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HISTORICAL CHESS
Chesstories
Aishwarya
Rai and Chess - Six Degrees of Separation
Contribute to your favorite charity through Kevin Bacon's Sixdegrees.org
by Jan
Newton
January 27, 2007
What's
that adage about coincidence - "there is no such thing"...
A few weeks ago my Goddesschess cohort and fellow goddess, Georgia and
I were email-chatting about movies and I recommended "Bride and Prejudice"
to her as an hilarious romp with great dance scenes and music, a fun,
feel-good interpretation of the Jane Austen classic "Pride and Prejudice." (It
sure made me get out of my chair and shake my booty).
Some
days later Georgia rented the video and she and Michelle (daughter goddess)
loved the movie. Georgia decided to buy it for me as a gift (thank
you, Isis). The beautiful Indian actress (1994 Miss World), Aishwarya
Rai, starred in the film as Lalita Bakshi, Elizabeth Bennet's alter-ego.
(Photo of Rai from BizHat.com)
Rai,
a superstar in her native India, has appeared in over 40 films since her
debut in a 1997 Bollywood film "Iruvar." She is perhaps
best known to western audiences for her role in "Bride and Prejudice,"
which was her first English-language film. Release of the film in the
United States led to immense publicity for Rai, including appearances
on popular programs such as "60 Minutes", "David Letterman"
and "Oprah Winfrey" and presented her to a whole new segment
of audience - the English-only speaking world.
Rai
has many critics - they criticize her acting skills; they criticize her
film choices; they criticize her personal life. But now that Rai has broken
the east/west barrier, she has no intention of quitting. Rai has
signed on to star with Colin Firth (who portrayed Mr. Darcy, Elizabeth
Benet's protagonist and love interest in A&E's 1995 production of
"Pride and Prejudice," the best Darcy ever and arguably the
best production ever of "Pride and Prejudice") and Ben Kingsley
in 2007's historical epic "The Last Legion," as well as French
director Coline Serreau's remake of her 2001 film " Chaos,"
which will cast Rai alongside Meryl Streep. Rai has not abandoned
the cinema of her heritage, however, and has signed on for 2007 Bollywood
movies including the "The Heart of India" and the historical
romance "Jodha-Akbar" -- in which she will play the title role
of Mughal king Emperor Akbar's Hindu wife and queen.
Around
the same time Georgia rented the "Bride and Prejudice" video,
we both saw an article about Rai at Yahoo.com
news:
| Top
Bollywood Stars Get Engaged
By
Krittivas Mukherjee Mon
Jan 15, 7:52 AM ET
MUMBAI (Reuters) -
Two of India's biggest cinema stars, Abhishek Bachchan and former
Miss World Aishwarya Rai, are finally engaged after months of
feverish speculation about their relationship, their families
said on Monday.
The hush-hush romance
of Rai and Bachchan, the son of legendary actor, Amitabh Bachchan,
had transfixed the Mumbai-based Hindi film industry, despite
denials by the couple of sharing anything more than a healthy
friendship.
On Sunday evening
-- one of the most auspicious days in the Hindu calendar --
Bachchan and Rai were engaged in a private ceremony in which
Abhishek reportedly placed a diamond ring on his girlfriend's
finger.
"No date for
marriage has been fixed yet," the senior Bachchan told
reporters, adding that his son had proposed to Rai in New York
last week after the world premiere of their latest film entitled
"Guru." The senior Bachchan said the two families
will sit down and decide on the marriage date.
"Some members
of the two families are not in town now. Let them come back,"
the father told Sahara television. "Every son's parents
desire a daughter-in-law. We too will have a daughter-in-law
and we are very happy."
TV channels and
newspapers, however, said the marriage could take place as early
as next month, with some suggesting February 19 or March 7 as
possible dates. The Bachchan family has booked a top luxury
hotel for these days, the reports said.
IN THE STARS
As news of the
engagement spread, large crowds sang and danced through the
night outside the Bachchan family home. Several Bollywood stars,
top industrialists and politicians also visited the couple into
the early hours of Monday to offer congratulations.
Rai and Bachchan
left Mumbai shortly afterwards for a film shoot in the western
state of Rajasthan. Members of the Bachchan family also left
for the central Indian city of Ujjain to offer prayers at a
revered temple, Indian television reports said.
Rai, 33, and Bachchan,
30, have worked together on at least five films, and both have
been in the past romantically linked to other Bollywood stars.
