NOV 20: A Bollywood epic about the Taj Mahal releasing
worldwide seeks to capture the pervading romance of the
world famous monument to love, director Akbar Khan said.

Khan said he lived and dreamed the movie with thoughts of
Mogul Emperor Shah Jahan vowing at his dying wife Mumtaz’s
bedside to build a monument in which she could sleep
eternally. “I felt there was a soul in the mausoleum, a
heartbeat inside every marble slab,” Khan told The
Associated Press. “There’s a murmur that follows visitors
through the Taj.”
He began researching the movie five years ago and filming
started in 2002 with a new face, a French-Pakistani, playing
the lead role of Mogul Empress Mumtaz Mahal. Located in Agra
near the capital New Delhi, the marble mausoleum that has
become the face of India’s tourism industry was built by
Shah Jahan between 1632 and 1654.
Khan said his two-hour, 40-minute movie, “Taj Mahal _ An
Eternal Love Story,” was a mixture of history and
entertainment with eight song and dance numbers. Elaborate
sets were crafted inside an ancient fort in northwestern
Rajasthan state and battle scenes were shot with men in
armor wielding swords astride horses, elephants and camels.
Actors were costumed in rich, embroidered outfits with heavy
jewelry. “We leased out a fort for three years and
constructed colossal sets,” he said. “The movie is fully
packed with entertainment and history.”
Apart from the 19-year marriage of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz,
who died from complications arising from the birth of their
14th child, the movie also tells the tale of the Mogul
empire.
It dwells on ambition, intrigue and rivalry for the throne
in an era when brothers fought each other and sons rebelled
against their fathers for power.

But Indian newspapers are filled with pictures of French
citizen Sonia Jehan, who plays Mumtaz. “I was extremely
scared. I said I’d love to work but I didn’t want the lead
role,” said Jehan, who has a French mother, Pakistani father
and lives in France and Britain. “I had no training in
acting so didn’t think I could pull it off.”
Jehan said she dreamed of being a Bollywood actress as a
child when she saw Indian movies while visiting her
grandmother in Pakistan. Her dream turned into reality when
she was introduced by a family friend to Khan, then scouting
for talent.
She completed her degree at London’s St. Martin’s College of
Art and Design before coming to India for the film three
years ago. “It was a huge challenge because the only acting
I had done before was in school plays,” said Jehan, who like
many South Asians trained in classical singing and dance.
Khan said he specifically wanted a first-time actor. “I
wanted the audience to see her as a character of the time. I
didn’t want an established actor bringing her image into the
film.” The Hindi-language version will be released across
India Friday along with a limited release in Britain, the
United States, Canada and South Africa. It will be released
two weeks later in Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore
and Fiji.
The English version will be out in two months along with
versions in Arabic, Persian, French and German. (AP) |