Question Kapur on Rahman
 By Behindwoods News Bureau.
  October 31, 2007
   Hi

I have been following Behindwoods' coverage on Elizabeth: the Golden Age
especially Shekhar Kapur's direction and the music by A.R.Rahman along with
Craig Armstrong. [image: Shekhar Kapur]

  Last evening during the special screening of this movie at the Irish Film
Institute in Dublin I had the privilege of meeting director Shekhar Kapur.
The movie is scheduled to release in UK and Ireland on November 2nd. But
this was an exclusive premiere show followed by a Q&A session with the
director. I luckily managed to get a ticket at the last minute for this
event which was a complete sell-out.

The audiences were allowed to interact with him after the screening was
over. Most of the questions raised were regarding the script and the cast. I
was also one among the lucky ones to get an opportunity to question Mr.Kapur
.

I asked him to share the experiences he had with A.R.Rahman while working on
the music score for this movie. He introduced Rahman to the Irish audience
hailing him as the Mozart of Madras and told the audience that he picked
Rahman for his capability to produce melody easily just as Mozart did. There
was also a mention about Rahman's
musical roots and his successful collaboration with Scottish composer Craig
Armstrong in this movie. I am still wondering why I had to ask this question
as I am a die hard fan of Ilayaraaja and always argue with people who praise
ARR, a lot. But still the background music was world class.

Another person asked Mr.Kapur how difficult it was for him to migrate from
Bollywood to Hollywood and how both these film industries differ with each
other? The director did agree that there was too much politics involved in
his entry to Hollywood. But he quickly hinted that as a director when he
says sound, action it is the same story in Hollywood as well. He also made
an interesting remark that working in Bollywood is chaotic and it is more
organized in Hollywood. He went one step further by adding that working in
Hollywood is like shopping at a supermarket or a departmental store and
working in Bollywood is like shopping at a bazaar.

The event finished after an hour long interaction with the audience. I tried
my luck once again, this time asking the organizers of the event if they
would allow me to have a snap with Mr.Kapur. What a surprise. They agreed
and I got what I wanted.

Thanks and Regards

Mahesh Sundaresan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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