Even I would have thought so had the person had not spoken to me just about 15 minutes ago. Anything for India, the winning team, what say you? Even if that means having to watch Sourav Ganguly score a century and bail India out.
Patriotism: we, the Indians, can redefine what the word means every week. One connotation, as of now, is that some serious Ganguly haters are ready to suffer him for the time-being.

WHOSE IDOL IS ABHIJIT SAWANT ANYWAY?

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

While visiting Pune, veteran music composer O P Nayyar said that shows like Indian Idol did not mean much to him. Nayyar should know. After all, he is the man who crafted some of the most beautiful tunes Asha Bhonsle has ever sung in her entire career. Nayyar explored the Western idiom often, yet his songs had an unmistakable Indian identity, one of the reasons why Nayyar's originals are still heard in the 'real' India while in the confused cosmos, people indulge in the retro remixes of his tracks and jive with them at nightspots.

Why should Nayyar not be critical about such talent hunt shows is a question one must ask. Firstly, most of these guys who come to the shows are seekers of limelight, not expertise. Lots of money and incentives are on offer. The programmes are telecast, and re-telecast, on major channels. Those with mediocre voices get past those with bad voices. They become celebrities overnight.

Think Abhijit Sawant, Qazi, Ruprekha Banerjee. Their discs might be circulating in the market, and I am sure have been picked up by many hopefuls who feel that if guys with such voices can make it, why can't we? But, does that make them good singers? No way. The only person who has proved to be a serious exception to this reality is Shreya Ghoshal. But then, Shreya did not need to have a great personality to make a musical point. She had to sing which she did very well, and today, she is one of the better talents in the country.

Eventually, somebody like Qazi will have to hardsell himself as a singer if he is not looking at a career in acting. But, is Qazi prepared for it despite being splashed on the cover of leading magazines? He is not, if one goes by what one heard in his album Jodi No.1 with Ruprekha. He needs some serious practice, he needs to try out a variety of tracks, possibly even undergo some regular classical grooming to get his basics right. Or else, he will be just one of those guys who came out of nowhere and disappeared in nothingness.

A veteran music composer like O P Nayyar knows the perils of premature superstardom. Anybody who views music as something that is meant to be heard and not seen will agree with him.

Monday, January 30, 2006

AAMHI ASU LADKE, ANYONE?

JUST CHECK OUT KAVITA KANE'S BLOG JOKERTALK FOR A REVIEW OF AAMHI ASU LADKE, THE MUCH-APPRECIATED MARATHI FILM RELEASED RECENTLY.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

WAKE UP BUDDIES

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Rang De Basanti takes the viewer by complete surprise. For, here is a story of five young men who are completely disillusioned with the nation itself. They see no hope, no present. As DJ (Aamir Khan) says in the film, one leg of every Indian is on the past, the other on the future. And, the person is happily peeing on the present!

Have you read Hanif Kureishi's Black Album, a novel in which the writer says there was nothing the people could seek inspiration from? There were no politicians, no statesman, nothing at all except The Beatles. In Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's Rang De..., even The Beatles are missing. All you have are a bunch of students who hang around in the university, having chai while watching a television which needs the occasional slap to work properly.

Not that Mehra has got everything right. Atul Kulkarni's character of Laxman Pandey, a right wing activist, is marred by a grave foible. Kulkarni does a fine job, but where the script goes wrong is when he comes forward to play the role of the patriot Ram Prasad Bismil for a documentary on Indian revolutionaries being made by Sue (Alice Patten). One would have understood if he had reacted to the death of the fighter pilot Ajay (R Madhavan) and joined hands with the five young men in a plot to eliminate the defence minister (Mohan Agashe). But Laxman Pandey as an actor? Wrong choice.

Where Rang De really scores is firstly because of the wit. Although the bit about Aamir Khan and his method acting has been stretched too far, the fact remains that Aamir plays the role of DJ brilliantly. Right after the debacle called Mangal Pandey, and despite the fact that he plays a guy who is supposed to be 15 years younger than him, he successfully manages to finish off any cynicism that people might have had due to the age factor. He speaks in a rustic Punjabi accent all through, making an unexpected shift to regular Hindi just once when his friend's mother (Waheeda Rehman) is rushed to the hospital. But when he cracks a joke, the entire auditorium laughs with him.

