A new Bollywood gets real, riches
WORLD CINEMA
Backed by big investors, Indian movies see a demand for less clichés and more trained actors.
MUMBAI, India -- When Amit Shah, a budding young actor born in Chicago, auditioned for a role in the upcoming Hollywood comedy "Fraternity House," the directors picked him to play an Indian exchange student. He was told to wear glasses and sport a thick Indian accent like Apu, the convenience-store owner in "The Simpsons."
The 27-year-old of Indian origin did his best. But he quickly realized that if he was going to be pigeonholed as the token Indian immigrant, he had better visit the country of his parents' birth and attend one of the growing number of acting schools in Mumbai, a sprawling metropolis of 17 million.
But once here, he wanted to stay. Mumbai is experiencing an economic boom that is fueling its fast-evolving film industry, the world's largest, with twice the movie output of Hollywood.
"Initially, I came here to learn the culture. I never had any intentions of staying. I don't even speak Hindi," Shah said at the Actor Prepares school, surrounded by others of Indian descent from the United States, Britain and Canada. "But Bollywood has so much opportunity these days. I have just fallen in love with the Indian film industry."
More than ever before, Bollywood is being flooded with cash from Indian investors who see the country's film industry as a money machine. The rise of the multiplex theater has led to a wider variety of films, with more socially relevant scripts that discard the overused Bollywood formula: a rambling, four-hour hodgepodge of twins separated at birth, rare blood diseases, wet sari scenes and lots and lots of singing and dancing in alpine meadows. More linear and socially conscious story lines are becoming popular, as are shorter movies.
"The new trend in Bollywood is the death of the cliché," said Anupam Kher, an award-winning Bollywood actor who has been in more than 300 films. Three years ago, Kher opened Actor Prepares. He has announced plans to open a school in London that will teach foreigners, as well as those of Indian descent, thick Hindi dialects, yoga and the infamous Bollywood style of dancing (think petting a dog with one hand and screwing in a little bulb with the other, as described in the film "Bride and Prejudice").
"We used to have very few trained actors. We were a young country. Entertainment was the last thing on our agenda," Kher said between takes on a film set. But now, "the Indian economy is booming, and Bollywood is booming right along with it. There is a huge middle class who have traveled and watched foreign movies on cable or at an upscale multiplex. The consumer has awakened, and the quality is soaring."
