Tuesday, 13 September 2011

VIR DAS ON THE MAN MAGAZINE SEPTEMBER ISSUE 2011














PRESS RELEASE
The Man SEPT'11

Section: Cover Story
You're a Weirdass, man!
On stage he’s India’s funniest, most audacious stand-up comedian. We've seen him sport an afro and dance in platform shoes yelling, “Jaa Chudail!” in Delhi Belly. Yet he describes himself as balanced, geeky, and reserved. Vir Das talks to Azeem Banatwalla about his awkward childhood, how anger fuelled his comedy and how stand-up has made him fearless.
Setup
Vir Das does not bask in the glory of being called India’s funniest man. It surprises him. “I’m not the funniest man in the country, no,” he says, “I just have funny ideas.” I’ve watched Vir Das on stage and on the big screen, and assumed that with his cheeky grin and unabashed humour, he would be the life of any party he attended. Wrong. “I’m usually the guy sitting in the corner of the room, observing everyone else. Where do you think I get my material from?” he jokes. More seriously, he adds, “I think everyone has different facets to their personality. The comedian and the joker in me, that’s my stage personality. I talk to 2,000 people non-stop when I’m up there, but I’m not usually so talkative. I’m very reserved off-stage.” Even today, his friends taunt him when they're out for a drink. “They tell me, ‘It’s 11.30, shouldn’t you be asleep?!’ I’ve got a small group of friends who accept me as I am, and I’m thankful for that,” he laughs.
Das was born into a family of civil service officers so his choice of profession was clearly unusual. “We had generations before my dad working for the IAS. My dad became the black sheep of the family when he decided to run a business. So you can imagine what a shock it was when I became a comedian!”, he says. He describes his childhood as “painfully normal” although he travelled a lot, spending several years in Africa. Vir’s family returned to Noida when he was 15, and he remembers being the class geek in school, sitting on the back-benches, buried in novels. “I loved to read,” he recalls. “I was the nerd of the class. Not too popular with the girls, as you can imagine. I was a borderline dyslexic. Terrible at academics, terrible handwriting. I mean, I got a 52 per cent in the 12th grade, man! I was only good with sports and performing arts. I loved taking part in debates at school.”
He may have spent more of his life in Nigeria, but Delhi owns Das's heart. He speaks of the city with an almost fierce affection. “I absolutely adore Delhi, I grew up there, and I feel that the generalisations people make about Delhiites are unfair. The people have the largest hearts, you find the best food, and the prettiest women in the country. I live in Mumbai now, and it’s a very modern city, but I think Delhi is the greatest city in India. It always will be.”
Twist
Das bid farewell to Delhi after school to study theatre at Knox College, Illinois. Thus began the most trying period of his life, which led him to discover the comedian in him. “My course had an emphasis on performance, so I would spend a lot of my time enacting plays,” he says. “After that, I’d take out my guitar and head to Cambridge Square to play and earn money to eat dinner. That’s how it was. But I enjoyed it.” There came a point when simply acting out scripts wasn’t enough and he wanted to be himself for a change. That’s when stand-up reared its head. He recalls, “I was a doorman for this comedy club near my college which had an open-mic every Tuesday night. So I decided to have a go but was booed off stage 15 weeks in a row.” He realised that simply telling jokes wasn’t enough to get people to laugh. He had to find humour in himself and his own life.  That's when he finally got it right. “People started to laugh when I decided to talk about stuff like sex, or even taking a dump!” he says.
Although Das jokingly claims to have hit rock bottom about once every month, he found himself in a severe cash crunch after his college life ended. “I worked as a doorman, a dishwasher and a security guard, and that wasn’t to support acting. That was my career!” he says. “After a point, it made me very angry and very cynical about my life and how I couldn’t seem to outgrow my poverty. I thought to myself, 'I’m f*&^d', but I also found it kind of funny. I started doing shows talking about the shit I was in, about my credit card debt. I started putting myself out there, and that’s when it began to come together,” he explains.
Punch line
Das returned to India in 2004 having learnt the formula to stand-up comedy the hard way. He wrote his first show Walking on Broken Das and toured the country with theatre producer Ashvin Gidwani. His humour was bold, which represented a risk with an Indian audience that was not really familiar with live stand-up. But he accepted the challenge. In fact, he revelled in it. And it paid off. Crowds of 500 grew to 2,000 and Das was soon performing to packed houses everywhere he went. “I knew it was a risk, but that’s what makes anything I do fun,” he says. “I absolutely love being the underdog. Stack all the odds against me and I will do everything I can to defeat them.”
