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Bikram
Saluja, you've seen him in more then a dozen
commercials is just another model-turned-actor, making his debut with Fiza, but
here he's not talking about his acting or his first film but talking about his
first love, tennis for the last time on the eve of his release with Nisha
Chainani.
Who is Bikram
Saluja?
I'm just the guy
next door. I was born on the 28th April 1974, and I'm what you would call a
typical Taurean, quite, practical, as sensible and down-to-earth as a quiet pair
of old shoes. I was born in Indore and that's where I spent all my teething
years. We are a family of 5, and life was simple. Sunday's were family days,
where all of us along with a few other families went for picnics, met up at each
other's houses, where the grown-ups played cards and we played mischief. We went
to waterfalls during the rains, burnt crackers at Diwali and threw colour on
Holi.
What were you like as
a child?
A brat! I was the most troublesome of the lot. I
had to have my way or no way all the time. And no one was allowed to scold me or
shout at me otherwise I would make a long face, threaten not to eat and lock
myself in the room until my mom and dad felt really bad and pampered me until I
felt better. And then just to do them a favour I would sit down and eat. I was
extremely stubborn, and when I didn't get what I wanted, it entitled me to bring
the whole house down! And my parents indulged me completely.
Then I
remember how my mother had Green Fingers. She loved her garden and her flowers
and her plants and how she nursed them with so much of love and affection until
it was summer time! The onset of her fury! Because during the vacations her
beautiful garden became our cricket ground! Every afternoon she would take her
nap and every afternoon my brother and I would march onto the ground all
equipped with our stumps, bat and ball and started whacking the ball all over
the garden damaging all her precious plants and flowers and breaking all the
pots! And then when she would wake up and see her garden in such a mess and she
would then start howling and we would just run away and
hide!
As a child were you
inclined towards acting or the arts?
Not at all! At the age of ten, I discovered the first love of my
life, tennis! Ever since tennis came my way, it became my entire focus of
attention. From then onwards, I stopped going out, I got special permission from
the school to go and play at the club everyday, and by the time I was 13 my
parents even sent me on a special two and a half months training programme to
the United States to coach in tennis. When I got back from the States I started
playing in tournaments but I only started doing well in the game after I turned
16, when I actually started winning some of them.
I mean, everybody at
school wanted to become a doctor or engineer or some professional or the other,
but all I ever wanted to do in my life was play tennis. I wanted to become a
professional tennis player. Probably as a kid I participated in class plays and
that too because the entire class participation was compulsory but nothing
else.
So what
happened?
But by the end of
the 11th year of school, I left Indore and went to Poona to join the Symbosis
College in the 12th and primarily to pursue tennis because the level of tennis
in Indore was fairly poor. I shared an apartment there with three other tennis
players and our mornings started really early for our hill run. Every day we
coached for hours and then we ate an early evening meal and it was lights out by
ten every night. But the sweet fruits of vigorous labour soon began to show. I
got my first national rankings and I was titled no.2 in the juniors. In 1991 I
went for my first international tournament to Taipei. And it's one tournament
I'm not likely to forget so easily!
Why?
Well let's just say that everything that could
go wrong went wrong! First my coach calls me and tells that I'm going to go to
for a world-ranking tournament to Taipei and hands me a ticket and an official
letter confirming my entry at the tournament. Great I think but don't I need a
visa to go to Taipei I ask him. No problem he says, you can get one from
Hongkong as soon as you reach. I was 17 years old! I had traveled only once in
my life before that and that too when I was 13, and he wanted me to go to Taipei
all on my own, stop over at Hongkong and arrange for my own visa!
Anyway,
but that's exactly what I did. I flew to Hongkong, found out from the airport
that I could acquire a visa to Taipei not from the airport but I had to go to
the Taipei Council's office. So I go there and tell them that I need a visa, and
they gave it to me within the hour. Simply enough I think, but when I get back
to the airport to board a flight for Taipei I'm informed that I don't have a
confirmed reservation and that all flights going to Taipei that day were full.
The only available confirmed seat I could get was two days later. I couldn't
wait two days! I had to be there by tomorrow, otherwise, I missed the tournament
completely. So I hang around the airport all evening in the hope that they'd
have one empty seat for me but they didn't, and my heart sinks deeper as time
goes by. Finally, there was one empty seat on the last flight out and it had my
name on it! So off I was to Taipei!
When I get to Taipei airport I call
the tennis federation there and guess what? I had all the wrong numbers! It was
night, the airport was shutting down, so I get into a cab and tell him to take
me to this address. But the buger didn't understand one word of English, so he
takes me to a railway station and tells me to get off! I wasn't going to get
off! It was 2 am and I didn't know where the hell I was or where the hell to go!
