By
Shevlin Sebastian
Shakeela
got a chance to play a role in the soft-porn film, 'Playgirls', in
1994 in which reigning sex queen Silk Smitha was the heroine. In one
scene Shakeela had to only wear a towel and do a love-making scene.
Then Smitha would enter the room, catch Shakeela in the act, and
give her a slap. Before the scene could be shot, an anxious Shakeela
kept asking Smitha about the slap. Smitha repeatedly said, “Don't
worry, I will only pretend that I am slapping you.”
However,
when the shooting took place, Smitha gave an actual slap. A shocked
Shakeela burst into tears and ran away from the set at AVM studios
in Chennai. For three days she stayed away. Then the producer went
to her home and told the youngster that Smitha wanted to say sorry.
When Shakeela reached the set, Smitha gave a box of chocolates, and
hugged her.
“Smitha
told me that since I was new to acting, I probably would not know
how to cry,” says Shakeela. “And since I was skimpily dressed, I
would feel uncomfortable in front of the crew. So, in order to
finish the shoot in one take, she slapped me. But till today, my
heart is not convinced by her answer. I have been puzzled by her
behaviour.” Could she have been jealous at the rise of a new
competitor? “I don’t know,” says Shakeela.
Incidentally,
Smitha committed suicide on September 23, 1996.
It
is 2013. Shakeela, who has lost more than 20 kgs, is relaxing in her
hotel room at Kochi, after a day's shooting for her latest Malayalam
film, ‘Neelakurinji Poothu’, in which she is acting as well as
being the director. The story is about a single mother bringing up a
girl. The producer is Jaffer Kanjirapally, who has done 19 films
with her. “I made a lot of money, thanks to Shakeela,” he says.
“Now I am trying my luck again.”
As
for Shakeela she wanted to do something different. “To try new
things like direction will help me to grow as an actor,” she says.
But it has been an up and down career.
For
a time, from the nineties to 2000, Shakeela's soft-porn Malayalam
films were a rage in Kerala. Her film, ‘Kinnarathumbikal’, became
a huge hit. She shakes her head and says, “How did this film do
well? It had one of the worst background music I have heard:
some scratchy remixes of Michael Jackson songs. I was wearing a
blouse and a lungi. There were only two hot scenes. In one I am
having a bath in a stream and, in another I make love to an older
man.”
Nevertheless,
the public were enamoured. Later, the films were dubbed into many
other Indian languages and could also be seen in places like Nepal
and Bangladesh. But once the Censor Board clamped down on the films,
Shakeela's career came to a sudden halt.
“I
had been working for two years without a gap,” she says. “And
when I got a break, I was so happy. For a month I was eating and
relaxing. Then it became very boring. I learned cooking and passed
the time by playing games on Play Station. For two years, I did not
get any roles.”
Her
break came when she got a comic role in Telugu director Theja's
'Jeyam' in 2002. Thereafter, she did similar roles in Tamil and
Kannada films. However, the old request to wear revealing clothes
kept cropping up. “Immediately I will say, 'Is this a Malayalam
film?', and shut them up,” says Shakeela, with a smile.
(Sunday Magazine, The New Indian Express, South India and Delhi)
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