Filmworld
Bollywood's eternal romance with Kashmir lives on
By
Sheikh Qayoom and Aadil MirSrinagar, April 12
Bollywood's romance with
Kashmir that began in the 1960s and blossomed in the 1970s and 1980s,
was interrupted for over two decades by violence that plagued the
Valley. Bollywood then shifted its outdoor shoots to Europe and America.
As violence began waning, Bollywood like a smitten lover, rebounded to
its old love.
To encourage Bollywood's return to the Valley, the
state government has been extending all possible help to film units
during their stay here.
"We are hopeful of more and more B-town
biggies to the Valley as we welcome them with open arms. We are the most
affordable place in the world with most beautiful locations," Jammu and
Kashmir Tourism Development Corporation Managing Director and Director
Tourism Farooq Ahmad Shah told IANS.
Hoteliers, too, are more than happy.
"We
hosted many film units in our hotel, we want to serve them as better as
we can, we want the message of peace and beauty to go out, so that more
and more people come here," Asif Burza of Pine and Peak Hotel in
Pahalgam told IANS.
It was at this hotel that Yash Chopra and his star cast for "Jab Tak Hai Jaan" stayed while shooting for the film.
Addressing
an election rally last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also echoed
the need for Bollywood to return to Kashmir for the benefit of both.
"I
have to bring back Bollywood to Kashmir," Modi told the rally, adding,
"I have to bring back tourism to the state and I have to make Jammu and
Kashmir the ultimate tourist destination in the world."
Leading
the legion of Bollywood's eternal love for the breathtaking locales of
Kashmir are the present-day heart throbs of the celluloid world - Shah
Rukh Khan, Ranbir Kapoor, Shahid Kapoor and others.
"Jab Tak Hai
Jaan", "Rockstar", "Student of the Year", "Yeh Jawani Hai Dewani" and
"Haider" are Bollywood's assertions that nothing can keep it away from
Kashmir's meadows, mountains, lakes and streams that continue to serve
as mesmerizing backdrops to the movies shot in the Valley of Flowers.
"Kashmir is a beautiful place. If one sets up camera anywhere in
Kashmir he will be able to appreciate its beauty. We will all cherish
the hospitality and facilities we got here," said Shah Rukh Khan, during
his extensive shoot for "Jab Tak Hai Jaan".
Personally also,
Kashmir has worked wonders for Shah Rukh. While shooting for "Jab Tak
Hai Jaan" in Pahalgam, he had told IANS that he assigned a ringtone to
his mobile phone after years because his nerves had been soothed by the
magic that Kashmir holds for everybody.
After the unprecedented
floods hit Kashmir last September, film shoots scheduled for autumn in
the Valley had to be cancelled, triggering uncertainty about the
resumption of schedules here.
The first Bollywood unit to return to the Valley after the floods was that of "Fitoor".
"Fitoor"
was scheduled to be filmed in the Valley "but the floods intervened.
The unit then planned to go to Poland. We requested them not to cancel
their Kashmir schedule and they agreed after being assured that things
had settled down here", Khawer Jamsheed, a line producer in the Valley,
told IANS.
"After Rekha, Katrina and Aditiya Roy Kapoor came
here to shoot for 'Fitoor' a message of normalcy went out. Shortly
afterwards, Yami Gautam and Pulkit Samrat came here to shoot
'Jononiyat'," said Jamsheed, who is now awaiting star-studded "Bajrangi
Bhaijaan" with Salman Khan, Kareena Kapoor and Nawazudin Siddique.
The unit arrives here later this month.
"Many
producers have contacted me for their shoots in the Valley. I conveyed
it to everyone that it is quite peaceful here and anyone can come here,"
Jamsheed added.
Trying to emerge from the nightmare of last
year's floods, Kashmir is eagerly looking forward to rekindle the magic
and beauty of Bollywood, for which Kashmir and its people have always
been brand ambassadors.
(Sheikh Qayoom can be contacted at [email protected]; Aadil Mir can be contacted at [email protected])