So I tell him to take me near to where I had to go, and he takes me to the
street round the corner and then tells me to get off! As I get down I see a 7
Eleven's store still open so I walk towards it. Now as I'm walking I see a
Westerner and I run across to him and ask him if he can help me. He attempts to
give me a few directions and then walks into the store buys himself a can of
beer, comes out and says, you see that park over there, I turn to look and I say
yeah, and he says, well, I wouldn't go there if I were you, unless you're gay,
and he walks away! Unless you're gay! What did he mean by that! Being gay was
still a very misunderstood concept to me in those days, it's as if he had said
don't go to that park over there, there are monsters in there! It's silly when I
think about it now but back then I was shit scared! So I run into the 7 Eleven's
store and ask the guy over the counter if he would help me out, and he does. In
fact, in the morning after he finishes with the store he takes me there himself.
So after my first night out on the street in a foreign country I finally reached
my destination, and to one of my careers best tournaments!
And then.
After that I started playing a lot of the Asian circuit where I
collected my points, and then went to play the European circuit, Mahesh was also
there at the time, also playing, when we along with a few other players all
qualified to play for Wimbledon. I lost my first round, and then went on to play
the US Opens. I lost my first round there too but only to a very close
competition. None of the others really made it either. Then came the turning
point of my life. After the Opens while Mahesh and the others decided to stay on
and join a University there, I opted to go back to Poona. I had only one year to
go to graduate, I didn't want to join a University in the States and start my
studies all over again. I thought that I had better spend my energies playing
instead of studying. I would play in the men's category and so on. It's a
decision I live to regret. For one thing I didn't know that I could exchange
credits! I could simply have joined a University in the States and taken up from
where I had left off in the Poona University! When I went back to Poona and
started playing there my game didn't improve considerably. In the whole of India
there were probably 20 good players and sometimes I would go abroad to play, but
if I had chosen to stay in the States, there are at least 1000 good players to
compete against, which meant that my game was likely to improve at least a 1000
times!
Seeing that my tennis was not going to go anywhere, one day I
decided and I quit! I lost heart, I lost belief in myself and I gave up! I was
never going to be a professional tennis player! At 20 my dreams were
over!
But that wasn't the end of the
world?
No! A few years later
after my stint with modeling, I found acting!
 How did Fiza
happen?
I was going from
office to office giving my photo's around when like that I walked into Karan
Johar's office and he told me that he hadn't started yet but I could go and meet
Khalid Mohammed if I liked, he was looking out for a fresh face. So I went and
met Khalid and things worked out between us and the next thing I knew was that I
was doing Fiza! It's not the ideal launch pad for a new comer, but it's a start
and I'm grateful.
And acting
is like.
Playing tennis,
except with new rules. Instead of the forehand, I have to work on my
expressions. Instead of my backhand I have to work on my body language. Instead
of my serve I have to work on my speech. Instead of my volley I have to work on
improvisations.
After tennis I thought my life was over, but this is just
going into set two and the games not over yet!
My first day of shooting
was just expressions. It was a graveyard scene for which I had to sport a
stubble. I reached the location early to get the feel of the place. I wasn't
nervous in respect to my performance, I knew that I was quite capable of doing
the job I was hired to do, but acting with a new medium as I soon discovered was
different to stage! On the stage I was free to express all my gestures and body
movements, whereas, working with the camera it wasn't quite the case. With the
camera every gesture, every movement had to be specific, controlled and I was
only just beginning to adapt to a set of new instructions.
 Khalid has been a true mentor to me. He's
been generous with his advice and has always been there to correct me when I
faltered. He's helped me to understand the finer aspects of acting and opened my
vision to all the small, small things I had been over looking in my performance.
Learning though is a never-ending process and it takes a while to even begin to
implement everything you've absorbed. It's like riding a bicycle, though you
know how it's done, it still take a while to successfully be able to implement
it and ride without falling. But at least I'm learning how it's done. I'm seeing
things my eyes weren't seeing earlier and I feel so greatfull for all his
suggestions. I don't know how successful I've been in putting into practice
everything I've been learning.
Karishma has been very supportive and
helpful and patient to all my follies. I mean I realize that they are all in a
position where they don't have to put up with it. She could just have easily
have turned around and complained that I don't want to work with this guy, he's
new and he's making too many mistakes! But she didn't do anything of the
sort and I'm greatfull for her patience towards a new comer.
Hrithik and
I only shot twice. Once before the release of Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai and once after,
so we didn't get a chance to interact that much. |