Among the others, Sharman Joshi who plays the joker of the gang (Sukhi) is superb. Not many thought that Sharman was any great shakes as an actor, not surprising because his body of work had nothing to write home about. But here, he comes up with a first-rate performance, matching Aamir frame for frame in a scene when he wants to avoid doing the seemingly impossible. Siddharth who plays Karan is wonderful when he expresses his anguish through silences. But when he turns into an announcer to describe a huge bit of news to listeners, his voice lets him down.

Kunal Kapoor has the gravity required for the character of Aslam, while Madhavan does a great job with the small role of the fighter pilot whose death catalyses an act that stirs the entire nation. A few words about the two ladies, Alice Patten and Soha Ali Khan. Although this film is dominated by the guys, Alice as Sue and Soha as Sonia have performed most commendably.

The emotional exchanges between Sue and DJ are as subtle as possible, while Ajay and Sonia share an equally beautiful relationship. Mehra hasn't gone overboard while depicting either, thereby making it clear that he did not intend to make a romance but a film that deals with the harsh truths of life. These truths are camouflaged by humour and light moments, but we all know that the director isn't seeking an escape route. Only, he is trying to make the experience of watching it as comfortable as possible.

By now, the climax of the film is well-known. The young men kill the defence minister in a reaction to the death of the fighter pilot because the minister has been guilty of buying cheap parts, thereby endangering the lives of pilots. Such transactions are just one of the problems crippling the nation, and that one needs to deal with them is the message that resonates all through the plot. Is killing the ministers a solution? Certainly not, since it seems like radical Syndicalism that no modern social system can accept.

What it means is that the youth of the country need to come forward and act if the ailments are to be eradicated. Significant message, very well told and, hopefully, a handful will respond to the need for acting. For, sadly, the nation has been chug-chugging towards complete anarchy, and we have been guilty of accepting the state of affairs because we have been sleeping all through. When we have acted, it is as if we have practising somnambulism.

We have suffered far too much, and for far too long. Seriously.

THIRD-DEGREE TORTURE FOR BOWLERS

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Is this cricket? One was forced to ask this question after watching the first two Tests in the highly awaited Indo-Pak series. Most batsmen had a ball, almost everyone seemed capable of scoring centuries, while the bowlers toiled endlessly. And it seemed, rather needlessly. So 'batsman-friendly' were the pitches that, believe me, even Sourav Ganguly could have hammered a hundred if he was given an opportunity. After all, he is known to make the most of favourable situations, isn't he? Tons against Namibia, Holland -- they are too recent to be forgotten.

The idea is not to make a scapegoat out of Ganguly. That must be left to Greg Chappell and company, who are doing a spectacular job anyway. What needs to be emphasised is that the brains behind the cricketing pitches have no business to reduce quality bowlers to jokers. In the first innings of the first Test, Pakistan posted a formidable total of 679 for seven declared. Younis Khan, Mohammed Yousuf, Shahid Afridi and Kamran Akmal scored centuries, while the Indian bowlers suffered, just suffered. The situation was loaded in Pakistan's favour, while most went on and on about how badly our players bowled.

Tongues stopped wagging when the Indians went in to bat. Virender Sehwag just went after the Pakistan bowlers, and smashed them to every possible corner of the park. In the role of an opener, Rahul Dravid played the perfect foil as the Indians put on 410 runs before losing Sehwag. They were closing in on the world record for the opening stand held by Vinoo Mankad and Pankaj Roy, while the Pakistani attack looked much worse than India's all through. The much-hyped aggression of Shoaib Akhtar, which was being spoken about as the difference between the two teams, did not even threaten our batsmen mildly. The fault was not Shoaib's though. What could he have done when the pitch did nothing to assist him?

