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          It is considered discourteous to write in negative tones after any person's   demise. Never speak ill of the dead, the saying goes. Journalists and writers,   however, must remain faithful to their calling and document the truth about   Rajesh Khanna before it is drowned in a crescendo of blandishments from   publicity-hungry cronies.
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        Rajesh Khanna's worst enemies were the sycophants in his lifetime. They created   the destructive genie which lurks within but is kept in leash by most of us. Not   so with 'Kaka', as the actor was popularly known. He allowed his ego full play   and, at a later date, even rued his lifestyle; but, by then, it was too late. He   had alienated his well-meaning lady friends, his old schoolmates, his aides,   servants and relatives.
 In hindsight, the only similar example from the   world of cinema I can recall was the famed Howard Hughes, inventor,   industrialist, film producer, director and a psychotic. Hughes is also credited   with a film which is a media favourite, a veritable study guide for young film   directors. For film historians it is the greatest film ever made: Citizen   Kane.
 
 Howard Hughes introduced half a dozen girls to Hollywood, but he   claimed that his best discovery was Jane Russel. After acting in a couple of   films, Russell actually dumped Hughes, causing Hughes to withdraw into a private   world of his own with very strict rules for all who had access to it. One former   actress, Jean Peters, decided to stay with him until he died, sacrificing a   promising career in Hollywood.
 
 The only thing that separates Rajesh   Khanna from Hughes is that the former contributed nothing to the industry he   served while Hughes founded an entire empire of companies under the Howard   Hughes Corporation which included the Trans World Airlines, Texas Equipment Co.   and an armament manufacturing company. On top of everything, Hughes made stars   out of ordinary men and women.
 
 Kaka had a mean streak. He used his star   power to demolish any opposition. Actress Anju Mahendroo could have much to add   to my own story which I wish to share.
 
 The time was when Rajesh Khanna   was about to get married to Dimple Kapadia after a long-drawn romance with Anju   Mahendroo. The latter and her mother had a royal tiff with Khanna before   Mahendroo walked out of the home in which she had been a regular. The film   industry was with her. What made Kaka furious was the reaction from even his   well-wishers. He blamed Mahendroo and her friends for all the negative   publicity.
 
 My close friend Basu Bhattacharya had just completed his   latest film "Daku" featuring Kabir Bedi and Anju Mahendroo. One working print   was sent to Delhi by the producer for private screenings. The film came to me   for tax exemption as I was the film expert on board the official committee of   the Excise Department in the Delhi Administration.
 
 "Daku" was based on a   novelette written by the famed Punjabi writer Amrita Pritam. The writer did not   charge any royalty because she had tremendous regard for Basuda as a film   director. The film was issued a tax exemption for a period of one month after   its first week's commercial run in Delhi. I had found the film worthy of the   exemption.
 
 The film, however, was never released.
 
 Rajesh Khanna's   fierce battle with Mahendroo led him to order the private confiscation of all   films in the country featuring her. He even went so far as to declare that he   would pay double the cost incurred to all filmmakers with rights over their   films in which Anju Mahendroo had a role. He demanded that even lobby prints,   posters, trailers and advertisement films et al featuring Mahendroo be handed to   him or his representative. He paid for all the material seized.
 
 The   entire record of Mahendroo's film career to date virtually disappeared. Films   already released, like "Road to Sikkim", were withdrawn. The advertisement for a   well-known brand of talcum powder endorsed by Mahendroo also disappeared and, of   course, there remained no trace of the film "Daku" .
 
 Basu Bhattacharya   was furious at the turn of events. "Daku" had already got full tax exemption in   Punjab and more credit would be forthcoming. Kaka had other ideas. He probably   had all the material destroyed. At one time Bhattacharya even contemplated   re-shooting "Daku" with a new star cast, but funds were his insurmountable   problem.
 
 I think "Road To Sikkim" might still be in some private   possession as a 16-mm print in eastern India. If it is still around, I would   wish for it to re-surface now and its print be sent to the National Film   Archives for preservation. Anju Mahendroo deserves to be   resurrected.
 
 Rajesh Khanna came to Delhi for a charity premiere I had   organized for the film "Shakti" in which he played the role of a policeman. At   the press meet I asked Kaka about the release of the film "Daku". His reply was   that he had not heard of any such film. I told him about the Anju Mahendroo   story. Khanna simply stared at me transfixed and expressed the desire to meet me   separately, but I decided not to oblige him.
 
 From time to time I am   asked: Could Rajesh Khanna have been rescued?
 
 I do think that Kaka could   have been saved from himself. In 1984, Rajesh Khanna's last big hit film   "Maqsad" became successful and he was in good spirits. At this time, one of his   physician friends could have prevailed upon Kaka to move out of Bombay for an   extended period of detoxification and recovery from his problems.
 
 Khanna   nearly succeeded in 1991. He was asked (by the Congress) to stand in a   by-election for the Lok Sabha seat from New Delhi against (the Bharatiya Janata   Party's) L.K. Advani . He lost by a whisker. He stood again (because Advani   vacated the seat, having also won from Gandhinagar in Gujarat) against   Shatrughan Sinha (also of the BJP), and won. But he wasted away his gains due to   his wayward behaviour.
 
 Rajesh Khanna's worst enemies were his arrogance   and self-indulgence. He was a poor listener, always bent upon dominating the   lives of his dear and loved ones. He had mood swings and could be very generous   to someone at one moment and an utter miser in the next moment. The constant   refrain around him touting his superstar image had turned his head and he could   no longer lead a proper private life. He became consumed by an overpowering need   to be surrounded by fawning flatterers at all times.
 
 The entire   machination could well have been filmdom's clever strategy to create a counter   point against the camps of Dev Anand, the aging Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor. The   phantom created by vested interests for public consumption ultimately consumed   him.
 
 Kaka remained a lonely man. He had numerous affairs with women whom   he could not marry. Dimple, foreseeing the ultimate fate of her husband, had   left him to himself in his big house Ashirwad, refusing to grant him a divorce.   The public never knew much about all this.
 
 Rajesh Khanna's last supposed   romance was with Devyani Chaubal, a gossip columnist cast in the mould of   Hollywood's Hedda Hopper. The Khanna-Chaubal romance ended with her untimely   death.
 
 In later life Kaka also became a frequent visitor at hospitals for   his many ailments caused by his erratic lifestyle. Something had to give and, in   his case, it was his weak and thinning body.
 
 Aware of Kaka's declining   health, Kapadia knew that she would inherit some of his wealth as his surviving   widow and share it with her daughters. Her return to Kaka in his last days could   be an indication of her foresight. Many like me must feel that she rightfully   deserves to inherit Rajesh Khanna's wealth after all the physical abuse she   suffered from her superstar egoistic husband during the ten years of their   married life.
 
 Like Howard Hughes, Kaka did not want his illness to be   made public. Both died of the same disease. Even on his deathbed, Kaka reigned   over his body, come what may. The dark side of his life could eventually come to   light, just as it did in the case of Howard Hughes.
 
 Gautam Kaul is a film historian. The views expressed are personal	.
    
	
	
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