Even before the release of the film, whenever
some cinema halls showed the trailers of Hrithik
Roshan's Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai, the girls in
the audience would whistle loudly each time the latest
Bollywood hunk appeared on the screen. Since the film's
release in mid-January, Kaho Naa....has
been doing roaring business at the box-office. No wonder
filmmaker Yash Chopra, the film's distributor for the
Mumbai and overseas territories, says, "A star's
born. The public has accepted him totally." The
last time one saw female audiences going so crazy over a
new actor was more than ten years ago when Aamir Khan
arrived with Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak. Trade pundists
attach special significance to the Kaho Naa...'s
success because the film was sandwiched between two mega
releases of the mighty Khans - Aamir's Mela and Shah
Rukh's Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani. But both the
Khan-starrers failed to live up to expectations, and a
novice stole the show. Hrithik - the first major star to
arrive since Shah Rukh Khan burst into Bollywood with
Deewana and Baazigar - is now the new hope of a film
industry hit by frequent, colossal flops and rare hits.
But how is the object of all this adulation coping
with his mint-fresh status as Bollywood's new superstar?
Well, 26-year old Hrithik is feeling "embarrassed
and awkward," and trying hard to remain the
"average guy" he claims he is. The third
generation of two premier film families (he has music
composer Roshan and filmmaker J. Om Prakash as his
grandfathers), Hrithik assisted his director father
Rakesh Roshan for five years before the latter launched
him in the glamorous, youthful and romantic thriller
Kaho Naa.... "It's Dad's magic and hard work
that has paid off," says Hrithik, "I was just
hoping for pass marks. I didn't expect this to happen. I
still haven't come around to enjoying the success of the
film. I was waiting for the first week to finish before
really letting my hair down, but then this happened to
Dad." 'This' refers to the attempt on Rakesh
Roshan's life in which the director had a miraculous
escape. Hrithik is particularly uncomfortable at the
idea of his newly-acquired drooling female fans.
"It makes me very nervous. I'm basically a very shy
person. My female fans expect to see me as Raj (the name
of the character he plays on screen) when they see me.
But I'm like any other guy. Hailed as the most
sensational dancer the industry has ever seen, Hrithik
says he's actually "very awkward" on the
floor. "If you ever see me in a disco, you'll
realise I'm not a great dancer at all," he says.
"I just rehearsed a lot with Farha Khan (the
choreographer) for all my dance in Kaho
Naa..." Though filmmakers have started
queuing up outside the actor's Juhu home, Hrithik
insists he's going to judge films very carefully before
accepting them. "I plan to do only three or four
films at a time," he says. "After all, movies
are all about creating moments. You need to take a break
in between to recharge yourself. I also don't see myself
in any particular image. I want to be an actor and fit
myself into any and every role." He already has
some enviable projects lined up - a film with Karan
Johar, Subhash Ghai's next movie called Yaadein, with
Kareena Kapoor, a film each with Rahul Rawail and Raj
Kanwar, Vidhu Vinod Chopra's Mission Kashmir, and Khalid
Mohammed's Fiza. Hrithik realises the responsibility -
of living up to Kaho Naa...'s success - that rests on his
muscular shoulders. "It's scary," he says,
"all I can do is strive for the best and be a good
human being. After all, I'm just an ordinary guy trying
to earn my bread and
butter."
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