The second match followed the pattern of the first. Apart from an inspiring spell by Zaheer Khan, who picked up a few quick wickets in the Pakistan second innings, never for a moment did the match seem like serious cricket. The batsmen plundered each other's attacks, and improved their averages. The bowlers got murdered. In the Pakistan first innings score of 588, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Afridi scored centuries while Younis Khan missed out on one. When the Indians responded with 603, Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Dravid scored centuries. VVS Laxman and Irfan Pathan made 90 each.

Because Inzamam and Shoaib Malik did not bat, the Pakistan second innings folded up very quickly. Seriously. Despite centuries from Younis Khan and Mohammad Yusuf, the team could manage merely 490, the worst of the series. The match ended without making any vague promise of a result. The batsmen went back home happy. The bowlers left thinking why life was giving them such a bad deal. Nobody can blame them.

Why this Indo-Pak series is a horror story is since fans from both the countries expect to see serious duels on the cricketing ground. They wish to experience nail-biting moments such as those in which the pacer makes a batsman evade the cherry with short-pitched deliveries, or when the spinner deceives the batsman into playing a false shot with sublime guile. Each fan wants to see his country win, and very badly at that. One victory for India, and the entire country becomes ecstatic. One triumph for Pakistan, and everyone starts mourning.

Indo-Pak outings being emotionally charged affairs, it was highly essential that the pitches were made in such a way that they yielded results. They had to help the bowlers from time to time so that they had some hope in their hearts when they ran up to bowl. Both the teams have fine bowlers. But they needed opportunities to display their skills, which they simply did not get. What they got instead was third-degree torture on the cricketing ground.

The two Indo-Pak tests will be remembered for a long time because fans lost track of centuries. They will be even better remembered for being cruel run feasts that ended up raising the bowling averages of players from both the countries. Very sad indeed, but then a select few chose to spoil the party of millions. Guess they know why. +

(The copyright of this article rests with The Maharashtra Herald)

Friday, January 27, 2006

RANG DE BASANTI: A UTOPIA WE MUST SEEK

BY KARISHMA UPADHYAY

Latest computers, the coolest phones and the newest designer brand to hit the Indian market… these are some of the things that 99.99 percent of today's youth is clued into. Oh! And, their biggest concern is also getting the highest paying job possible. After all, who cares about Bihar or Nagaland (is that in India?!)? While I was watching Rang De Basanti on the country's 56th Republic Day, the thought struck home. No one cares.

The politicians or the civil services definitely couldn't be bothered(and unfortunately no one expects them to), but what is really, really sad is that neither do the people who live in this country. The same people who complain about everything and anything in the country, wouldn't spare a minute to think about what they can do to make things right.

A simple example of this can be seen every day in Mumbai, one of country's premiere cities. Whether it's a businessman in his shiny Merc or an advertising executive in a local train, neither will think twice before littering the city. After all, how many will take the pain to carry the rubbish to the closest dustbin? Or as my husband and other friends insist – 'The city is one big dustbin, another chocolate wrapper or plastic bag will not make a difference'.

Life came to a standstill in Mumbai on July 26th, 2005 when the city was flooded after unprecedented rains. While the blame game started the next day, Mumbaikars refused to take any responsibility for the tonnes of garbage that clogged up the already inadequate drains in the city. After all, it's the government's job to clean up the city and we pay our taxes (at least most of us to). So why should we act? That was the government's job.

Getting back to Rang De Basanti, the film essentially talks about a group of five friends who have given up on the country. A simple twist in the script changed life as they know it and suddenly their passion for the country takes centre-stage. Wonder what it would take for the DKNY wearing 20 somethings in the country to wake up? I believe that the film is a must watch for young India. Even if hundred youngsters look beyond the film's basic entertainment value and think about it's
message, it would be worth all the effort that went into making the film.

It's not just about something as basic as keeping your city clean but it does start there. Bigger issues like poverty, corruption, illiteracy or unemployment can be tackled at a macro level but do anyone of us do anything at all for the city/country that we call ours. Don't need an oracle to answer this one.

Just ask yourself. And, be honest.