Earlier this year Das started his pet project, a comedy rock band called Alien Chutney,  to realise a childhood fantasy of being a rock star. Although at the bottom rung of the rock 'n' roll ladder, he firmly believes he can claw his way to the top. It’s just the way he is.
Side by side with stand-up, Das began doing comedy on TV with shows like Is Route Ki Sabhi Linein Mast Hain and Ek Rahin Vir, but he was never really comfortable. “I find it incredibly difficult to be myself in front of a camera” he says, describing how he struggled to conform to the needs of the TV channels he worked for. That changed in 2007 when he began presenting CNBC’sNews on the Loose, making fun of anything that dared to call itself news. He recalls, “I used to spend my time reading seven newspapers a day to find things to make fun of, and the channel gave me license to say what I wanted. I really enjoyed my time doing it.”
That same year, Das found himself a role in Manoj Tyagi’s Mumbai Salsa, a small movie, which didn’t do very well. Nonetheless, it was his gateway into Bollywood. “I had fun doing Mumbai Salsa. I wanted to do more movies at the time, but I had signed a contract with CNBC, so I really couldn’t. I still managed a couple of cameos in Namastey London and Love Aaj Kal.” Das had a clear plan. He intended to keep doing TV and stand-up until the right movie script turned up. In 2010, it did. It was called Delhi Belly.
Landing one of the lead roles in Delhi Belly was not easy. It was the most coveted script in the country. “I guarantee you, every Indian actor capable of speaking English, aged between 19 and 30 has read for Delhi Belly,” he said with a hint of pride in his voice. “I auditioned so many times over the course of the year. The call finally came while I was doing a show in London. It was the script, and I knew it was worth taking a year off from stand-up to do Delhi Belly.” The makers themselves sometimes doubted whether the movie would have mass appeal, but Vir was a constant nagging voice in their ears, saying, “I’ve seen 4,000 people at my shows laughing at this content. If people laugh at it on stage, they will laugh at it on the big screen, as well.” He was convinced Delhi Bellywould be a success, and it is. He jokes about how he hates the Transformers movie franchise.Transformers: Dark of the Moon released the same week as Delhi Belly, threatening to steal Das' thunder. It can't have done too much damage at the box office, though, given the astronomical Rs 21.25 crore for Delhi Belly's opening weekend.
While Das is proud of all he’s achieved, he credits stand-up comedy for allowing him every success he’s had. He emphasises that being a comedian has taught him all he knows. He explains: “When you’re doing a movie you’re pampered. You have a script, you have a director to help you. Believe me, stand-up is the most terrifying thing you can do. It’s just you on a stage, with a microphone and a spotlight, versus 4,000 people. I realised I could do that and it’s made me fearless as a performer.” Perhaps that’s why he had no qualms shaving his head or doing a disco item number in platform shoes and tight jeans for Delhi Belly.  “If you had told me four years ago that I would be doing a dance number with Adi Chopra and Farah Khan, I would have said you were bloody insane. But these Bollywood item numbers are really popular man!  Everyone calls me chudail now. I’m an item boy!” he says laughing.
Comedian he may be, but Das's love for cinema makes him keen to explore the more serious side of his acting in his upcoming project Raakh, where he’s cast opposite Raima Sen. He calls it his biggest challenge so far. “I had to lose eight kilos, forget I spoke English, and get myself a Bhojpuri  accent! It’s totally different from anything I’ve done before,” he explains.
Reaction
Das is surprised with the reception he gets every single day. He now has about a dozen comedy shows and three major movies under his belt but doesn’t allow himself to look back. “Unfortunately, I wake up with 20 ideas in my head every morning. I can’t let myself think about what I have done, because it distracts me from thinking about all that I haven’t! I want to takeAlien Chutney forward, I want to have my own comedy club, I want to do a certain kind of film. There’s so much left to do!” he says. But in spite of his success, Das is determined not to let himself get carried away. He’s managed to steer clear of controversy, although he thinks people don’t expect a comedian to be well-behaved. “As a comedian, you can be found passed out in a trashed hotel room with 75 beer bottles and 95 strippers, and say you’re doing research!” he says with a laugh. On a more serious note, however, he feels he doesn't overdo the indulgences: “I still drive my six-year-old Honda Civic, even though I can afford a fancy car. My house is very simple. I travel first-class, I like to stay in expensive hotels, I buy a new guitar every time I go abroad, and I have a massive library, but that’s about it.”
