Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s
biography, An Ordinary Life is a biography written by Rituparna Chatterjee.
From the excerpts that have come to us, we can definitely say that Nawazuddin
has made sure that the book is as candid as possible. Here’s an excerpt from
the tell-all book.
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui: (My first relationship) was like rain after a spell of drought
I was performing in a play in
Mumbai which was when I finally had my first romantic relationship.
Incidentally, she too happened to be an NSD graduate, though we had never met
there. It was very sweet, like rain is after a very long spell of drought.
Sunita had fallen madly in love with me. Every day, she would come over, hang out
at my house in Mira Road and scrawl our names in tiny font all over the wall.
You remember those old-fashioned hearts with the names of lovers in it,
sometimes with an arrow across it, sometimes without? Her doodles were
something like that. It seemed to my roommates that every day she covered one
wall with her art of love. We saw each other for about a year and a half. She
was a Pahari girl. Then she went off on a holiday to her home town in the hills
to see her folks. When she returned, Sunita would not take any of my calls. And
when she did at last, I was flabbergasted. After such a deep, passionate love,
she simply said, ‘Nawaz, you focus on your career. And I will focus on my
career.’ She cut off all contact after that and I plunged into another deep,
deep depression. I took a bucket of fresh white paint and began to replace her
artwork on my walls with the blank canvas that they were before. With every
brush-stroke, I tried to erase her off my heart as well. But, of course, the
brush refused to do double duty and erased only the marks on the walls, not the
scars on my heart.
Living in Mira Road meant that
the local train was our lifeline. We were at the station almost all the time.
Soon after her call, one day I was at the station and stood there staring at
the tracks. A train was coming, screaming its arrival with a lusty horn. It
would be simple and instant. Should I jump on to the tracks and end it all? End
this struggle, end this life? I had nothing. No love, no work, no money. But
some being woke up in me and gave me a metaphorical slap. ‘You know this is not
your department,’ the voice in my head said. ‘Then why? Why did you go that
way? Why!’ it screamed at me. The train sped away, screaming pompously, cutting
through the air. Simultaneously, I cut off my emotions like doctors sever an
umbilical cord. I decided that I would never again be emotional in any
relationship. And I kept my word. Never again did I allow myself to be
vulnerable like that again, not even with my wife. Yet it was important to
analyse what had happened. My exgirlfriend’s flatmate was an attractive, modern
and flamboyant actress called Achint Kaur who was quite popular at the time. I
concluded that the only explanation for Sunita’s abrupt goodbye was Kaur’s
influence. She must have advised her that for the sake of her career, Sunita
should probably date someone successful, not a struggling, desperate actor who
was out of work.
Today, Sunita tells
everybody that she was once together with me in a very serious relationship.
Incredible, isn’t it? Life is beautiful, just fucking beautiful.
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui: The West was kinder to me first, both in terms of love and work.
Those years between 2006 and
2010 were pretty incredible too. The industry had begun to notice me. People in
the industry would come and tell me how all of Bollywood was talking about this
‘one-scene actor’ who was amazing. Over the years, I had had a thousand
rejections in every phase of life, whether it was from girls, money, directors
. . . I had begun to think of myself as a manhoos, the ill-fated one. What they
call in my region ‘grahan lagna’, that is, astrologically the stars have
aligned themselves to ensure that this person fails at everything no matter how
hard he works. But during those four or five years I knew that this was the end
and I would be successful after this. Then a moment came when I knew that it
would be over in just a few days. That sweet ecstasy of knowing, that relief,
completely surpasses the joy of success that I have today.
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui: I, being the lusty village bumpkin that I am, scooped her (actor
Niharika Singh) up in my arms and headed straight for the bedroom.
