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Uttara Choudhury / DNA

New York, Aug 10: Half-Indian, half-English Oscar-winning actor Sir Ben Kingsley is well known for slipping into challenging roles with ease and intensity. He won a Best Actor Award for 1982’s Gandhi and earned a supporting nomination for playing thug Don Logan in 2000’s Sexy Beast. When quizzed by Time magazine’s readers in a special interview this week on how playing the role of Gandhi had influenced his life, Kingsley said it had been an enormous responsibility.

“It was a great quest. I know that director Richard Attenborough had been attempting to do it for 20 years. I’m thrilled that it’s still present in so many people’s lives. I meet people here in New York who said ‘I saw it last week.’ They’re not delving back into memory. Millions of people are watching it somewhere everyday. It’s thrilling, especially now. It’s very dangerous times that we live in,” said Kingsley. 

“I was with great people making that film. It was my first major feature film, my first leading role on screen, and I was surrounded by passionate people. I was surrounded by Indians who were passionate that this story should be told correctly and beautifully. It was humbling and an enormous responsibility. I think it stretched a lot of my muscles and I hope they haven’t shrunk back yet.”

Hollywood actor Sendhil Ramamurthy who is the star of NBC’s biggest freshman hit Heroes may have sacked his agent for suggesting he change his Indian name, but Kingsley is honest about what prompted him to change his name from Krishna Bhanji. “It was a way to my first audition. My dad who is Indian was completely behind it. My first name, Ben, is my dad’s nickname. My second name, Kingsley, comes from my grandfather’s nickname, which was King Clove. He was a spice trader. It’s a bit late to change it back now,” the actor told the US magazine.

When quizzed about what he looked for in a role, Kingsley said he looked for an echo inside him; “Maybe we’re all born with our future coiled up inside us like a spring, and we just unravel this coiled spring and work it out. I’m sorry if this sounds a bit bizarre. I’m trying so hard not to be pretentious because I’m always called pompous and pretentious.”

The actor has eclectic tastes and his iPod is loaded with a mix of Bulgarian music, English stuff and songs from Pakistan and India. “I switch from track to track depending on what my particular mood needs. There’s music from the Middle East, from the Ottoman Empire, from India and there’s some very English stuff as well. I’ve got a good musical ear, so I can listen to most things.”

  

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Comment on this article

  • Nelson Lewis, Karkala/Bombay/Kingdom of Bahrain

    Sat, Aug 11 2007

    There was a time when I used to watch a lot of Hollywood films and Hollywood, over the ages, have produced actors and actresses of class, grace and substance. At times, I would remain awake up to 2.00 a.m. in the night to watch films on VCR. However, since quite many years, due to work and other compulsions, I do not get time to watch that many films. However, if I am given an option to watch Hollywood or Bollywood films, I would anyday prefer to watch the former, though good films I would say. Hollywood produces films of top quality and most of their stars are far superior to Bollywood stars and I am quite sure the cinema watching audiences in U.S.A. and west are far demanding, discerning than Indian audiences. You just cannot invariably churn out crap and dish it out to the audiences.

    For the film "Gandhi", I remember Ben Kingsley did a lot of homework by studying Gandhi as a person, his life and mannerisms and then he went on a starvation diet to lose weight so that he had a lean physique of Gandhi. We talk a lot of Amitabh Bachchan and Sharukh Khan and other megastars, but how many of many countrymen have pondered to think of what use are these so-called megastars and Kings and also producers and directors who did not have the ability to produce a film right from 1947 to 1982, until a British director, Sir Richard Attenborough produced one. After that some films have been produced on this great man by others, but none can beat the film "Gandhi". Let's accept facts and acknowledge our weaknesses and shortcomings.

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