logo
#

Latest news with #DoAnjaane

'Jaya Bachchan once invited Rekha for lunch, confronted her about Amitabh Bachchan,' said writer Hanif Zaveri: 'Things changed after his Coolie accident'
'Jaya Bachchan once invited Rekha for lunch, confronted her about Amitabh Bachchan,' said writer Hanif Zaveri: 'Things changed after his Coolie accident'

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

'Jaya Bachchan once invited Rekha for lunch, confronted her about Amitabh Bachchan,' said writer Hanif Zaveri: 'Things changed after his Coolie accident'

There have been several rumours about and ever since they worked together in the movies. While Bachchan has always denied these rumours, Rekha has often confessed about her love for him. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now When asked on Simi Garewal's show if she ever fell in love with him, Rekha had said it's a dumb question. She added that she doesn't know of anyone who has never fallen, deeply, completely and hopelessly in love with him. While one can never comment on their equation, a while ago in an interview, writer and film expert Hanif Zaveri had spoken about it. He had said on the podcast, 'Meri Saheli' a while ago about Bachchan and Rekha's bonding which developed during 'Do Anjaane'. He said, "Woh log bahut kareeb aa gaye aur pata nahin kaise ek doosre ke pyaar mein pad gaye. Lekin yeh 100% tha ki dono ek doosre ko chahne lage the (They grew very close, and somehow, they fell in love with each other. But one thing was certain — they had truly started to care for one another).' Zaveri said that things changed drastically after Bachchan's nearly fatal accident on the sets of 'Coolie'. He almost got a second life after that. Haif said, "After Amitabh Bachchan's accident on the set of Coolie, played a very important role, staying by his side at the hospital 24/7, taking care of him, meeting with the doctors… When Amitabh saw all this, certain things naturally began to shift, and he started drifting away from Rekha. Unka jhukaav apni patni ke prati zyada hog gaya,' he said in Hindi. In this interview, he also spoke about the time when Jaya Bachchan took the bold step of confronting Rekha. He said, "It is said that Jaya Bachchan once invited Rekha over for lunch at her home. Aisa sab kehte the, mujhe nahi pataa usmein kitni sacchai hai. Uss waqt Amitabh Bachchan ghar mein the nahi. Unko achhe se khana-wana khilaya gaya, wahaan ki bahut saari gupshup hui. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Aur gupshup karne ke baad, jab last mein jab jaane ka time aaya toh Jaya Bachchan ne Rekha se kaha: 'Dekho, Amitabh mera tha, mera hai, aur mera hi rahega'. Toh uske baad bhi shayad Rekha ne apne kadam peeche kar liye. (At the time, Amitabh Bachchan wasn't at home. Rekha was served a lovely meal, and the two engaged in a long, friendly chat. But as Rekha was about to leave, Jaya reportedly said to her: 'Look, Amitabh was mine, is mine, and will always be mine.').' He added, "Rekha ne unse door hone ki koshish ki bohot. Unhone phir Mukesh Agarwal se shadi bhi karli. Toh unhone apne dhang se puri koshish ki par kahin na kahin ek soft corner aaj bhi hai aur shayad pyaar usi ko kehte hai." Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan and Rekha had shared screen space in 'Silsila', which released in 1981.

‘Amitabh mera tha, mera hai, aur mera hi rahega': When Jaya Bachchan reportedly confronted Rekha over their relationship; how emotional ownership complicates love
‘Amitabh mera tha, mera hai, aur mera hi rahega': When Jaya Bachchan reportedly confronted Rekha over their relationship; how emotional ownership complicates love

Indian Express

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

‘Amitabh mera tha, mera hai, aur mera hi rahega': When Jaya Bachchan reportedly confronted Rekha over their relationship; how emotional ownership complicates love

