|
Q: The De Montford university at Leicester has
conferred a doctorate on you. How does Dr Bachchan sound
to you?
‘Dr Bachchan’ was my father! A Ph.D in English
Literature from Cambridge, on W.B. Yeats and Occultism,
in 1954, perhaps the first Indian to get this distinction
from that University. That achievement shall remain embedded
in me always. None of my achievements, honours and degrees
can and will ever match that. The Jhansi University conferred
a doctorate on me the year before last, De Montford does
one this month and at the end of the year the Delhi University
wishes an honorary doctorate for me too. I am, of course,
overwhelmed and deeply humbled by this recognition and I
express my extreme gratitude to each of these prestigious
institutions, but truly feel unworthy of them. My contribution,
if at all there is any, shall always pale in front of my
father’s.
Q:You come from a family with an acute literary/scholarly
bent of mind. How much of an academic are you at heart?
Do you get time to read a lot? Who are your favourite authors?
I am an acute failure in this department, as I am in various
others. I am a graduate in science and have lived and been
brought up in an atmosphere of poetry and literature and
academics due to my father. Whatever I have, which isn’t
much really, is all that I have imbibed or accumulated because
of my proximity to my parents. There has not been any concerted
effort to follow or pursue academics. There is a deep desire
to do so. But how and when, I just do not know.
Q:You're just being your over-modest self.
I’m serious. The genes reflect in the progeny. My
niece, Nilima Bachchan, Ajitabh’s eldest, has just
done a Ph.D in Aeronautical Engineering from the UK. If
there is a genuine Dr Bachchan after my father it is her.
My other niece, Namrata, is a painter and writer. My daughter,
Shweta, is a voracious reader and a great mind. From our
side of the family she is perhaps the only informal academic.
But I get no time to read. I collect the latest books and
browse through them and store them for a rainy day, hoping
that they shall give me company when I am confined to a
chair or a bed. But I am a bad reader. I am currently content
with my father’s books and his wisdom.
Q:Do you think formal education is a necessary
qualification for an actor? You’ve been to college.
Dilip Kumar hasn’t.
I think a formal education is necessary for an individual
pursuing any vocation. Formal education just does not bring
in academic knowledge. It brings with it curriculum, discipline,
forbearance, competitiveness, understanding, vision and
so many other qualities that are so essential for everyday
existence in a normal society. My days in college may not
have a direct reflection on my present profession. But I
cannot wish away the other aspects of its benefits to me
as an individual. An actor’s performance will always
betray his inner build-up as a human. Dilip Saab may not
have gone to college. But can you really doubt the reflection
of the quality of his inner self in his performances? That
he developed these qualities independently and not through
an educational institution gives so much more credence to
his unassailable genius.
Q: How much did you stress on Abhishek and Shweta’s
education?
We stressed a lot. But in the end our bottomline was,
educate yourself yes, but educate yourself to be a good
human first. |