Strangely, the West was kinder
to me first, both in terms of love and work. I gained recognition there through
my films which travelled to most festivals. I was at a cafe once with my friend
in New York City’s Soho area. The stunning waitress kept staring at me. ‘Boss,
you’re all set!’ My friend chuckled. I was not used to such attention,
especially from the female kind. ‘You? You are an actor?’ she asked a
rhetorical question. ‘Yes!’ I replied. ‘Which film of mine did you see? Gangs
of Wasseypur?’ She squinted, trying to remember, ‘No, no,’ she said. ‘Another
film!’ After a few moments, she responded: ‘Lunchbox!’ We got talking and let’s
just say what happens in New York stays in New York, at least in my case. As
you can probably guess from the titles of the films, this is a memory that
happened way down the line when I had tasted the sweet nectar of success. Before
that came Suzanne: a lovely, dear Jewish girl from New Jersey, who lived in New
York City. We met there and hit it off. She came to Mumbai and began to live
with me. By then, Shamas and I had moved to Yari Road. Every few months, she
kept extending her visa. It was a very sweet relationship. She was so lovely
that the idea of marriage had begun to cross my mind, first in fleeting
thoughts, and then slowly they turned into a decision. At the very last minute
when I was about to propose, as if reading my mind, Suzanne said, ‘In my
country it is divorce season right now.’ It was winter, famous for festivals
and infamous for breakups in the West. Her brother had just gotten a divorce.
Perhaps that was why she was afraid of marriage.
‘Let’s wait and watch what we
want to do. Let’s see if we want to live together or not after a year,’ she
said quietly. I was bewildered. Without telling her, I dropped the idea of
marriage altogether. The shooting of Miss Lovely commenced. Suzanne used to
accompany me there. Then came the day when her visa expired and she needed to
return to New York to sort it out. She was gone for many months. One day, while
we were shooting a dance scene, something happened to my co-star Niharika
Singh. When the director said, ‘Cut!’, she quietly rushed to her vanity van and
stayed there.
Something seemed to have
happened to her. She was suddenly cold, went out of her way to maintain a
distance from me and began to keep mum. I was puzzled. What was wrong with her?
What had happened? She used to be friendly, social and talk quite a bit. I
thought it was best to ask her what had happened and so I did, not once, not
twice, but several times, for several days. She responded that nothing had
happened. I silenced my curiosity. I simply urged her to talk, be more social,
that it was not healthy to be so quiet. After some days she began to. I invited
her over for a home-cooked meal, a mutton dish which was my speciality. She
politely agreed and came over. The dish I had made for her turned out to be
absolutely terrible. But she was too well mannered to say so. Not only did she
eat everything that was on her plate, but she praised it as well.
‘Now you come to my house,
Nawaz. I will cook mutton for you,’ she said warmly. For the very first time I
went to Niharika’s house. I rang the doorbell, slightly nervous. When she
opened the door, revealing a glimpse of the house, I was speechless with
amazement. A hundred, or so it seemed, little candles flickered beautifully.
She wore soft faux fur, looking devastatingly gorgeous, her beauty illuminated
even more in the candlelight. And I, being the lusty village bumpkin that I am,
scooped her up in my arms and headed straight for the bedroom. We made
passionate love. And just like that, out of the blue, I began a relationship
with Niharika Singh, a relationship which I did not know then would last for
almost one and a half years.
During the early days I wanted
to impress her. I was a struggler but by then I had managed to get a car, a
second-hand one, but a car nevertheless. She lived in Malad, I lived in Yari
Road. There was this time when she had to come to Yari Road for some work. I
told her that I would fetch her in my car. I decked myself up in my best
clothes, sprinkled cologne and drove off to her place with a song in my heart.
She sat inside, we drove off
and bam! In the middle of the way, the cranky old car decided to break down.
Since then, she blatantly said she would not sit in my car because it was not
to be trusted, she would go in her own car instead.
Such last-minute setbacks had
become a pattern for me from all ends. My love life had become a Siamese twin
of my work life. I worked so diligently on getting girls and films. A momentum
would build up and then, bam, lady luck would slap me on the face in both
cases. I would be selected for a role, the costumes would be finalized and I
would be flying on cloud nine that now I will become an established actor, and
then, just like that, out of nowhere, would come a phone call cancelling my
part or me in that role, right at the very last minute.
