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	<title>White Mercury &#187; Bollywood</title>
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		<title>BIG BROTHER &#8211; Cruelty TV As We Knew It</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jan 2007 18:39:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hermann Djoumessi</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Sure it feels like the end of the road for what is a light entertainment/Factual show&#8230; Or Cruelty TV as we knew it&#8230; Racism was the last taboo, these type of show had never tackled. While class war, sexism, etc&#8230;had already been through the big brother machine&#8230; Having said that&#8230;Isn&#8217;t it the very function of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head">Sure it feels like the end of the road for what is a light entertainment/Factual show&#8230;<br />
Or Cruelty TV as we knew it&#8230;</h3>
<p>Racism was the last taboo, these type of show had never tackled. While class war, sexism, etc&#8230;had already been through the big brother machine&#8230; Having said that&#8230;Isn&#8217;t it the very function of CBB and his &#8216;brother&#8217; show BB to higlight the ills of our society and to somehow weather the storm&#8230;?</p>
<p>And my point is&#8230;although I feel for the poor Shilpa&#8230;.she is actually &#8211; bless her &#8211; bearing the brunt of what a lot of us are experiencing on a daily basis whether at work or at school or while being stopped and searched in the streets&#8230;.She is almost a martyr for a just cause&#8230;.</p>
<h3 class="post_head"><u><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/events/images/2_128208_1_248_002.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Shilpa Shetty crying on Celebrity Big Brother 2007" align="left" height="200" hspace="10" width="260" /></u></h3>
<p>If a stunning &#8216;princess&#8217; out of Bollywood&#8217;s finest can suffer racism &#8230;then it says a lot about what ordinary Asians (and others by proxy) are going through on a daily basis&#8230;.<br />
If people are ready to behave in such a way on National Tv&#8230;then it says a lot about our society&#8230;and I am not only talking about Jade who has been made the &#8216;EscapeGoat&#8217; (To use a Goodysm) but also Danielle and Jo, who often were more plain in their speech, albeit behind closed doors and far away from Shilpa&#8230;.</p>
<p>If people can reach the level of &#8216;fame&#8217; and income reached by the three Witches and still behave so appallingly against a particular individual while displaying a level of ignorance and miseducation seldom seen on National Tv.. it does say a lot about the society we are living in&#8230;</p>
<p>Rather than brushing it under the carpet let&#8217;s expose the ills of our society in prime time TV. And yes (poor Shilpa) thank you for your grace and dignity in such a horrid time&#8230;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/events/images/genImage_000.jpg" class="imageright" alt="Celebrity Big Brother housemates 2007" height="274" width="450" /></p>
<p>I also applaud the 30 000 peoples whichever background they are hailing from who complained about her treatment. Ultimately, the producers are rubbing their hands and seemed to be willing to keep that storyline alive&#8230;Although I was for the show to be kept on-air, they also have a duty of care for the people they do invite on the show and if their livelihood or safety might be at risk by appearing on a Tv Show, then they should take their responsibility of course and inform the &#8216;contestants&#8217; properly.</p>
<p>Next? The &#8216;storm&#8217; will hopefully go away, new standards of behaviors and etiquette will be introduced on national Tv&#8230;As for our daily lives? Do not expect much I suspect, although Gordon Brown must have just been able to salvage the Anglo-British trade relations. As for Jade, who is said to be on &#8216;suicide-watch&#8217;&#8230; I suspect her camp has hired the PR machine that got Kate Moss off the hook and turned cocaine addiction to &#8216;Cocaine Chic&#8217;&#8230;.What will be the PR Buzz word for that: &#8216;Goby Chic&#8217; &#8230;&#8217;Chavy Chic&#8217;&#8230;? But I&#8217;m just an old cynical&#8230;</p>

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		<title>RAHMANIAN RHAPSODY &#8211; Letting his Work do the Talking</title>