In emotionally complex relationships, especially when a third person becomes involved, it is difficult to find the right way to set boundaries. Writer and film expert Hanif Zaveri recently revisited the widely speculated dynamic between Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, and Rekha in an episode of the Meri Saheli podcast. Zaveri said that the bond between Amitabh and Rekha began during the shooting of their film Do Anjaane. He said, 'Woh log bahut kareeb aa gaye aur pata nahin kaise ek doosre ke pyaar mein pad gaye. Lekin yeh 100% tha ki dono ek doosre ko chahne lage the (They grew very close, and somehow, they fell in love with each other. But one thing was certain — they had truly started to care for one another).' He also claimed that the course of their relationship shifted dramatically after Amitabh's near-fatal injury on the set of Coolie. 'After Amitabh Bachchan's accident on the set of Coolie, Jaya Bachchan played a very important role, staying by his side at the hospital 24/7, taking care of him, meeting with the doctors… When Amitabh saw all this, certain things naturally began to shift, and he started drifting away from Rekha,' he recalled, speaking in Hindi. Zaveri recalled Jaya's bold step of confronting Rekha. 'It is said that Jaya Bachchan once invited Rekha over for lunch at her home. Uss waqt Amitabh Bachchan ghar mein the nahi. Unko achhe se khana-wana khilaya gaya, wahaan ki bahut saari gupshup hui. Aur gupshup karne ke baad, jab last mein jab jaane ka time aaya toh Jaya Bachchan ne Rekha se kaha: 'Dekho, Amitabh mera tha, mera hai, aur mera hi rahega' (At the time, Amitabh Bachchan wasn't at home. Rekha was served a lovely meal, and the two engaged in a long, friendly chat. But as Rekha was about to leave, Jaya reportedly said to her: 'Look, Amitabh was mine, is mine, and will always be mine.').' Counselling psychologist Athul Raj tells 'In love triangles, the emotional urge to confront the third person is often strong. It comes from fear, betrayal, and a deep need to reclaim a sense of emotional control. But more often than not, what needs to be confronted is not just the third person — it's the emotional rupture between the original two people in the relationship.' If someone does decide to speak to the third person, Raj explains, it's essential that it's not done from a place of desperation or emotional collapse. 'Anger is valid. Hurt is valid. But no conversation should happen to control the other person's presence. It needs to come from clarity — not chaos.' Jaya Bachchan told Rekha to back off at the end of their meeting. Raj, reflecting on the same, says, 'Many of us are taught to equate love with permanence. In Indian families, especially, ideas like 'ek baar mera hai toh hamesha mera hai (once mine, always mine)' are common. But relationships are not objects to own. Emotional ownership — this belief that someone should always remain yours — can come from unprocessed grief, insecurity, or past abandonment. It often means that the person is holding on to the idea of the relationship more than its actual, present truth.'

'Amitabh Will Always Be Mine': Jaya Bachchan fought Rekha for her husband, asked Rekha to forget...
'Amitabh Will Always Be Mine': Jaya Bachchan fought Rekha for her husband, asked Rekha to forget...

India.com

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • India.com

'Amitabh Will Always Be Mine': Jaya Bachchan fought Rekha for her husband, asked Rekha to forget...

Affairs, weddings, and divorces are common in Bollywood. One of the most infamous rumoured affairs was that of Rekha and Amitabh Bachchan. Though the affair was never confirmed, a lot of speculations were made. Both Amitabh and Rekha have worked in several movies. However, do you know that there was a time when, despite knowing the speculation about an affair between Amitabh and Rekha, Jaya Bachchan called Rekha for lunch and opened her heart in front of her? Author Hanif Zaveri once revealed how Rekha came into Amitabh Bachchan's life. Though Amitabh tied the knot with Jaya, the speculations of Rekha and Amitabh growing close became stronger. Their chemistry in their films, especially in Silsila, added fuel to the fire, leading many to believe that it was a reflection of their real-life love triangle. During his conversation, Zaveri said that Amitabh and Rekha's relationship deepened during the shooting of Do Anjaane. He recalled and said, 'This affection, this bonding, was formed during the shooting of the film Do Anjaane. They came very close, and I don't know how they fell in love with each other. But it was 100% certain that both of them started loving each other.' Upon seeing the growing closeness, Jaya Bachchan planned to invite Rekha. After a warm lunch, when it was time to leave, Jaya, with her cutting words, said, 'Amitabh was, is, and will always be mine.' However, a turning point came in Amitabh's life when he featured in Coolie and met with a fatal accident. It was Jaya Bachchan who had put her heart and soul into the recovery of Big B. Upon seeing this, Amitabh started to distance himself from Rekha.