I wondered why this happened
to me. I still do when I look back. Anyway, coming back to the story, in the
meantime, emails from
Suzanne started coming. ‘Why are you not mailing me, Nawaz?
Suzanne started coming. ‘Why are you not mailing me, Nawaz?
What’s wrong?’ I did not
respond, I did not have the courage to. I trusted my silence would convey what
needed to be conveyed. When I was checking my inbox one day, Niharika happened
to see one of her emails.
‘Who is this?’ she inquired.
‘You know very well who it is,’ I said. ‘It’s Suzanne.’
‘Wo-ow! It’s still going on
between you two! Amazing!’ Niharika thundered in anger. ‘It is wrong. I hope
you know that.’
‘No, Niharika, nothing is
going on between us. Sometimes her emails come, that’s all. Slowly she will
realize that Nawaz is not interested and she will stop emailing,’ I explained
softly. ‘No, Nawaz! You must maintain clarity,’ she said. ‘All right! I will
email her clearly then,’ I said. ‘No, you won’t. So I will email her,’ she said
sternly.
From that day, Niharika began
to send emails to Suzanne from my email address. She would type, ‘I cannot
continue with you . . .’and sign off as me. Imagine the shock for Suzanne. She
would send heartbreaking replies like: ‘What happened, Nawaz? Please tell me,
Nawaz! . . . I am crying, Nawaz! Tell me, please.’ It was absolutely awful. I
simply could not endure it! It was as if she was screaming, crying out aloud
helplessly in unbearable pain.
It was apparent that the
emails had some sort of a multiple personality disorder. After a few of these
email exchanges, Suzanne figured that this was not my voice at all. ‘Who is
this writing, Nawaz? I know this is not you. Somebody else is with you,’ she
wrote back. Imagine her plight—helplessly trying to solve a mystery from
another continent and her only clues were those few emails. ‘Somebody else is
making you write these emails. Tell me who is this person?’ she wrote. ‘Who is
she? Who is this b***h?’
‘Bitch!’ That word infuriated
Niharika so much that she made me end all correspondence with Suzanne forever,
then and there. I was very sad. Then I thought, so be it, it’s all right, I am
with Niharika. My melancholy evaporated quickly.
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui: I would only come to them for my own needs. Otherwise, I might not
even take their calls.
Niharika was an intelligent
girl. Being an actor herself meant that she knew and understood my struggle for
work. Sure, my life was better but I was still running around from office to
office, showing my face, talking, asking for roles, giving auditions. I spent
all day hopping around like this. She would call me in frequent spurts
throughout the day demanding to know of my whereabouts. She insisted that I
tell her all the spots I would be at on that particular day. I was very touched
with how much she cared for me. Soon enough though, the romance of the concern
faded. The regularity of the questions felt like being nagged non-stop, and I
began to get rather annoyed. She, on the other hand, did not have to run all
over the place like me. She was being serenaded by several offers; she had the
luxury of choice. I did not. So I expected compassion, I expected empathy.
There was another piece to
this puzzle. Like all girls, Niharika obviously expected some of the sweet
conversations that lovers have, to take place between us. But I was quite a
selfish bastard. I had a plain aim: go to her house, make out and leave. I
could not talk lovey-dovey too much. It finally struck her that I was a rascal
who cared only for himself. (Actually, all the girls I have ever been with have
had this same complaint about me. I would only come to them for my own needs.
Otherwise, I might not even take their calls.)
When I went to her place next,
she was wearing a silk robe. I ran my hand over its coolness around her waist,
grabbing her but she pushed me away. ‘No, Nawaz!’ she said. ‘I won’t meet you
again. This is enough.’ I pleaded, I cried, I apologized. I said I wouldn’t
repeat my mistakes again. I would be more thoughtful, a better lover. But she
remained adamant. She had had enough. She had been hurt too many times. So that
was that, we broke up cutting off all contact.
Two months later, another girl
came into my life in a most mysterious way. I did not know then that years
later, I would marry her.
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