Taapsee Pannu, a feisty actress known primarily for women-centric movies, recently had a big grouse about Amitabh Bachchan walking away with all the credit for the success of Sujoy Ghosh’s Badla (2019) despite the fact she had more scenes than him in the film.
“Even when I do films like Badla, I had more working days or scenes so to say than Mr Bachchan. He was the hero of the film, I was the antagonist. But the antagonist has more presence in the film than protagonist. But eventually the film releases, they call it an Amitabh Bachchan film,” the 32-year-old actress was widely quoted as saying in an interview.
Taapsee's remarks kicked up a controversy but she apparently said it to underline the fact that Bollywood remains a male-dominated industry, which fights shy of giving women its due. It is both true and false at the same time. True, because there is no denying the fact that the Hindi film industry remains overtly patriarchal even today. False, because it is wrong to assume that the female actors are forever denied their due because of that. The fact of the matter is that whenever any actress comes up with a sterling performance, her effort is applauded and acknowledged wholeheartedly.
Since the inception of Bollywood, actresses from successive generations, right from Devika Rani to Kangana Ranaut, have been stealing the thunder at regular intervals from their illustrious counterparts in their movies by dint of sheer acting prowess. It has never made a difference whether it is a male-dominated industry. Isn’t Mother India (1957) still remembered as Nargis’s film even though she had three formidable male actors – Raj Kumar, Rajendra Kumar and Sunil Dutt – as her co-stars? Didn’t Waheeda Rahman share the honours equally with Dev Anand in Guide (1965) even though he played the title role? Even a purely commercial venture such as Seeta Aur Geeta (1972) is widely acknowledged to be a Hema Malini movie even though she had the formidable Dharmendra and Sanjeev Kumar playing the male leads at their height of their popularity. Similar was the case Chalbaaz (1989) where Sridevi outshone both Sunny Deol and Rajnikanth.