The Making Of Silsila: How Yash Chopra Managed Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan And Rekha On One Set
The Making Of Silsila: How Yash Chopra Managed Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan And Rekha On One Set

NDTV

time07-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • NDTV

The Making Of Silsila: How Yash Chopra Managed Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan And Rekha On One Set

"I was always on tenterhooks and scared [during the making of 'Silsila' because it was real life coming into reel life. Jaya is his wife, and Rekha is his girlfriend; the same story is going on. Anything could have happened because they are working together." - Yash Chopra As actress Rekha's biographer, I must confess that Silsila never stops fascinating me. Why? Because it did what no tabloid or whisper ever could: it gave cinematic form to an association that lived only in the public's imagination. Think about it, without Silsila, there would be no boldly filmed, dripping in double meanings-Rang Barse, no poetic confession of love by Amitabh-Rekha in Yeh Kahan Aa Gaye Hum, and definitely no ice-cold face-off between Jaya and Rekha where the wife coolly tells the lover, "I will win." So meta! Isn't that wild? It's been over four decades, and Silsila still holds its place as a pop culture legend that dared to blur the line between reel and real. What was really unfolding behind the scenes of one of the most audacious casting coups in Hindi cinema history? Advertisement - Scroll to continue In the early '70s, Rekha faced harsh body shaming-mocked for her skin tone and broken Hindi. But she fought back, reinventing herself through sheer hard work, becoming a skilled actor and fitness icon. On Simi Garewal's talk show, she credited her transformation to Amitabh Bachchan, whose intense professionalism during Do Anjaane (1976) deeply inspired her. Ever since the making of Do Anjaane in the mid-'70s, whispers of Amitabh and Rekha's off-screen equation began lighting up film magazines, and nearly fifty years later, the legend still refuses to fade. In the early 1980s, Rekha was at her peak as a leading actress. She had arrived as a respected actress and a box-office sensation who had A-list producers queuing up to sign her. Rekha was now constantly in the news for her beautiful cover shots, her fitness routine, and her elusive lover. While Amitabh Bachchan had excommunicated the media from his life, it was Rekha who dedicatedly kept him alive in gossip columns and industry news. In 1980, two of Amitabh's big films, Ram Balram (1980) and Do Aur Do Paanch (1980), turned out to be box office debacles. He then pinned his hopes on Dostana (1980), which, to his despair, didn't bring the relief he was looking for. The media had begun prophesying the doom of the star, whom they believed had lost that special touch that made his films invincible at the box office. Celebrated film director-producer, the late Yash Chopra's last film, the ambitious multi-starrer, Kaala Patthar (1979), hadn't performed as well as he had expected. He wanted a blockbuster as his next film. This ambition gave birth to the idea of Silsila. Amitabh immediately agreed to do the film, which was based on a love triangle. But Yash Chopra had bigger plans for Silsila. He suggested that Rekha be cast to play the role of the girlfriend. The film media reported that despite his promise to Jaya that he would never work with Rekha again, Amitabh agreed! An announcement appeared in trade papers, and the film instantly became the talk of the town. People were absolutely shocked. But in a dramatic twist, a few months later, Rekha quietly bowed out and returned the signing amount, leaving everyone guessing. Yash Chopra now had a hero and an ambitious film, but nothing else. Reluctantly, Yash Chopra again began the hunt for female leads. At first, Padmini Kolhapure was signed to play the character of the "other woman", and Poonam Dhillon's name was being mulled over for the role of the wife. But this casting did not please Yash; it wasn't what he had imagined for the film. Thereafter, he signed Parveen Babi as Rekha's replacement and Smita Patil as the betrayed wife. The cast in place, the first shoot of the film was scheduled in Kashmir. Despite the film being on course, Yash Chopra's heart was ill at ease. This was not the blockbuster cast he had hoped for. There was no selling point, nothing that would make the audience sit up and take notice. Yash wanted to grab headlines, but the Amitabh Bachchan-Parveen Babi-Smita Patil ensemble just did not have the edge that would send gossip columns into a tizzy. What Yash truly wanted seemed an impossible ask. In a memorable TV interview of Yash Chopra, his last before