What is about death of actors that makes people go
irrationally sentimental? People who
have never even seen or spoken to Rajesh Khanna in person feel or claim to feel
a sense of loss. There was a near stampede today as his fans thronged the
crematorium. “He’ll be missed” says one of the media reports. Missed? The man
had stopped acting long back. So the ‘missing’ is not something that arises
from the news of his death.
His fans knew him only through the characters he portrayed.
So are they mourning the death of the characters that he played? That doesn’t
make sense. The characters had a finite shelf life anyway- till that particular
movie ended. And it was possible that one or two of the characters played by
him would have died too. His fans did not take that so personally.
Is it charisma? As I wondered in an earlier post, why should
actors have a fan following at all? Unlike singers or cricketers whose real persona
display their respective skills in real life, what is seen by the public in
movies are virtual images of actors. It would be logical for the virtual
character to be admired, but why the actor in flesh and blood? He won’t even be
able to sing a single line of the popular song that his “character” had sung in
the movie.
People do identify, vicariously, with the film characters and
find an outlet for their fantasies through them. If they cannot – or do not
want to- distinguish between the actor and the character he plays, his death
could cause a deep sense of loss, as if a part of one’s self had been snatched
away. The ‘fantasy’ world gets
shattered when the actor- the creator of the characters- dies.
Do you have an explanation?
Update 28-07-12
Sunil Gavaskar in
his column last week ( online link not available) paid tributes to Rajesh
Khanna and commentator, Suresh Saraiya and said that such heroes ought to be
remembered.
About Suresh
Saraiya, he had fond recollections. It was Suresh who brought Gavaskar a
photograph of his new-born son, Rohan, when he was on a long tour of West
Indies. He also recalled the hard work he put in as a commentator and his
passion for the game. It is clear that Gavaskar knew him personally and
closely. Therefore, his sense of loss on the passing away of Suresh Saraiya is understandable.
About Rajesh Khanna,
Gavaskar writes that his movies were very popular with the Indian team. In particular,
Ashok Mankad was a great fan and would imitate the actor very well. Mankad
would entertain the team, acting out scenes from many a Rajesh Khanna film.
In the entire piece,
Gavaskar provides no evidence that he knew Rajesh Khanna personally. He knew
only the on-screen persona but seemed to make no distinction between the actor
and the characters he played.
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