KARACHI, APR 14 - Born a boy, Ali Salim long prayed to God to make him a
girl. Years later, he is the most famous female TV identity in this devoutly
Muslim, male-dominated country, even though his physiology remains
unchanged.
Salim’s chiffon-wearing alter ego, Begum (Mrs.) Nawazish Ali, has become an
overnight star, using style and pomp to confront prickly topics with
Pakistani politicians, Islamic religious figures and celebrities, posing
questions that more established journalists routinely steer clear of.
He is very reminiscent of Dame Edna, Australian Barry Humphries’ famous
alter ego for the stage and TV, but Salim says that his character was not
inspired by the more slapstick Australian. “I have heard about Dame Edna and
have also gone to his (Humphries’) Web site, but I am not motivated by his
show,” he said. “I do it in my style and he does it in his.” However like
Dame Edna, Salim’s teasing and sarcasm has allowed him to tackle head-on the
discrimination women face in Pakistan’s male-dominated society. “My show is
about empowering women psychologically,” Salim told the Associated Press on
the set of his popular show filmed in Karachi. “I am trying to show people
that there is no difference between men and women. I have no gender bias.
Men and women are equally capable of doing all the same things, except for
their reproductive roles.”
Since it first aired eight months ago, ‘The Begum Nawazish Ali Show’ has
built up a massive following, particularly among younger Pakistanis such as
college graduate Saima Kareem, 23, who says that Salim “Is asking hard
questions of people who otherwise remain untouched by TV shows.”
While very popular, Salim’s show has ruffled some feathers in a country
where Islamic customs generally frown upon cross-dressing. “We decided to
create a larger-than-life character to host a talk show where the host would
be flirtatious and look good allowing her a strong footing with her guests,”
Salim explained. “She can intimidate her guests and break through their
tough exteriors to reach the inner person that he or she is.” On the set of
a recent show, film producer Rashid Khawaja pondered whether his host could
be cast as a heroine for a future movie. Deeply immersed in his character as
Mrs Nawazish, Salim curled his lip and suggestively replied: “Well, I don’t
want a small one, I want a BIG one,” before clarifying the remark with, “I
don’t mean that kind of role, I mean a role in the film.” Naimatullah Khan,
a former Karachi mayor and Islamic political leader said that he did not
even know Salim was a man when he went on the show. “Although I had the
chance to say what I had in mind, I do have reservations on the way he
conducts himself and talks,” Khan said. “I don’t think it is good to perform
like this. It is not acceptable in our society.”
Dressed in character (a sleeveless, low-necked, blood-red chiffon gown) for
an interview with The Associated Press, Salim said that he grew up
surrounded by women; his divorced mother and her friends. “Ever since I was
a child I used to fantasize about growing as a woman,” he said. His role
models included former prime ministers such as Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto,
Margaret Thatcher of Britain, “and all other famous women of that time”.
Salim said that his character helped put a modern face on a nation of 150
million people, which usually captures global attention through coups,
earthquakes and war. “Begum Nawazish Ali represents the aspiration of all
the Pakistanis who want a modern, progressive Pakistan,” Salim said. “She is
the face of an enlightened, moderate Pakistan.” Salim said he plans one day
to marry but only once he finds a partner of equal intellectual capacity. “I
am a man performing as a woman,” he explained. “I don’t have a boyfriend or
a girlfriend either.” Khalid Farshori, a senior media commentator in the
weekly magazine Akhbar-e-Jahan, said that Salim’s show was groundbreaking
and that it would encourage other channels to “come out with brilliant ideas
to amuse viewers, who were fed up with the monotonous shows that we have
here.”
Salim said he gets nothing but praise from his viewers, even after they
realize he’s not really a woman. “Not a single piece hate mail or a
threatening call,” he said. “Now people greet me on streets and show me love
and respect.”
(AP) |