he died, with Shah Rukh Khan, the latter remarked: "It was one of the most interesting, one of the biggest, one of the most challenging casts in a film ever done in the history of Indian cinema." How did it come about? While Amitabh was shooting for Tinu Anand's Kaaliya (1981) in Srinagar, Yash Chopra flew down to meet him. On the night of 21 October 1980, they met over dinner. Yash shared in his interview to Shah Rukh Khan, "After everyone [had] gone out of the room, he [Amitabh Bachchan] comes to me [and asks], 'Are you sure with the casting of the film? Are you happy?' I said I am not happy. Bachchan asked, 'You tell me honestly ki aapko kya lagta hai iski ideal casting kya hai (Tell me honestly what you feel the ideal casting for this film is)'." This gave Yash the opening he was hoping for. Yash said he wanted Rekha for the role of the other woman and Jaya to play the wife. Apparently, Yash threw in some bait and promised Amitabh a memorable film if he got the leading ladies of his life to play the leading ladies in this story. This was the first time in Indian cinema that the central plot revolved around an extramarital relationship. It deserved a cast that was capable of creating ripples at the box office. Amitabh mulled over the suggestion for five minutes. He then suggested they go back to Bombay. Instead of asking her himself, Amitabh said Yash should persuade his wife, Jaya, to come on board. The next day, 22 October, both left for Bombay; there was a tense silence throughout the flight. Things were not going to be easy. Reminiscing about the chaos created by the casting hassles, the script writer of the film, Sagar Sarhadi, had told me during the research of my book Rekha The Untold Story, "Jaya had extracted the promise from Amitabh that he would never work with Rekha. This was confirmed. Industry knew it. People knew it. This was a strange dharam sankat (moral dilemma)." Jaya and Rekha both had to be brought onboard, despite the former being dead set against the idea of her husband working with the latter. How, then, was Jaya persuaded to work in the same film with the other two? How did Silsila become Jaya's much-awaited comeback? And how was Rekha lured back into the film? Jaya, expectedly, was extremely reluctant to star in this film. In fact, it took much coaxing and cajoling to get her around to even listen to the story. All through the narration, Jaya sat unmoved, looking neither interested nor impressed. Till the climax. It is said that it was the last scene that did the trick and moved Jaya to accept the role. 109 The climax of Silsila was a banal nuptial reunion: an unconscious Jaya lay on a hospital bed, doctors and nurses frantically trying to revive her. Just then, Amitabh entered and asked them to leave the room, saying, "I know what the matter is, the remedy, leave us." When alone, he places his palm lovingly on her forehead and gently takes her hand in his. He murmurs affectionately, 'Shobha, I have come back to you, forever.' At this, Jaya slowly opens her eyes and weakly says, 'I knew you would come back to me. It is a moment that signified the victory of vishwaas over pyaar. One is tempted to speculate about the resonance these words and sentiments would have had for Jaya. Perhaps this role, through which Jaya could both make a strong moral statement and help Amitabh's flailing career, seemed a good enough reason to re-enter films. Popular film magazine Super did a cover story titled "Jaya is Back!" It said, "Yash, whose dilemma of casting was fast exceeding human endurances, must've slept well for the first night in months on October 23rd, the happy day when Jaya agreed to his desperate, last measure request. Yash confessed, 'I had a tough time getting her into the film.'" Sagar Sarhadi told me, "It was decided... to explain everything to Jaya, because otherwise, this film couldn't be made. The compromise was that Jayaji was asked to do Smita Patil's role, and her permission was sought before signing Rekha." Rekha herself did not hesitate to block a few months of her shooting schedule for Silsila. An unspoken tension and competition had always existed between Jaya and Rekha. Jaya had always been one up as far as acting was concerned. With Rekha, the reigning actress in the industry, now being pitched against her, a pronounced battle was expected to follow. In characteristic scandalous fashion, Rekha later revealed in a Movie magazine (May 1987) interview, "I have learnt to use all the insults and barbs thrown at me to my advantage... Until you're provoked, you don't realise your real value. The biggest contribution of this person in my life, for which I will remain eternally indebted to her, is that she taught me that no matter what happens, you should never give