HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentZeenat Aman: If it weren’t for Dev Sahab, I wouldn’t have had such a meteoric rise

Zeenat Aman: If it weren’t for Dev Sahab, I wouldn’t have had such a meteoric rise

That '70s thing, Zeenat Aman, the evergreen gorgeous model turned actor, who's now turned into an internet sensation, on working in Hindi films in one of the more progressive and revolutionary decades of Bollywood and Hindi cinema.

October 01, 2023 / 12:27 IST
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Zeenat Aman and Dev Anand in 'Haré Rama Haré Krishna' (1971); and (inset) Zeenat Aman now (Image courtesy Instagram)
Zeenat Aman and Dev Anand in 'Haré Rama Haré Krishna' (1971); and (inset) Zeenat Aman now (Image: Instagram)

A convent-educated girl who’d studied in America, an international beauty pageant winner with a glamorous blend of bohemian chic and classic elegance, Zeenat Aman was definitely not the conventional desi heroine of the early '70s. She shattered stereotypes, blurred the lines between the good girl and the bad girl, introduced grey shades in leading ladies, and portrayed characters way ahead of her time.

On Friday evening, ahead of the screening of the superhit Don (1978), restored by filmmaker-archivist Shivendra Singh Dungarpur's Film Heritage Foundation, the yesteryear actress, former model and today's Instagram sensation discussed about her work and films. Edited excerpts:

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Your father Amanullah Khan was a screenwriter. Tell us about his influence in your life.

Mere walid sahab (my father) wrote the screenplay and dialogues of Mughal-e-Azam (1960) and Pakeezah (1972). He was prolific in Urdu and I have a whole collection of all his poems which I am looking to publish at some point. Lekin afsos that I didn’t get to spend much time with him. My parents were separated when I was about two years old and I lived with my mother. And so, I cannot claim to have any knowledge of the Urdu language. I went to a convent school and studied in America and then I came back and had to start my career, learning Hindi all over again.