Raj Kapoor loved cinema,booze & heroines

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With the Title , “Khullam Khulla: Rishi Kapoor Uncensored”, the tell-all book sees the ‘Bobby’ hero talking about his father’s affairs with co-actors and his passion for films, besides capturing the evolution of their father-son relationship.

Being the father of another hero Ranbir kapoor, Rishi also reveals his father’s fascination for a particular brand of whisky, which he refused to share. “My father loved his cinema, his booze, his leading ladies and his work. But for a man legendary for his hospitality, he was very possessive of his whisky.

Rishi practically begins the book talking about his father’s affair with yesteryears’ actor Nargis Dutt, who together, he writes, continue to be widely acknowledged as the most iconic pair onscreen.

Raj Kapoor loved cinema,booze heroines

“My father, Raj Kapoor, was twenty-eight years old and had already been hailed as the ‘showman of Hindi cinema’ four years before. “He was also a man in love at the time, unfortunately, with someone other than my mother.

His girlfriend was the leading lady of some of his biggest hits of the time, including Aag (1948), Barsaat (1949) and Awara (1951).”

Rishi writes that Nargis was Raj Kapoor’s “in-house heroine” and was understandably immortalised in the RK Studios emblem.

The 64-year-old actor has also shed light on the relationship his father shared with co-star Vyajanthimala, who had denied having an affair with the actor.

He writes, “I remember moving into the Natraj Hotel on Marine Drive with my mom during the time Papa was involved with Vyjayanthimala.

“From the hotel, we shifted for two months into an apartment in Chitrakoot. My father had bought the apartment for Mom and us. He did all he could to woo her back, but my mother wouldn’t give in until he had ended that chapter of his life.”

Raj Kapoor loved cinema,booze heroines

Rishi remembers getting “livid” when Vyjayanthimala claimed that his father had “manufactured the romance because of his hunger for publicity”.

“She had no right to distort facts just because he was no longer around to defend the truth…But I can say with absolute certainty that if Papa had been alive, she wouldn’t have denied the affair so blatantly or called him publicity hungry,” Rishi writes in the book.

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