		<link>http://www.whitemercury.com/music/rahmanian-rhapsody.html</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 09:43:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Writer</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[A. R. Rahman, having scored for over 75 movies and sold over 150 million albums, is almost worshipped as a god in some parts of India. However, despite his huge success he is ever the reluctant celebrity, preferring to let his work do the talking. Rahman will bring his Live, 3D Concert to Wembley Arena [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/rahmanian_phapsody.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="rahmanian phapsody" height="279" width="475" />A. R. Rahman, having scored for over 75 movies and sold over 150 million albums, is almost worshipped as a god in some parts of India. However, despite his huge success he is ever the reluctant celebrity, preferring to let his work do the talking. Rahman will bring his Live, 3D Concert to Wembley Arena Pavilion on 30th July 2005.</h3>
<p>If I told you of an artist whose albums have outsold Elvis, The Beatles and all of the Jackson clan added together, I wonder how you might respond?</p>
<p>Well, the artist in question is A. R. Rahman, dubbed &#8220;the Mozart of Madras&#8221;, whose tunes have mesmerised music lovers the world over. Having first made his name with numerous hit Bollywood soundtracks, he has since composed the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Bombay Dreams. His next musical offering, the stage adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien&#8217;s Lord Of The Rings trilogy, will open in Toronto later this year and, at a cool £10 million, it is the most expensive musical ever.</p>
<p>The good news for London though, is that, in July &#8217;05, A.R. is embarking on his first live UK tour. Expect magical musical soundscapes, stunning visuals and, for the first time in concert history, experience it all in 3D. The publicity release explains it like this: &#8220;&#8230;the audience will receive 3D glasses to transport them into a magical galaxy, where they will be able to ‘virtually&#8217; reach out to their favourite stars&#8230;&#8221; Apart from A.R., the concert will feature the very best classically trained, Bollywood playback singers, all of whom are popular artists in their own right. These include Shankar Mahadevan, Hariharan and Sadhna Sargam, to name but a few.</p>
<p>However, life has not always been so kind and, A.R.&#8217;s own meteoric rise to fame is itself the stuff of &#8220;Bombay Dreams&#8221;. Born in Chennai, India, A.R.&#8217;s earliest memories are of long periods spent sitting by his father&#8217;s hospital bedside &#8211; something he assumed that all children did. Following his father&#8217;s untimely death, A.R., aged just nine, felt the mantle of responsibility for his family pass onto his young shoulders. Aged eleven, he left home to become a touring musician, working with many eminent names, including the table maestro, Zakir Hussein. In time, the young Rahman earned a scholarship at Oxford University&#8217;s Trinity College, where he studied Western Classical Music. On returning to India he set up his studio, Panchathan Record Inn (now one of India&#8217;s most technologically advanced recording studios, housing one of the biggest and most comprehensive sonic libraries).</p>
<p>His big break, however, came in the form of maverick film director, Mani Ratnam, who offered A.R., then 26, the role of Music Director on his 1992 film Roja. The gamble was worth it, as the Roja soundtrack revolutionised the sound of Indian film music and went on to win every music award imaginable, including Best Music Director for A.R. Rahman, at the National Film Awards.<br />
Since Roja, A.R. has provided the scores for most of Bollywood&#8217;s biggest blockbusters, including the Oscar-nominated Lagaan. His skills are in demand the world over and in 2003 he provided the score for the Chinese martial arts film Warriors of Heaven and Earth.</p>

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		<title>THE RISING &#8211; Aamir Khan&#8217;s Influences &amp; Politics</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 01:51:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Writer</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The latest Indian blockbuster featuring an International cast and aimed at a crossover audience released recently in the UK. Sangeeta Datta talks to Aamir Khan about his influences and politics. Bollywood is now India&#8217;s biggest calling card in the ever growing business of entertainment. It is the new buzzword and mantra in Diasporic cross cultural [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/film/the_rising_header.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="The Rising" align="left" height="246" width="473" />The latest Indian blockbuster featuring an International cast and aimed at a crossover audience released recently in the UK. Sangeeta Datta talks to Aamir Khan about his influences and politics.</h3>
