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Sanjay Dutt: My circle of friends has become smaller now

Sanjay Dutt: My circle of friends has become smaller now

Time of India3 days ago
Sanjay Dutt
Sanjay Dutt
has always cherished spending time with friends. However, over the years, the actor admits that his circle of friends has gradually become smaller. Now dividing his time between Mumbai and Dubai, Dutt finds himself in Mumbai mostly for work, while Dubai remains his haven for family life.
Whenever he returns to Mumbai, he makes it a point to reconnect with those closest to him.
Once known for hosting lavish gatherings at his Mumbai home, Dutt now prefers a quieter lifestyle. Speaking candidly, he shares, 'My circle has become smaller over time. I really enjoy having meaningful conversations with my close friends. These are old friends, nothing related to the
film industry
or business. They drop by occasionally—we laugh, talk, have a drink.
It's simple and genuine.'
The
K.G.F: Chapter 2
actor made these remarks while attending a celebration in Mumbai, marking two years of GlenWalk, a beverage brand he endorses. Dutt has been the face of GlenWalk, founded by his long-time friend Mokksh Sani. The two have shared a bond for over two decades.
Reflecting on their collaboration, Mokksh Sani—also the founder of The Living Liquidz—said, 'The response has been fantastic, and we're continuing to grow. I focus on manufacturing, but I always turn to Sanjay for marketing insights. He's the face of our brand, yet he gives us full creative freedom, which is invaluable. More than that, I've always been a huge fan of his. I often send him videos whenever I'm watching his films like Vaastav or Munna Bhai M.B.B.S.
'
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Do whatever you can to make it better],' Walker recalled in Usman's book. He went on to be part of every film Guru Dutt directed or produced, except Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam. Right from his first film, Dutt also had a clear sense of how his films should look. He used light and shadow to an almost poetic level in his cinema. 'On the sets of Baazi, Guru Dutt recognised one such person with whom he was going to create unforgettable images and emotions on screen. His name was VK Murthy,' Usman wrote. Baazi was also where Raj Khosla entered the picture. He had come to Bombay hoping to become a singer, but joined Dutt as an assistant director on Dev Anand's recommendation. When he admitted to exaggerating his Hindi writing skills, Dutt let it slide with a grin. The next to join was production manager S Guruswamy, who handled the nuts and bolts of the filmmaking process. 'They worked together, they partied together. This camaraderie of the team members was translating beautifully on celluloid too,' wrote Usman. The partnership wasn't about forming a coterie around Dutt. It was also about mentorship and mutual benefit. Khosla, for one, went on to become a successful director in his own right, known for films like Woh Kaun Thi? (1964), Mera Saaya (1966), and Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki (1978). But the turning point was CID, produced by Guru Dutt Films. Even though Dutt's brother Atmaram wanted the job, it went to Khosla. The brothers fell out but the film became one of the biggest hits of 1956. 'He never interfered with my work. It's Guru Dutt's skill that I learnt, the use of the face, the eyes more than body movements. And the use of close-ups—they tell the main story,' Khosla told Kabir. In the same interview he also recounted that reviews and criticism did not affect his mentor very much. 'Guru Dutt never bothered about critics. He was his own critic. He knew where he was going wrong and he would say, 'Raj, this film is going wrong, this film will not go over right—yeh gadbad ho gayi hai [this has gone wrong]'. He could feel it,' said Khosla. When CID earned Rs 30 lakh, Dutt called Khosla and handed him the keys to a Dodge convertible. 'It's a present for having made CID,' he said when asked why. Khosla was a 'gushing admirer of Guru Dutt, his persona and his filmmaking,' wrote Amborish Roychoudhury in his book Raj Khosla: The Authorised Biography. Yet, it was not a relationship where anyone was beholden. Khosla turned down Dutt's offer to direct another film for him, reportedly saying, 'I am a small plant and I can't grow under a big tree.' Another dream team member who was fierce about her individuality was Waheeda Rehman. Also Read: Guru Dutt turned melancholia into art. He was 'lost in filmmaking, lost to life' A reluctant muse The story goes it all began in 1955, when Guru Dutt's car hit a buffalo in Hyderabad. Stranded for a day with Guruswamy, he spotted a young woman across the street and asked who she was. Her name was Waheeda Rehman, a dancer in the Telugu film Rojulu Marayi. Dutt arranged to meet her, spoke to her briefly, and returned to Bombay. Months later, a man named Mannu Bhai Patel showed up at her home in Madras and told her Guru Dutt wanted to see her in Bombay. After some deliberation, Rehman travelled to Dutt's office at Famous Studios in Mahalaxmi, where he, Khosla, Alvi, Murthy, and Guruswamy were waiting with a contract. 'When I first met him, I did not think he was a famous and great director because he spoke very little. The meeting lasted for about half an hour,' said Rehman to Kabir. She signed on but right from the beginning she dictated her own terms, sometimes to the ire of the others, especially Khosla. For one, she refused to change her name as he had requested. She also demanded a say in her costumes. 'Raj Khosla was furious – in his world, newcomers didn't throw their weight around…But his mentor could see a spark in her that Raj couldn't. Guru Dutt agreed to all her demands,' reads Raj Khosla: The Authorized Biography. Rehman made her Hindi debut in CID and stuck to her guns from the start. For a seduction scene, she refused to wear a lace blouse unless it was covered by a dupatta. Khosla protested but Dutt acquiesced. 'They had seen Guru Dutt losing his patience with other actors and senior technicians. But he seemed like an entirely different person when talking to Waheeda,' wrote Yasser Usman. Their collaboration gave Dutt's films some of their most haunting moments: the long silences in Pyaasa where she plays the sex worker Gulabo, the ache of 'Waqt ne kiya kya haseen sitam' in Kaagaz ke Phool. As Rehman became central to his films, rumours about their relationship worsened his already strained marriage to Geeta Dutt. His personal life, by most accounts, was turbulent, with alcohol being a major factor. On 10 October 1964, Walker and Waheeda Rehman were travelling to Madras. As Walker entered his hotel the telephone rang : Johnny Guru gaya. He broke down and Rehman was stunned, writes Usman. The cause of death was a fatal mix of alcohol and sleeping pills. Whether it was accidental or intentional has never been resolved. 'His death may have been just an accident; but I know that he had always wished for it, longed for it…and he got it,' Rehman later wrote in 1967. 'Whatever happened was perhaps best for him! That is the only consolation left.' (Edited by Asavari Singh)

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