Bee Gee's note: Karishma works with the DNA. Having worked with her before, I have had the privilege of spoiling her birthday and making her file articles all through that special night and the next! We continue to be friends therefore. And she continues to be as mad as ever.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

THE PROBLEM WITH WRITING ON SALMAN

Among the four star biographies I have written -- all unauthorised or else I would have ended up writing a lot of goody goody fiction -- the one on Salman Khan did the worst. Barely one edition managed to move off the shelves as opposed to the one on Shah Rukh Khan that sold in places as remote as Nigeria and did around six-seven editions in English and Hindi. The criticism I had to confront regarding Salman was that he did not merit a place in the 'Hall of Fame', which is what the series was called. After all, he was known to be violent, he had been bad to all his girlfriends right from Sangeeta Bijlani to Somy Ali to even Aishwarya Rai. Yeah, even Aishwarya Rai. So, who the hell was I to write a book on Salman and pedestalise him alongside SRK, Aish and Hrithik?

But, there was a second view which I respect. Many film buffs who had read all the four books actually found a way to get hold of my email id, and tell me that my book on Salman was the best of the lot. I wouldn't say the best, because that would imply that the others were good which was not the case. The one on Hrithik was very average to be honest, not only because of a taxing deadline but since there was very little material on the guy who had just started out.

Why I think my book on Salman was the only good one was since it was an awfully tough challenge. The superstar's body of work was huge, and everything about his life was eventful including his childhood which was not particularly bliss-laden to say the least. His father Salim Akhtar was really hard on him. So much so that when the walls of his house had marks because Salman and younger brother Arbaaz had missed each other while trying out Kung Fu after watching a martial arts film, the dad thrashed them with a hockey stick till it broke.

Briefly, when I started out, there seemed to very little good about Salman's life which could have made for comforting reading. There was action, violence, injustice, two-three-four-timing. But as I began to explore the guy's life, I realised there were positives which few bothered to report, the reason being Salman had a particular image which was a hot seller. Salman as a man who tormented Aish --whether or not he did is a different story -- was sure to sell. But will a story that Salman was supporting 35 widows of Matheran sell? No, because none of them happened to be an Aish or even a Somy Ali. Besides, Salman seldom spoke about his personal life which only helped the media to get away with anything when it concerned his own life. He did not care. That was his biggest weakness.

When Salman's girlfriends hit out against the guy, he just kept shut, making vague statements like "Aishwarya is a good costar. It was great working with her in Hum Dil Chuke Sanam." He was the happiest guy on earth when Hrithik Roshan became a megastar after Kaho Na Pyaar Hai. He asked Somy to go ahead and sign a film with Suneil Shetty when the latter was a nobody. For years, he had been working for cancer patients while making sure that the media did not report about it. His bad side was made worse by the media's repeated assaults on the guy. But his good side was less than obscure because of his belief that if you did something good and spoke about it, what you did ceased to be good then and there.

Doing a balancing act with Salman's life was tough. Bloody tough. I would have been happy to pull that one off even if just one of my books had sold. And that too, because I had bought it.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

IF WESTERNS ARE ABOUT GAYS, CALL ME JOANNA

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Yul Brynner and Queenie Cross have a job to do. They have to confront a bunch of brutal nuisance-makers. They take out their guns, look into each other's eyes, and kiss. Lovers, they are. And, professional killers, who may never ever get to spend intimate moments later. Used to Bollywood masala mixes with "action, emotion, drama and melodrama" -- the classic one-liner used to promote Hindi films through the radio once -- the heart weeps for them. How one wishes the guy was a tailor, and the girl a maidservant, so that they could have married and lived happily ever after. But here, in this Hollywood Western The Magnificent Seven, they have to deal with rugged criminals whom they must kill, failing which they will be dead.

Liar, cut the inanity. Stop fooling readers with your gibberish. You haven't watched The Magnificent Seven. Queenie Cross acted in just one film (Ginger Mick, 1920) that was released five years after Yul Brynner was born. Brynner's partner in crime in the film was Steve McQueen, you fool. That is right. The edit page being sacrosanct, I do not wish to misreport here, although cooking up fiction is pretty much up my street. Brynner and McQueen were the pair who were all set to hunt and, naturally, there was no Queenie. Both were great killers, and greater gay lovers.

