
Dancing Queen: Why the magic of Helen in ‘Mehbooba, mehbooba' hasn't faded with the years
In two sequences, women dance for him: Mehbooba, mehbooba and Jab tak hai jaan, both songs integral to the plot, both songs plagiarised from other older hits in the great tradition of R D Burman. Mehbooba, Mehbooba is what I call a song of misdirection; here the dance is a screen for other activity that moves the story forward. We were at the edge of our seats in the Minerva theatre on Lamington Road in Bombay where we saw the film again and again. The edge of one's seat is not a great place to think. It never occurred to us to ask why Jai and Veeru didn't simply shoot Gabbar in the head and then blow up the ammo dump. It never occurred to us to ask why this loss of ammunition seemed to have no impact on the dacoits' strength. It was pointless to ask questions like that.
To write this piece, I played the song loud in an office in which I work. As the familiar chords struck up, someone started whistling, then another voice began singing and soon a general raucous chorus broke out. That was what Helen did for us: she invited us to the delight of her dancing.
And yet, a peculiar sadness came over me. It is quite clearly what one might call an item number. Helen has no further role in the plot. She has nothing to do with the moral issues at stake and crime and punishment are always about the righting of the moral order. But then neither do the four biggest stars (Amitabh-Jaya-Dharmendra-Hema). The film is written as a collision course on a sinusoidal curve, the collision being between Gabbar Hari Singh and the Thakur (Sanjeev Kumar). Even when ahimsa is mentioned, it is the Thakur who shoots it down.
And so it is fitting that Helen should be strutting her stuff for the uber-daku of our cinema. I would also like to draw your attention to a moment, when we see one of those glorious legs from hip to toe, stretched out across the ground. Look at the foot as it arches, the toes curved into the dust. It's a fleeting moment, but it brings back a Leela Naidu story.
During the shooting of The Householder, Shashi Kapoor noticed that his co-star Leela was tapping her foot to show irritation, though her foot was not in the frame. He was impressed, she was not. To her, she had simply been in the moment, in the role. Her foot would tap out her irritation, whether it was in the frame or not.
And Helen's toe would draw an arabesque on the mud of Ramgarh whether you noticed it or not. This then the sadness: they don't make them like that any more.
Jerry Pinto is author of Helen: The Life and Times of an H-Bomb (Penguin)
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