In 2010, Das started Weirdass Comedy, with fellow comedian Kavi Shastri, as India’s first 'comedy consultancy' firm. Das and his hand-picked group of comedians funny up everything under the sun, from books to television to movies. I ask him if he believes he can make anything funny. He’s modest again, “No, but I do believe that there’s comedy to be found in everything. Humorists in India right now are really old. We need young, talented ones working on movies, scripts and TV shows to create better content. That’s what Weirdass Comedy aims to do.”
Vir Das' career has seen the best and the worst of times. He’s talented, understated and supremely confident in his own ability. From being booed off stages ten years ago, he’s fought back to become India’s greatest stand-up artist. The key to his success he claims, was learning to laugh at himself.
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Tuesday, 14 June 2011

ROHITSHARMA COVERSHOOT FOR THE MAN MAGAZINE

The Man JUNE'11
Section: Cover story
THE DARK PHOENIX SAGA
Unlike Jean Grey from the X-Men, he’s not risen out of the ashes villainous as ever. Indian Cricket’s biggest rediscovery in 2011, Rohit Sharma is calmer, fitter and cooler than ever before as he talks to Anand Chandy about money, girls, cars, critics and cricket, of course.
The Mumbai Indians put up a poor showing and  receive a drubbing at the hands of the Deccan Chargers. Even by IPL standards, this performance is pathetic; worse because it’s two games in a row. Yet the jokes are in good spirit, “He’s done it on purpose to stay fresh for your cover shoot tomorrow,” say his team mates.
The first time I saw Rohit Sharma was during the Under-19 World Cup final in 2006. Touted as the next Sachin Tendulkar, I watched the tanned, pudgy youngster be bowled by a speeding Anwar Ali from Pakistan for just four runs off seven balls. In an hour, India’s Under-19 lose the finals to Pakistan.
Five years on, there is a renewed sense of pride courtesy India’s new victories, a World Cup no less after 28 years. Indian cricket reclaimed some sheen with their inaugural T-20 World Cup victory a few years ago where a swash-buckling Rohit Sharma smashed a quick 30 off 16 balls in the final against Pakistan pushing India to victory.
Rohit was a mild-mannered Mumbai boy, who took the local train from Borivili for his practice sessions, didn’t rip off his jersey or hurl abuses at his competitors and was sans tattoos. Rohit concentrated on letting his game do the talking for him. He faded in and out of the limelight, slumped out of form and returned, contributing consistently to the national team’s cause, yet never taking the full credit for it. “I wasn’t hungry enough,” he is alleged to have said. A statement he categorically contradicted when he walked into the studio to shoot for THE MAN.
Lean, fit and mature, albeit with a  playfulness; articulate and firm, he knows what he wants and what suits him best. Gone are the full cheeks, the unkempt stubble and the round frame. Stunned by his sharp, yet rounded looks, the crew quickly reworks some preconceived notions about him. “I’m not used to being a model. So tell me what you want me to do and help me out,” says Rohit.
Unlike his team mate, Yuvraj Singh, Rohit isn’t flooded with endorsements. He spent the last three months sitting at home reinventing his physique and his persona. Working out at the gym, eating right and following a strict regime, he watched his team mates from the sidelines. His resurgent form last year, which helped him to career-best figures of 114 against Zimbabwe and consecutive 101s against Sri Lanka, weren’t enough. Neither was his T-20 79-run success against Australia or his decent bowling economy rate, which is a little above four runs an over. No. Rohit Sharma was dropped from the side in favour of his peers like Suresh Raina. “I watched the World Cup from home. I didn’t go to the stadium.”
Disappointed at not being selected to play the World Cup, he didn’t let that slow him down. Rohit’s mission is to cement his position in the team. “My seniors and mentors have told me that this is part of the game. The focus is not on getting selected. I just concentrate on playing the best I can,” he says.
