Javed
Akhtar, who has to his credit four National Awards for best lyrics
besides accolades for film scripts and poems, once considered running
away to a small city and living with a pseudonym because he felt he
could not write anymore.
Javed Akhtar
The constant pressure of delivering lyrics and scripts within the
deadline and at a time when he was stuck with a "writer's block" made
the veteran wordsmith feel like escaping to Sangli district in
Maharashtra, a place he never visited.
"It has so often happened with me that whenever I would write a
script, a producer would come and give me a heavy signing amount. And
then when I sat to write I felt I could not even write a single page,"
Akhtar said.
The filmwriter and poet was here recently to release the book "In
Other Words", a translation of his own poetic works in English by Ali
Hussain Mir.
During that time there was no television, so nobody recognised me by
face and all they identified with was my name. I used to fantasize when I
was unable to write, that there was only one way out and that is to run
away to some small town and start living there under some other name
and start doing something else," he said.
"... And I don't know why every time I used to think of escaping, I
thought of going to Sangli, a city that I have never been to. And maybe
another reason was that I never came across anybody from Sangli so I
thought I can hide there, it will be a safe place," quipped Akhtar.
Famous now for umpteen lyrics in films Akthar had landed in Mumbai in
early 60s after a rebelling with father Jan Nisar Akhtar, an eminent
poet of Urdu literary world.
Interacting with the audience on the question of how to tackle
writer's block , he said, "there is not hard and fast rule for the
process of creativity. Within one person there is no permanence reason
for logical initiative that makes a person write. As far as writer's
block, everyone faces that."
"But, if you are a professional writer, you can't only wait for
inspiration, you just have to write. You have to give it on a particular
date. When writing script or lyrics for a film, you can't say that I am
not getting inspired ...it's not possible, so you better get
inspired!," he said.
The noted lyricist poet had in the year 2013 been conferred with
Sahitya Akademi Award in Urdu, for his poetry collection "Lava."
"Often, people ask me that the songs you write, what is your source
of inspiration for it. And I say - deadline! I saw a deadline coming! It
doesn't remain a choice anymore and you have to get all your faculties
together to write," Akhtar, who won eight Filmfare best lyrics awards,
said.
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