up your career. She is a living example of how you suffer if you do... Watching her, I've learnt not to be a hypocrite. That is why I am not a so-called martyr." It was clear to everyone whom Rekha was referring to. Thus, the greatest Bollywood "casting coup" was achieved. Amitabh, Jaya and Rekha were to essay the lead roles for Silsila. It caused quite a stir in the industry -- no surprises there. While some were praising Yash Chopra for making the impossible happen, others used the opportunity to target Amitabh. His rival and former superstar Rajesh Khanna referred to the happening as "a height of desperation". Regardless of the gossip, the cast and team of Silsila left for Kashmir. "As artists, we were acting out a story written for us; the rest existed in the imagination of the press and those who believe whatever's written in the magazines."-Jaya Bachchan The shooting of Silsila began in Kashmir. It was an extremely private affair. No media were invited; no friends were permitted. Yash Chopra had to be very careful. He is said to have had to keep the two women as far away from each other as possible to avoid any clashes. Every scene had to be manoeuvred with precision. Later, he said in a BBC Asia interview (August 2010), "I was always on tenterhooks and scared because it was real life coming into reel life. Jaya is his wife, and Rekha is his girlfriend; the same story is going on. Anything could have happened because they are working together." Coming from someone of Yash Chopra's stature, this statement can't be taken lightly. He said, clearly and directly, that the Rekha-Amitabh relationship existed not only in gossip columns but in reality, too. Yash talked about it again in his famous interview with Shah Rukh Khan. He told Shah Rukh, "Before I started [shooting] the film, maine dono ko alag alag bola -- ikattha milna toh mushkil hi tha for obvious reasons -- ki yaar dekho tum meri dost ho, tum meri picture mei kaam kar rahe ho dosti mei. Yaar mere set pe koi gadbadi mat karna yaar. Dono ne mujhe surety dilai bilkul problem nahi hogi. (Before I started shooting the film, I told them both separately - it was difficult to meet them together for obvious reasons - that you are my friend, you are acting in my film out of friendship. Please don't do anything controversial on my set. Each assured me that there would be no problems.) And they didn't give me trouble." According to script writer Sagar Sarhadi, Rekha, as a rule, tried to avoid Jaya by timing her exits with Jaya's entries. However, at times, all three, Amitabh, Jaya and Rekha, were forced to come together to shoot. When this happened, they would sit separately, like strangers, without communicating and wear blank expressions. One wouldn't believe this upon watching the film; each actor's performance shines brilliantly. This speaks volumes about the talent of the cast. Among the many intense scenes, there was one in which Rekha and Jaya came face to face, and a dramatic verbal exchange took place between them. This scene was probably scripted to cash in on the well-known tension between the actresses. The tussle between matrimony and extra-marital love, and between faith and passion, forms the core of this scene. Jaya, the quintessential wife wearing red, asked Rekha, in pristine white, to leave her husband, for she knew that her faith in their marriage would triumph over all else. At this, Rekha quipped, "Aap apne vishwaas ke saath rahiye, mujhe mere pyaar ke saath rehne dijiye (You hold on to your faith, let me hold on to my love)." It should be unsurprising that the friction depicted in this scene rubbed off on interactions during and after filming. The silence maintained by the man in the middle of the conflict was steadfast and absolute, but the women, in ways subtle and obvious, spoken and unspoken, conveyed their distaste for each other. The stories surrounding Silsila are of as much, if not more, interest as the plot of the film itself. The embargo on the press couldn't stop gossip from flooding magazine pages. The scandal-hungry film media of the time had a field day with Silsila. While countless rumours buzzed through Bollywood corridors, one story about the making of the film actually got published. The story, 'Inside the Making of Silsila' (Cine Blitz, August 1981), spilt some truly dramatic details. The climax scenes were being shot at Film City. Sanjeev Kumar was caught in a fire, and Rekha was to rush to rescue her on-screen husband. While the final cut did not include this scene, the original shot had Jaya holding Rekha back, pushing her away from the fire, while Amitabh went ahead to rescue Sanjeev Kumar. Just before the first take, Rekha apparently went to the cameraman and told him that she would only do one take