
He8217;s been away from Mumbai for over 20 days, but he8217;s not home-sick. Puru Raaj Kumar is too busy soaking in the warmth of Delhi8217;s new-born summer. At the Qutab Colonnade, the 25-year-old watches squirrels on the railing, set against the setting sun, and can8217;t contain his pleasure at being in the Capital. 8220;I just love Delhi,8221; he says, 8220;it has so much culture, so much taste. Look at this place, Mumbai doesn8217;t have something like this,8221; he adds, gesturing at Malini Ramani8217;s Tamarind Court. He waves enthusiastically at a pottering-about Georges Mailhot, in a fellow-artist camaraderie sort of way Mailhot returns the wave with equal enthusiasm.
Puru himself is an abstract artist, that is, when he8217;s not busy shooting for films. He loves Delhi-based Jatin Das, though he8217;s not so taken in with M. F. Husain8217;s recent works 8220;I liked the stuff he did in the 60s,8221; he explains. But legendary actor Raaj Kumar8217;s son wasn8217;t in town just for a bit of the sun: he had business to attend to, including a series of stage-shows, some in Chandigarh and one in DLF. 8220;DLF was a great experience,8221; he says, and gets up to show some of the steps from the show, right there, in a middle of the courtyard, much to the waiter8217;s surprise.
He8217;s got Desh coming up next, with Mamta Kulkarni who, like Puru, plays a cop in the film, Katle Am, where he gets to star opposite Tara Deshpande 8220;I8217;m really looking forward to that,8221; he says and Inth Ka Jawab Pathar. And there are some lessons learnt from the Bal Brahamachari debacle. 8220;I have realised that a big banner doesn8217;t mean that things will be professionally managed. Prakash Mehra8217;s productions, I realised, are a house of confusions.8221; The other thing he has learnt is the importance of 8220;patience8221;. Things will come in their own time. Every dog has his day. That kind of thing. 8220;I have a lot to learn and a long way to go, though I haven8217;t a clue who will teach me,8221; says Puru, not without a touch of the humility that comes with a fair amount of struggle.
The struggle hasn8217;t cost him his love for 8220;Hindi films8221; 8220;I detest the term Bollywood8217; and filmi8217;. They reek with pre-conceived notions,8221; he insists, or his passion for acting. 8220;It is a very noble profession, provided you are fortunate enough to be happy in it,8221; he says. There is only one regret: 8220;I can8217;t go and watch myself on screen as part of an objective audience,8221; he says philosophically, his eyes on the setting sun.
8220;That would have been nice, wouldn8217;t it?8221;
Sure, but that is a small price to pay on the altar of stardom.