Dressed in a waistcoat and a pink shirt, Rohit looks dapper in a fedora. “I’m a simple guy. I don’t have a great family background. Five years ago we weren’t well-off. My father is a retired employee of a transportation business, my mother a housewife. I am grateful to them. Especially my uncle, without whose support, I would never have attended the school that trained me.” Rohit had decided from the tender age of 10 that he wanted to play cricket. Without enough money to enrol himself into a school with strong cricket leanings, he would perhaps have remained just another kid with big dreams had it not been for his coach, Dinesh Lad, who spotted him playing and his uncle. At their insistence, he was enroled into Swami Vivekanand International School, Mumbai, on a scholarship.
“It’s totally different when you play for your country - everyone respects you. That feels great. When I was younger, there was none of that. Pressure was always part of the game. Whether you play for your club or the state it’s always there - you can’t run from it. The only way to overcome it is by scoring runs and always playing to the best of your ability.”
Starting out as a bowler at the age of seven, Rohit has come a long way. Auctioned off for Rs 20 lakh to the Mumbai Indians this year, he is overwhelmed by how much the cricket world values him. Consistent in the IPL and a one-time Orange Cap (for the highest run getter in the IPL) wearer in 2008, he was formerly retained by the Deccan Chargers for around Rs 3 crore.
From being a nobody five years ago, to living in the posh Bandra area in Mumbai and owning a swanky new BMW 5 and currently eyeing an Aston Martin, Sharma swears it isn’t the money that drives his passion to play cricket. “I’m a Mumbai boy and playing at home mattered more than the money that came in.”
Looking at the pics from the shoot, he’s rather impressed. He is right; he’s not a model nor an actor. He’s a sportsman, through and through. One coming to terms with his new-found popularity. “I read a lot of magazines but never imagined my face on a cover. I never thought I’d ever be in the limelight. Travelling to school by bus, magazines were what we passed our time with. I never imagined a whole new generation would be seeing my face on one of those very covers and reading about me on a bus somewhere.”
He chuckles as his childhood friend, Ajay, walks in. A sports agent now, Ajay says Rohit hasn’t changed but is still a fun loving prankster when the curtains come down. The star himself is candid about how much he likes to sit at home and chill out with his friends. “I have a PS3 and an awesome music system. My Mumbai team mates and friends come home and play FIFA with me and whoever wins gets to take home some sort of gift. We make small bets on the games.” Rohit can also be found dancing away to hip hop or enjoying himself at the clubhouse poolside near his home. Maybe this is what keeps him calm and his head screwed so firmly onto his shoulders.
“Calmness is natural to me.” Whether it was patiently partnering Sachin with a 66 against Australia in the CB series final at Sydney in 2007, or smashing the Chennai bowling attack of 87 runs for 48 balls with Andrew Symonds by his side, Rohit can play both the biffer and the blocker with the same ease and composure. Without advertising himself yet disarming his fans and critics alike, this calmness percolates into his everyday affairs, as well.
This is in evidence when I talk about the IPL’s bastardisation of cricket. I get a logical and quiet putting-down. “T-20 is just a format. You don’t play cricket to entertain. You play for yourself, your country and your team. You go out to make sure your team wins. You play to bring pride to your team. Whether people get entertained or not is secondary. I also party as hard as I play. Why not? If I perform well on the field, I can do whatever I want away from it.”
Not one to get emotional about a win or a loss, he’s guarded. “Why should the opposition know what I’m thinking. I let my cricket do the talking. In a country where even Sachin is criticised despite his achievements, this helps in real life, too.” It’s this part of Rohit's nature that has perhaps saved him from being linked to starlets and models. The woman he’s looking for would need to match these characteristics. Actually, he thinks that the Indian team is full of eligible, handsome bachelors – them first, then him.
Averaging at over 134.0 (the highest batting average in IPL IV) and being the fifth highest run-scorer with something in the range of 1,500 runs until halfway into the IPL, he is  excited about a return to the Indian team and his upcoming tour in the West Indies. Looking at a fresh start to his career, Rohit’s not even banking on his past 61 ODI appearances, 1,248 runs, the triple century he hit in the Ranji against Gujarat or his batting average of about 30 runs an innings. Like the phoenix, he's looking to rise from the ashes and showcase his current form. He’s also looking foward to that long-awaited holiday in Miami. 
In a country where time, tide, cricket, fan followings and sadly the traffic wait for no man, I have a feeling that Shane Warne’s prediction is going to come true. Rohit could definitely be India’s next big thing.
This time he’s probably going to be back for good.
ends
Shoot Credits
Photos: Saurabh Dua
Styling: Megha Monga Anand
Hair & Makeup: Bianca