From left: Mansoor, Soha, Saba, Saif, Kunal, Sharmila and Kareena in a rare photo of everyone together | Photos from the book
Who is Soha Ali Khan?
It is a question that the Bollywood actor is forced to answer fairly often, such as the time in July 2015 when she was accosted at the department store, Selfridges, by a gaggle of young, selfie-seeking Indian women, leading an English salesperson to inquire if she was famous. Before she had time to compose a full reply, she had already been introduced: “That’s Saif Ali Khan’s sister!”
That, she supposes, was valid, but so is her chagrin at having her older sibling’s reputation precede her own for the umpteenth time. So, soon after that Selfridges encounter when she found that she had some time on her hands, Khan decided to take stock of her own accomplishments in a rather public exercise — detailing the high, and low, points of her life in her autobiography The Perils of Being Moderately Famous.
More than the daughter of ‘Tiger’ Pataudi and Sharmila Tagore or the sister of Saif, the lesser known Bollywood actor tells her own tale
At the time she set out to write the book, Khan acknowledged the possible abortiveness of her literary endeavour. “To write a book don’t you need a story to tell? A story worth telling?” she openly wonders in the book’s introduction, candid in her doubts about her own significance. By the book’s end, however, she comes full circle, realising that she has, in fact, been writing all this time for her daughter in utero, to whom she dedicates the effort.
So what will little Inaaya Naumi Khemu, born September 2017, draw from this book, along with the hundreds of readers who have “bought/borrowed/shoplifted” a copy?
For one, some family history. Khan’s journey from a student at the University of Oxford, to a stint in investment banking, to Bollywood actor (she touches little on her vision for Renegade Films, the production company she has founded with her husband Kunal Khemu) are detailed. Other milestones of her life, such as travels in her youth, finding love and having a baby are also to be found here. In a fairly linear, chronological order, The Perils of Being Moderately Famous finally tells the world the Soha Ali Khan story — in an openly self-deprecating style.
The humour is not thoroughly hilarious on all attempts, but you’re sure to crack a wry smile at the fact that Khan is laughing at herself, or at least her predicament, as “the youngest (and lesser known) member of a somewhat notable family.”
She recognises that she must relate the illustrious history of this notable family, ie the Pataudi-Tagore clan, in order to effectively tell her own. So she dedicates her book’s two initial chapters to a series of interesting revelations about her ancestry, such as why her paternal family, the Pataudi clan, never moved to Muslim-majority Pakistan — her grandfather Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi “never believed in the idea of Pakistan” or a country based on religion — or how the seed of interfaith marriage was sown in their family decades ago when her paternal grandparents set the trend of “marrying for love and love alone”, or in what way exactly her mother Sharmila Tagore is related to the legendary Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore.
These are perhaps the most memorable parts of the book, brought to life with a great set of pictures, from stately portraits of her nawabi grandparents to a rare photo of Khan’s whole family — did you know Soha and Saif have an elder sister named Saba who designs jewellery? — to scans of Tagore’s poems written for Khan’s maternal grandmother. If nothing else, the book will definitely make the reader more informed in a conversation about one of Bollywood’s reigning families.