<p>Bollywood is now India&#8217;s biggest calling card in the ever growing business of entertainment. It is the new buzzword and mantra in Diasporic cross cultural worlds and even the average non-Indian has some idea about the glossy wedding songs in Indian films. Bombay makes a staggering 700-800 films a year, an average of 10 feature in the UK and US top tens every ye</p>
<p>ar. Larger than life heroes love, hate, strut and sing across giant screens romancing their lady loves, traipsing across the globe in fantasy sequences. The global entertainment market has flattened borders for the Bollywood film industry as thousands throng to the theatres from Dubai to Jamaica, from London to New Jersey.</p>
<p>Bollywood is technically savvy, its structure grows more corporate, its world brims with talent, its market fetches ever increasing bucks. The industry has grown from its native origins to comfortably vie with films globally. Not all films are about fantasy and romance, family and patriarchy. Some mature filmmakers deal more seriously with the medium and more ambitiously with the genre.</p>
<p>The Rising, directed by Ketan Mehta, is the latest feather in Bollywood&#8217;s cap, with all claims to be the biggest Indian film to hit the international scene. Set in 1857, this historical epic unfolds against what the British called the Sepoy Mutiny. In effect it was the first fight for freedom from the exploitation of Britain&#8217;s East India Company.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/aamir_mangal.jpg" alt="Aaminr Mangal" align="left" /></p>
<p>Produced by Kaleidoscope films, The Rising takes another look at colonial history, power politics and the growing awareness of the nation and its people. When history is being revisited by different nations and communities, this film deals with friendship, loyalty, love and leadership set against the backdrop of the bloodiest revolution in human history. This epic saga has the legendary folk hero Mangal Pandey at its nucleus; a man about whom there is very little historical detail. &#8216;Where history meets proud folklore, that is where heroes are born,&#8217; the opening lines of the film determine the treatment, which swings from realistic documentary feel to the colourful strokes of vintage Bollywood.</p>
<p>The story of a lowly Sepoy and his rise against the British first captured director Ketan Mehta almost 15 years ago. At the time a project on this scale, for a world market was inconceivable in India. Ketan held the project close to his heart until a global market made this possible. Producer Bobby Bedi known for making films of international standards took up the project. The UK Film Council got involved; this is the first Indian film to receive lottery funding for marketing and distribution. The script shifted hands and Farrukh Dhondy (Red Mercury 2005, American Daylight 2004, Exitz 2004) came on board. Aamir Khan, a star known to be choosy about his projects, joined and immediately raised the stature of the project. Bobby claims that his choice of subjects reflects, &#8220;a different take on biography,&#8221; and that The Rising boasts a -crew &#8220;from the Indian and British industry, with a healthy fusion of professional expertise and great team spirit starting from the lead actors, Aamir Khan and Toby Stephens.&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/film/amir_rangeela.jpg" alt="Amir Rangeela" align="left" height="142" width="250" /> Hailing from a well known producer&#8217;s family, Aamir&#8217;s acting debut was as a child artist in Yaadon ki Baraat (1973). Starting his adult career with the &#8216;Indianised&#8217; Romeo and Juliet story in Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (1988), Aamir played candy floss heroes for a while and had runaway hits to his credit (Dil, Raja Hindustani, Rangeela, Gulam). His performance in Deepa Mehta&#8217;s Earth (1998) as the &#8216;Ice Candy Man&#8217; fetched him rave reviews from critics. He turned into a meticulous producer-actor with the Oscar nominated Lagaan (2002) and his performance propelled him onto the international stage. Lagaan was about a cricket match between poor villagers and the English cantonment officers. In The Rising Aamir plays the lead role of Mangal Pandey, the man who sparked off the Sepoy Mutiny or the first freedom struggle in India. Aamir thus has his own take on the history of colonialism in India.</p>