for the scene, and no more: "Whether you get the shot okay or not, I won't be bothered. I will be quitting the moment the first take is over." The camera started rolling. Jaya pushed Rekha. But along with Rekha, Jaya also moved out of the frame by mistake. Rekha realised that the shot hadn't gone well, but unconcerned, she left the set. "As the entire unit stood there stunned, Amitabh, who was relaxing in his chair, looked sternly at Jaya and nodded curtly, as if to ask accusingly, 'So you did something?' Understanding this, Jaya, like an innocent child, said in self-defence, 'I didn't do anything. I didn't say anything to her.'" Jaya reportedly stood there with tears in her eyes. The same report also had this anecdote: For a certain sequence, Jaya was required to cry, so she asked for some glycerin. Surprised that an actress of Jaya's calibre should need glycerin, senior unit members reportedly asked her, "Jayaji kya aap ko bhi glycerin ki zaroorat hai? (Jayaji, do you really need glycerin?)" To this she retorted, "Itna ro chuki hoon ki ab aur rone ke liye aansoon hi nahin bache hain (I've cried so much already that I have no tears left)." Another interesting incident happened during the dubbing of the film. Rekha went to Raj Kamal Studio but before she started dubbing, she asked to be shown the songs from the film. After seeing her songs, she asked, "Baki ke gaane kahan hain? (What about the other songs?)" The unit members were reluctant to show Rekha Jaya's songs, but she insisted, saying, "Unke gaane toh hum zaroor dekhnege. Uske bina to aaj dubbing ka mood nahin banne wale hai. (I will definitely see her songs. Without that, I won't be able to do the dubbing.)" When she noticed that the unit members were still reluctant, she added, "Arre bhai leke to aao. Agar unka kaam nahi dekhenge to kinka dekhenge? (Get her songs. If not hers, then whose work will I see?)" At this point, they had to bring in the reels of Jaya's songs. As the songs were being screened, Rekha kept passing remarks. Years after Silsila, Rekha said in a Movie (Oct 1994) interview, "How can anybody compare Jayaji and me when it comes to glamour? It is like Mehmood trying to be Dilip Kumar. How can you even think of it?" Silsila was the first major mainstream movie to deal with the subject of extramarital affairs. In a way, it engaged in a dialogue on love, marriage and destiny. Shobha (Jaya) was engaged to Shekhar Malhotra (Shashi Kapoor), a squadron leader with the Indian Air Force. Shekhar's brother, Amit (Amitabh Bachchan), was a playwright based in Delhi, whose heart was set on the attractive Chandni (Rekha). All was well in the lives of the couple till Shekhar died in air combat, leaving a pregnant Shobha behind. Amit stepped in as her saviour and married Shobha. Chandni was laconically informed about the turn of events in a letter, and heartbroken, she went on to marry Sanjeev Kumar. Clearly, the two married couples in the film were not united by love, but by circumstances and responsibilities. Chandni and Amit were ill at ease in their respective marriages, and when fate brought them face to face some time later, they realised that they still loved each other and started having an affair. However, the culmination of an extra-marital affair in marriage would probably not have found the approval of audiences in India. In a Bollywood film dealing with secret liaisons and adultery, there is little hope for love to triumph. A string of events led to a rather banal reconciliation between Amit and Shobha. Matrimony was granted supremacy over love. Traditions, morals and virtues were upheld. The movie ended up becoming a silsila (affair) of compromises, just like the lead actors' real lives were rumoured to be. Silsila was released on 29 July 1981. The opening was stupendous, but the momentum couldn't be sustained, and it flopped, leaving everyone surprised. Many say the film was ahead of its time, that the audience was unripe for such a story. But ironically, according to Yash Chopra, the fault was in the selection of the cast. "The casting went wrong. People expected the real-life story on screen. There were too many expectations," he said after the film flopped. Rumours of affairs and scandals usually start as whispers in gossip columns, and then build into a loud media buzz before they die away, forgotten. The Amitabh-Rekha association would also have had the same fate were it not for Silsila. The film gave people visuals of an affair they had been imagining and talking about; it embedded the story in public memory. To date, most media reports and features on the fabled affair are accompanied by visuals picked out from the film. Silsila forever chiselled the Amitabh-Rekha-Jaya triangle into the public conscience. Share

