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Scripting Bollywood: Candid Conversations with Women Who Write Hindi Cinema by Anubha Yadav talks about women who write Hindi cinema. An excerpt from the conversation with Juhi Chaturvedi, writer of Piku.
"When I start working on a script, it may or may not entail actual writing. Even the two-three months I spend developing an idea are part of my writing process. I may not have written a single word, but I spend time ideating, because after that writing is not tedious. The toughest part is cracking the characters. I know what I am writing towards, but I leave it to my characters to figure out how they want to get there. I go along with them
Sometimes, you may not want a character to do certain things, but it is already so far in that process that it will just go ahead and do it. Like, if Bhashkor
Bhashkor’s Death Was Also About Giving Piku A Chance at Freedom: Juhi Chaturvedi
In Vicky Donor, Biji was not there in the first three drafts; she came in during the fourth draft. I wrote a total of six drafts for the film. Biji came because there was something missing. In a Punjabi household, there is an organic chaos and clutter; that quality was lacking. With Biji, suddenly the household became richer.
Becoming the Character
I cannot write in the third person, like an outsider. I have to become the character to seamlessly drive the scene, the plot, the film. If I have to write about an extremely ghatiya insaan (lowly person), then I have to believe that I am that and see what all I can do. It is interesting to allow yourself to completely surrender to the character. Whatever it is saying or doing will come out naturally only if you keep your judgment aside.
For me, as Juhi, it might not be the right thing to do at that point of time, but the character has to do it. It can happen only when I set aside my logic and intellect.
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In Piku, Rana Chaudhary’s (Irrfan Khan) sister is caught stealing her mother-in-law’s gold ring. If I see it from my own point of view, her actions are wrong, but aise bhi log exist karte hain (but such people also exist). As a woman, I try to understand her actions. Why did she steal her mother-in-law’s ring and give it to her mother? It could be
In Piku, Rana Chaudhary’s (Irrfan Khan) sister is caught stealing her mother-in-law’s gold ring. If I see it from my own point of view, her actions are wrong, but aise bhi log exist karte hain (but such people also exist). As a woman, I try to understand her actions. Why did she steal her mother-in-law’s ring and give it to her mother? It could be
Suggested Reading:
An Anthology Which Talks About Stories Of Women And Men
In Piku, there is a scene where Rana screams, ‘Agar itni hi jaldi thi jaane ki toh plane se karani thi na ticket’ and Piku goes silent. That happened because even Deepika
The above excerpt is taken from a chapter featuring Juhi Chaturvedi, writer of Piku, in ‘Scripting Bollywood: Candid Conversations with Women Who Write Hindi Cinema’. The book is written by Anubha Yadav and is published by Women Unlimited.