God! This fellow cannot stop fabricating, which is natural. He has worked for a company that produced a gossip glossy, after all. I can hear the angered reactions of a few who have watched The Magnificent Seven a thousand times, and intend to double that figure. These are the same people who know their Westerns frame by frame. They are aware that Ang Lee has done a brilliant job in Brokeback Mountain, a love story of two cowboys, but refuse to believe that Westerns have a gay subtext just because some say so.

So, am I regressively anti-gay or plain homophobic? Or, is my perspective a ploy in disguise to attract attention that I badly need? All these questions have a common answer. No. For, a Western is a guy thing. Most fellows who act in it are men. Most viewers who adore it are men too. It is the antithesis of Mills and Boon which very few guys read but which most girls cannot do without at a certain stage in their lives.

How can one describe the atmosphere in the average Western? Mentally retarded. The characters are unidimensional cardboard cut-outs seeking action in life. Why so, only God knows. These characters inhabit a territory in which laws are meant to be broken. Rewards are announced for mindless crimes, and the good criminal (see Westerns to figure out what that means) triumphs over bad criminals. Women pop in and out, but the filmmaker is usually too preoccupied with the tussle between the good bad guy and the bad bad guy to show any serious human relationship.

Where there is a Western, killings are inevitable. How the criminal commits the murder is a major directorial concern. The bad bad guy, for instance, has a gun in his hand. The good bad guy, who seems unarmed, looks troubled. But before the former can lift his gun, he bends down and pulls out a knife from his boots. The knife hurtles towards the enemy, and penetrates his chest. The fellow moves around in great agony, and slowly, slowly, falls down. He is dead. The gun lies next to him. It could have been an old man's walking stick. The good bad guy walks off. Next scene.

Logic. Don't look for it. Sadness. Experience it occasionally when a weak person is brutalised. Thrill. Feel it whenever the hero occupies screen space. You know action will follow. A few lesser mortals will be shot. You are also cushioned by the comforting feeling that none of these blokes have actually died. After the scene had been shot, they must have been walking around with bright red paint on their chests and thighs.

In a ruthless world where men are pitted against men, it is but natural that some men become friendly with men as well. After all, their goal is to either find some hidden treasure or kill somebody. Relationships with women are shown briefly, because indulging in them would dilute the plot of the film. The pace will slacken, sob stories for untimely deaths have to be incorporated, killing the film altogether.

Brokeback Mountain is not your average Western. It is an emotional film with cowboys as heroes and lovers. So, it is a pity that suddenly, a few are using the film to say how Westerns have gay subtexts. Actually, there is a grave problem with political correctness. Some use it as a device for bulls*******.

(The copyright of this article rests with The Maharashtra Herald, Pune)

Friday, January 20, 2006

WORKING IN A RED-LIGHT AREA

Have you ever worked in a red-light area? Should you do so, the experiences you might go through can be hilarious...mostly.
Late night. One day. I board an auto-rickshaw. Have just finished my work. The rickshaw guy looks at me, and tells me with a straight face in broken English,"Saab, do you want an item?" (Item is a ribald way of referring to a sex worker). I tell him I work in the red-light area. Am a scribe. He replies,"I do two jobs. In the morning, I drive auto like anybody else. In the night, I do delivery. I thought you wanted item also." I say I do not, leave the rickshaw, and walk off.
Buddhahood, Chapter 1 over.
"Saab, you have come to this area at the right time,"one rick guy tells me another day. "Right time?" Am confused. Have to come daily for work. "Yes, right now it is the government's budget season. So, items are giving discounts." It is ten in the night. How can I convince him I am a journalist? I keep shut. He says nothing too. I reach home.
Buddhahood, Chapter 2 ends.
In front of my house. Another day. A third rickshaw guy asks me,"Do you get girls here also?" "How the hell do I know?" I shoot back. "I thought you had gone to a red-light area, so you would know."
I stare at him, and leave the place.
Buddhahood, Chapter 3 complete.
A festival. I am walking on the crowded streets of the area to write an article on the atmosphere, the celebration to be precise. Families are enjoying every moment of the celebration but, at a distance, I see some plastered faces. A bunch of girls have put on what seems like cheap talcum powder on their faces to look attractive. The red lipstick they have applied seems to accentuate the pain on their faces. They are looking for work when people are enjoying.
Is this life?
Budhwar Peth Buddhahood. Last chapter ends.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

