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Alia Bhatt, who tied the knot with Ranbir Kapoor in April, announced her pregnancy last month and her father Mahesh Bhatt said he was overwhelmed after he heard the good news.
“It’s the most challenging role I have to play as a grandfather. When I heard that she is going to have a baby, (I was like) ‘Ah, my baby’s going to have a baby’.
“I had hardly recovered from the phenomenal challenge that she displayed in recent years and kind of stunned the nation as well. And her magic was all in itself awesome. Then the magic that she is going to be a vehicle of life left me awestruck,” the filmmaker told PTI in an email interview.
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“By the time my grandchildren grow up, the written word may perhaps perish and at least I’m leaving my voice behind so they can say that, ‘This is my grandfather’s voice’. So that’s what I feel is a gift. This is the best thing I could leave,” he added.
The filmmaker, one of the most recognised storytellers of the Indian cinema, is known for directing acclaimed films such as “Arth”, “Saaransh”, “Hum Hain Rahi Pyar Ke”, “Tamanna”, “Aashiqui”, “Dil Hai Ki Manta Nahin”, “Sadak” and “Zakhm”.
Mahesh Bhatt said “A Taste of Life” outweighs all his cinematic work and is closer to his heart primarily because it gave him the opportunity to go deeper into the bond that he shared with his mentor Krishnamurti.
“It has the defining love story of mine with my master, teacher, father, the love of my life, the breath of my life, U G Krishnamurti, and it chronicles my journey with him, particularly the last phase of life,” he added.
As a creative person, the 73-year-old director said he found the medium of audiobooks liberating.
“Doing the audio version of ‘A Taste of Life’ on Audible has been the mother of all experiences because cinema, when you direct or produce a film, is a collaborative medium and it’s done through group participation,” he said.
Writing, believes Mahesh Bhatt, is a lonely and intimate journey, where one may not be able to express their emotions completely.
“You cannot communicate because maybe you don’t have the skills or you’re not as good with the craft of writing… But when I spoke about it, when I read it in the studio, people who were listening to it on the other side were moved and stirred by the intensity with which my experience was pouring out,” he added.
In his novel “A Taste of Life”, Bhatt chronicles the days he spent with Krishnamurti in Vallecrosia, Italy, before the philosopher passed away in March 2007.
He said working on the audiobook was a unique experience as it pushed him to dig deeper into his memory.
“Those were the most intensely lived times of my life, and this work kind of flowered out of my heart. I had written about it but doing an audio version was a completely different experience because you use your body to share what is embedded in you.
“It is cathartic and it also transmits a lot of what you have been unable to kind of excavate from your memory bank, through the use of written word,” said the filmmaker.