Don't Make Devis Out Of Us
India Today|May 13, 2019

Hindi films paint the tawaif as pitiable, but history shows she was more radical and spirited

Shreevatsa Nevatia
Don't Make Devis Out Of Us

Set in 1945, Kalank (2019) uses pre-Partition India as its backdrop, when religion mattered more than national unity. In this film, it's a Muslim tawaif, Bahaar Begum (Madhuri Dixit), who first emerges as a secular hero, singing paeans to Rama and decorating her kotha with a Natraj statue. She is not hapless. She owns her scenes.

Madhuri had played a courtesan, Chandramukhi, in Devdas (2002), and in Khalnayak (1993), becoming the “most famous tawaif ” when she danced to Choli ke peechhe. Madhuri, her own predecessor, perhaps, never needed to draw inspiration from the genre of courtesan films—Mughal-e-Azam (1960), Pakeezah (1972), Umrao Jaan (1981).

Having watched the courtesan portrayed in all of 235 Hindi films, Ruth Vanita, author of Dancing with the Nation: Courtesans in Bombay Cinema, believes that Hindi films have rarely depicted the tawaifs as decadent. They have instead shown them as “educated, self-employed, even wealthy, modern women, who are agents of desire, and often single mothers”.

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