<p>Trying to locate him for a phone interview was a whirlwind task. Caught in a frenzy of release dates in Delhi, Bombay and Calcutta, Aamir Khan finally called as he drove to Calcutta airport. Aamir talked of his passionate involvement with the character he plays, &#8220;Mangal Pandey is a legendary figure, a symbol of freedom for all Indians. He gave his life for what he believed in, freedom from the exploitation and humiliation of the East Indian Company. He was also a volatile character and the film is about the growing awareness of a man and a nation. Little is known about the man Mangal himself so I had a year to research the background, the history (mid nineteenth century) and evolve a look for the character.&#8221;</p>
<p>With the first day reports just filtering in, The Rising collected 40% more revenue than any previous Indian film release in the USA. Does Aamir believe that Bollywood has finally come of age? He answered convincingly, &#8220;technically we are at par with Hollywood or anywhere else in the world. There&#8217;s wonderful talent and creative energy. The film industry is getting a more corporate make over. With Lagaan we tried to make a film which could compete at par with international projects. It was received so well at home and abroad, but Lagaan was more light-hearted, like an Asterix comic. This film is more realistic and darker in tone. With The Rising we have great talent from the UK. It is an international project both in theme and scale of production.&#8221;</p>
<p>Authentic sets designed by Nitin Chandrakant Desai recreate the 19th century &#8216;Company Raj&#8217; era and lend to the epic scale of the film. Cinematographer Himman Dhamija enhances the legendary story with ambitious camera work, but it is the music which really underpins the folk element of the film. Lyricist Javed Akhtar uses popular ballads he heard as a child in Uttar Pradesh to write the theme song Mangal Mangala. A. R. Rahman reigning composer of Tamil and Hindi films and West End and Broadway musicals (Bombay Dreams, Lord of the Rings) scores a stirring ballad which runs as the theme song embodying the stirring and rising of the nation. However, a few of the musical scores appear aesthetic misfits and sit on cracks in the screenplay. Powerful performances redeem the film, Aamir Khan got into character with 18 months of wearing dhotis (a length of cotton fabric woven around the legs) and boots as the Sepoys used to wear in the British army; he also grew his hair long so as to best portray the brooding and iconic Mangal. Toby Stephens delivers a layered Gordon torn between friendship and duty, Rani Mukherji portrays the spirited Heera, a Bengali nautch girl who falls in love with the fiery Pandey and Coral Reed impresses in the small role of Emily, the Colonel&#8217;s daughter.</p>
<p>As a stunning cinematic spectacle The Rising will hold its own against past epics Gandhi (Richard Attenborough), The Chess Players (Satyajit Ray) and more recent productions like Four Feathers (Shekhar Kapoor) or even Spielberg&#8217;s War of the Worlds. More importantly it is about identity in a global context. The East India Company, belittles the faith of Hindus and Muslims. Mangal rises above his own cast prejudice to call for freedom for the masses. Gordon, a Scottish outsider within his regiment befriends the local Sepoy and falls in love with a Bengali widow. Heera, the slave girl sold to the brothel frequented by the British soldiers and the low caste sweeper, the true subaltern who propels Pandey into self examination and action. Aamir admits, &#8220;delving into one&#8217;s history makes me more aware of who I am. It helps me to grow as a person and as an actor. Over the past few years in India with the right wing government and the communal tension, each Indian has had to think hard about his identity and ideology. I had never been so sharply aware of my position as a Muslim, part of a minority community. But in the last elections India&#8217;s masses have proved again that they believe in democracy and secularism.&#8221;</p>
<p>With 94 prints in the UK alone, The Rising is in the top ten charts with considerable mainstream patrons. Both British and Asian viewers get to take stock of their history from an alternative stance. According to Aamir, The Rising is more about the present than the past, &#8220;it was the present that interested me more than what happened 150 years ago. The parallels really drew me. Mangal&#8217;s story has a contemporary angle to which I could relate. The East India Company exploited the Indians, today it&#8217;s the US exploiting poorer markets; the story has reflections in global capitalisation.&#8221;</p>

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