LET'S NOT HYPE YOUNG TALENT

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Any tennis lover would have seen it coming. A miracle that transferred the skills from one player to the other had to occur while the two were locking horns on the court. But if not, Sania Mirza would have been defeated by Venus Williams anyway. There was no miracle, and Sania was outclassed.

Those who follow the game closely could sense another defeat for Sania, and this time at the hands of the Czech Republic youngster Nicole Vaidisova. Vaidisova is slightly younger than Sania, and she is one of the most talented youngsters in the circuit. Sania played reasonably well but, at the end of the day, the bottomline was a victory in straight sets for the young Czech girl.

Does this mean that we should abandon all our expectations from Sania, whose success has metamorphosed the face of Indian women's tennis? It does not, but what it does indicate is that we need to give little less attention to this girl as long as she is not doing something really remarkable. Declaring her the sportsperson of the year, showering countless accolades for being world number 34, publishing her pictures virtually every day, making sure that she gets more endorsements than bigger performers just because she is pretty and young: these are not good for Sania.

I had made a passing reference about this concern in a column of mine, but let me explain why I think so. Just how old is Sania? Born in November 15, 1986, means she is less than 20. At her age, many women tennis players had scaled the sort of heights Sania is yet to. When 19, a prodigy like Tracy Austin had defeated Martina Navratilova to win the US Open. So, somewhere, and just because Sania is the first Indian woman to make a mark, we have been guilty of hyping her.

Also, since she is just a 19-year-old kid, it is important to think how she might be feeling while encountering such adulation. Nobody should fault her if she spends some time indulging in the paneygyrical odes that are being composed on her. In this situation, if she says that she will play the game the way she does, it could be because she is guilty of ignoring her flaws because of how the nation perceives her.

But the fact is: Sania's game is promising, but she has some serious weaknesses which she needs to overcome to become a top ten player in women's tennis. If she continues to play in her present style, which is flamboyant but error-ridden, she might beat an Elena Dementieva when the latter is off-colour on the court. But if she herself experiences a bad day, she might lose to someone ranked 100 seeds below her because the latter is less flashy but more consistent.

Hyping somebody ahead of time is a typically Indian characteristic. When Baichung Bhutia came to the limelight, he was talked about as if he was India's Maradona, and obviously because our football standards are pitiably low. But, today, we all know that Baichung is the best player only in the context of a bad Indian football team. In a place like say, England, he will find it very difficult to even find a place in a decent club squad.

When music composer A R Rahman made his first impact with Roja, he was hailed as the great saviour of Hindi film music. But, a few films later, the very people who had praised him to the skies started saying that he was repetitive. When Yuvraj Singh played a couple of special knocks after his entry in the Indian cricket squad, critics went on and on about good he was. But, after a few bad innings and his subsequent exit from the team, the same guys launched scatching attacks on his easy-go-lucky approach and inability to play spin bowling at the outset of his innings.

Here, the idea is not to say that we should not praise youngsters when they make a mark like Sania has. But it is equally important to ensure that their flaws are spoken about as well because, as talents, they all have weak areas that need constant attention and polishing. We must stop viewing such youngsters as phenomena and talk about them as people with tremendous potential who have the ability to improve as well.

Also, one major need is that we must make sure that they are not compelled to be under the spotlight all the time. For, they can work on their craft only if they are left on their own. Personally, I would hate to see the day when the world might speak of Sania as another Anna Kournikova. But if that happens, who will responsible for her decline? Not Sania alone, that's for sure.

(The copyright of this column rests with The Maharashtra Herald, Pune)