Adil Hussain as Aslam Puncturewala in the 2014 film Zed Plus
I got a message on WhatsApp, saying that there’s this 23-year-old guy who has written a script on death and that the film will premiere in Venice. I met the director and instantly liked him. His humility and wisdom reminded me of Ang Lee. I mean, when I was that age, I was thinking about girls! I read the script and knew I had made the right choice.” It was the right choice indeed and lucky too, given that Hussain is inundated with too many scripts at any given time. And, dare I say, it’s his own fault: “I get a lot of work through Twitter or Facebook Messenger. I keep my DMs on. It’s difficult and time-consuming. Many of them I can’t even read. I’m carrying many of them on my tab and few of them are from friends — those are the difficult ones. Today I got one more. It’s piling up.”
Mukti Bhawan talks about big themes such as death, which has been a constant source of fascination for Hussain. It made him think of his own father’s demise, which he approached in a unique way. “I was shooting a television series in Rajasthan, near the Pakistan border, when I got the news. I was quite surprised that I felt no remorse at all. I was like, that’s great, he’s gone for another journey and he’ll be back if he chooses to. Everybody was ready to cry with me and I said ‘no, let’s celebrate’. If you weep or cry, the soul doesn’t travel out. We had a feast and everybody started smiling. And everybody was ready for him to go. He had lived his full life. Saw his children growing up. Grandchildren. Great-grandchildren. Aur kya chahiye matlab? [What else does one need?]”
While Hussain has played a few Pakistani characters on screen, he’s never been to Pakistan. “The trouble is that if I have a Pakistani visa on my passport, I’ll have a terrible time travelling. I had been offered a role in a fantastic Pakistani project, about the underground mafia, called The Lyari Project. That film didn’t happen, but I couldn’t have done it any way.” There’s some consolation though: next up, he’s at least playing a Norwegian-Pakistani in Iram Haq’s sophomore feature What Will People Say. The film, premiering at the Toronto Film Festival next month, is the story of a young woman straddling two different cultures.
Mukti Bhawan talks about big themes such as death, which has been a constant source of fascination for Hussain. It made him think of his own father’s demise, which he approached in a unique way. “I was shooting a television series in Rajasthan, near the Pakistan border, when I got the news. I was quite surprised that I felt no remorse at all. I was like, that’s great, he’s gone for another journey and he’ll be back if he chooses to. Everybody was ready to cry with me and I said ‘no, let’s celebrate’. If you weep or cry, the soul doesn’t travel out. We had a feast and everybody started smiling. And everybody was ready for him to go. He had lived his full life. Saw his children growing up. Grandchildren. Great-grandchildren. Aur kya chahiye matlab? [What else does one need?]”
At present, Adil Hussain is based in Delhi but whenever there is a mention of his roots, he glows. I ask him to paint me a picture of Goalpara, the city in Assam he’s from. “It’s a small, very small town. It’s so beautiful, which I didn’t even realise until I came to Delhi. It rains eight months a year. The backyard of our house has a pond, with fish, trees, jackfruit and all that. I used to climb trees and steal mangoes from our neighbour’s house. I still remember all the mischievous things I did. Like, when I had to smoke for the first time in my life, I had to go 50 metres and climb a hill, hide myself. I had a naughty friend who taught me to smoke.”