Rajesh Khanna in his heyday. Photo from the book The late Rajesh Khanna remains one of Hindi cinema’s most enigmatic stars, and led a life worthy of being the subject of a novel, if not a film. No wonder then, following his death in 2012, several books have been written about him, including Gautam Chintamani’s Dark Star: The Loneliness of Rajesh Khanna, and, more recently, Rajesh Khanna: The Untold Story of India’s First Superstar by Yasser Usman.
While the former placed more emphasis on Rajesh Khanna’s work, and stayed away from too many personal details about his life: “the stories of his largess, his pettiness, his insecurities could fill pages but this book steers clear of anything overly salacious,” wrote Chintamani; Usman’s biography, on the other hand, delves deeper into the psyche of the complex — and complexed — man who was India’s first superstar.
The current generation of filmgoers may not even remember Rajesh Khanna; perhaps the first time they even heard of him was when his death made headlines a few years ago, and even after that, they probably would not have been be able to fully grasp how this man, whose trademarks were his crinkly eyes and odd mannerisms, drove an entire generation of filmgoers in India and beyond into a frenzy.
For context, noted scriptwriter Salim Khan points out in his foreword: “My son Salman Khan is a big star, crowds cluster daily in front of our house to catch a glimpse of him … I have never seen that kind of mass adulation for any other star after Rajesh Khanna.” Khan attributes this fan following to Khanna’s “charm and charisma at work because it happened in an era when there was no television, no 24-hour FM radio stations or big PR agencies.”
Khanna’s meteoric rise to stardom with films such as Aradhana and Do Raaste (1969) followed after a few flops. But when success came, it was of epic proportions. “The second blockbuster [Do Raaste] proved that Rajesh Khanna was here to stay … the symptoms included ringing cash registers and fans — especially of the female species — becoming hysterical at the sight and sometimes the mere mention of Rajesh Khanna. The fever was soon going to escalate into mass hysteria unlike anything that had ever been witnessed…”
Yet, even though Khanna’s films and persona are remembered so vividly by his colleagues and film fraternity, it is all the more surprising given that his success was, in fact, short lived. After a string of successful films such as Safar and Anand, Haathi Mera Saathi and Amar Prem, by 1973-74 the failures started to outnumber the successes. Besides his bad choices in films, another factor that contributed to his decline was that Amitabh Bachchan, who co-starred with him in Namak Haram (and Anand earlier), rose to fame as the ‘angry young man’ at this time.
Ironically, part of the credit for this goes to Khanna, since during the filming of Namak Haram, Khanna manipulated director Hrishikesh Mukherhee to ensure that the character he was playing died in the storyline, while Amitabh lived. This was because Khanna believed that the previous films in which he ‘died’ like Safar and Anand had proven to be big hits, and he felt that would be the case with Namak Haram too. Unfortunately, while the film did relatively well, “eventually, the death scene that Rajesh Khanna had fought so hard for became his undoing. His character dies too early … before the audiences even have a moment to absorb this … the screen is eclipsed by the giant Amitabh.” And this film, along with others like Zanjeer, marked the beginning of the Amitabh Bachchan era of Bollywood.
The manner in which Usman portrays Khanna’s life makes Rajesh Khanna: The Untold Story of India’s First Superstar a potboiler of sorts. The narrative is brisk, the facts substantiated by many leading journalists and actors who worked with Khanna, all of which come together to create an insight into Khanna’s life, yet with plenty of mystique. Even Khanna’s birthplace remains a mystery — according to several accounts he was born in Amristar, while others state it was Lahore or even near Karachi. His family members do not speak about him, but what is known about his childhood is that he was adopted by his father’s brother, who was unable to have children. Usman points out that this was probably the reason that fuelled his insecurity once he became a star.