Atiqa Odho and Sania Saeed - Photos: Adnan Ali
In pin-drop silence, Mazhar Moin cues for a scene being shot for his new serial Piyari Bitto (PB) in an old house in the PECHS locality of Karachi. It is the end of May and as Karachi sizzles at 37C, without fans or airconditioners, it feels like 45C.
In artfully-created mellow light, Kaif Ghaznavi hands her husband (played by Fawad Khan) a cup of tea. Putting her own cup down, she confronts her husband for giving undue attention to another woman. Suddenly the scene erupts into a full-blown argument, but Kaif signals time out and pauses to delicately wipe the sweat off her brow with the pallu of her starched cotton sari. Mazhar cuts the scene and cues again to restart.
As Kaif delivers her fiery lines, a little kitten darts behind the door to meet his siblings and knocks over a lamp. Mazhar cuts again and walks over to an assistant, insisting on putting a cola drink in tea cups or whatever it is that his actors like to drink as long as they are actually sipping. He is as well known for his attention to minute detail as he is for shooting in real locations. In the oppressive heat, he sounds slightly edgy but Kaif softly reminds him that she is fasting and won’t be able to sip anything at all.
With thick, bound scripts on their laps Fawad Khan and Kaif Ghaznavi return to the dressing room to rehearse their lines. Fiddling with her hair attachment, Kaif sits with her dainty feet perched on the edge of a bed strewn with vanity cases, water bottles, wires, half-eaten biscuit packs, and water rations. Outfits on hangers hang across the open door. Farah Shah walks in, squeezing her petite frame past the noisy portable AC which blocks the narrow walking space in the small dressing room. The stylist approaches her and starts to work on her hair style for her upcoming shot.
Icon goes behind-the-scenes on the sets of television serial Piyari Bitto which reunites Sania Saeed and Atiqa Odho 25 years after Sitara Aur Mehrunissa
Outside in the lawn, wiping the sweat from their foreheads, the crew members are running around with lights, tripods and other props where a birthday party scene is being arranged. A van-load of women and children arrive and sit on the organza-sashed chairs, fanning themselves in the muggy sunshine. They will act as the guests in the party.
Running his hands through his hair, Mazhar laughs about how easily he had broken an earlier promise made to himself about not working again during a heatwave. But here he was on the sets of PB. With a powerful story by Saji Gul, this serial was going to make a bit of history as it reunites Atiqa Odho and Sania Saeed after a gap of 25 years.
“PB is a far cry from doing Anwar Maqsood’s Sitara Aur Mehrunnisa in 1992,” says Moin. “PB is the story of two women who are poles apart in their approach to life. One wants to change her life and break her boundaries and when she does, there are repercussions that she has to deal with, while another will spare nothing to keep a commitment in her life, but ends up with nothing.
“I choose stories with difficult situations. When people ask me why don’t you do something else, I always say ‘how can I change my signature?’”