Rekha never remarried after her first marriage due to..., 'I am someone...'
Rekha never remarried after her first marriage due to..., 'I am someone...'

India.com

time25-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • India.com

Rekha never remarried after her first marriage due to..., 'I am someone...'

Rekha is one of the most celebrated stars in Bollywood. She is hailed as the queen of elegance, class, and everything in between. While Rekha is admired on screen for her performances in movies like Do Anjaane, Muqaddar Ka Sikandar, Silsila, Khoobsurat, and more, she has always maintained a strong layer of mystery when it comes to her personal life. Though her well-wishers and admirers know that she has an intense feeling for Amitabh Bachchan, what many don't know is that after Amitabh's wedding with Jaya, Rekha tried to settle down as well. She married Mukesh Aggarwal, a businessman from Delhi. Sadly, fate never had a companion for Rekha. Her wedding was short-lived when, in less than a year, Mukesh passed away, leaving Rekha heartbroken. Since then, the actress chose not to marry and spent half of her life by herself. But, do you know why? If not, then keep scrolling. In a past interview which has now surfaced online, Rekha revealed the real reason for not remarrying. In that interview, the actress spoke about motherhood, something she has rarely ever talked about before. When the veteran actress was asked whether she feels the absence of kids in her life, she replied, 'I don't feel the longing anymore.' Rekha explained that even if she found the perfect man to have children with, it wouldn't align with her values or life aspirations. She said, 'Even if I were to find the perfect man to raise children with, it wouldn't be fair to my values. I'm not someone who can dedicate myself solely to one person. If I had a child, my focus would shift entirely toward them, and I wouldn't be able to give time or energy to anything else.' Rekha added, 'And what about all the children and people across the world who I feel spiritually connected to? If I possess the privilege of being Rekha, then it's my duty to be available to anyone who reaches out to me.' Though Rekha chose not to remarry, she made it clear that even if she were to be in a relationship, she would give her 100 per cent to it. Describing the way she would want to care for her partner, Rekha said, 'I'm someone who gives everything in a relationship,' she revealed. 'I'd make his bed, choose his clothes, oversee his meals, and even pack his lunch and deliver it myself. That's how focused I am.' Concluding her opinions, Rekha said that her views might sound unrealistic, but she is honest with her feelings.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store