Bachchan was even engaged to Bollywood star Karisma Kapoor in
2002, but the marriage was called off.
Speculation of
a romance gained ground after their families visited several
temples over the past few months to pray for the two lovers
whose stars were reportedly not in harmony, a key ingredient
to any engagement in astrology-mad India.
As soon as the
engagement was made official, television channels started airing
positive predictions.
"This year
is going to be very good and productive for him in which new
developments are seen," astrologer Arun Sharma told NDTV
channel. "Even for Aishwarya her stars are strong. But
she will have to look after her dietary habits."
Sources close to
the Bachchan family said they were keen to see the marriage
take place soon as Abhishek's octogenarian grandmother was not
in good health.
Rai, who has acted
in over 40 films, was crowned Miss World in 1994. Bachchan junior
too has acted in about 40 films.
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Rai,
who has been called the most beautiful woman in the world, evokes strong
emotions in people and certainly in India. She has been called a "goddess."
Rai has also been accused of being - well, I'll use the term, a "loose
woman." In December, 2006 a law suit was filed in India by
a lawyer who claims he was offended by a kissing scene in Rais film "Dhoom
2," and this suit may threaten Rai's lucrative career in Indian film.
Yes, that's right - kissing. In India, kissing on the big screen is a
big no-no and filmmakers and actors who step outside well-defined "decency"
laws (enforced by a censor board) run the risk of being fined and worse.
Speculation
and hints of an impending engagement and marriage between Rai and Bachchan
were rife in the Indian press for months before the news was formally
announced. The father of Rai's fiance, Bollywood film producer Amitabh
Bachchan, has worked with Rai on several projects. The upcoming marriage
has no doubt broken the hearts of millions of Rai's devoted male fans
around the world (much like Judit Polgar's marriage a few years ago broke
the heart of countless male chess fans) and has sparked the ire and venom
of at least one woman, Pakistanti film star Meera:
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Rai
will be a disgrace to Bachchans, says Meera
By Amir Mir Correspondent,
published 25/01/2007
Lahore: Actress Meera
has said Indian film star Aishwarya Rai - who is engaged to co-star
Abhishek Bachchan - would prove to be such a stigma to the Bachchan
family that could not be washed away even with the waters of Hindus'
holy river Ganges.
Expressing her "concern
and love" for Indian icon Amitabh Bachchan, his wife Jaya
and for their son Abhishek, Meera said yesterday that it looked
like Aishwarya had played her cards well to get close to the Bachchan
family.
"Let me predict
today that Aishwarya would be such a mark of disgrace to the Bachchan
family that could never be washed away even with the holy waters
of the Ganges."
Wrong decision
Meera went on to
add that the "young, innocent and simple-hearted fellow"
(Abhishek Bachchan) had fallen for the wrong person.
"He has been
trapped and has taken the wrong decision for the rest of his life.
"God knows what's
wrong with the people in Pakistan who think so high of her [Rai]
but in India, that girl has lost all respect for herself."
Meera pointed out
that Rai had earlier been close to film stars Salman Khan and
Viveik Oberoi.
"Isn't it strange
that whosoever co-stars with her in one or two films, falls in
love with the girl?"
Latest performance
Crediting Devdas
and Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam as Rai's best movies, Meera considers
Rai's performance in her latest movies Shabd and Dhoom-2 as poor.
"She has been
unreasonably vulgar in these movies. Although I don't think obscenity,
as a requirement of the movie, is immoral. Yet Ms Rai has been
unduly vulgar. She cannot come up to the mark of the likes of
Shabana Azmi and Smita Patil."
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The
lady protests too much...(1) Meera and co-star (does anyone care
what his name is?) from publicity still for "Nazar",
right, photo from rewaj.com.
"Vulgar" is in the eye of the beholder.
It
would be fascinating to spend more time learning about the ins and outs
of the Indian and Pakistani film industries and the competition and personal
animosities among film superstars in the two countries, but the point
of this article isn't the gossip (had you fooled, didn't I?) It is about chess. And so - back to the article --
Georgia
suggested we write an article about Rai. I was enthusiastic because I
admire Rai; but while Rai's honorific of "goddess" automatically
qualifies her as an honorary member of Goddesschess, I thought we needed
to demonstrate more of a connection between Rai and chess to justify an
article. Somewhere, somehow, I reasoned, there must be a connection
between the goddess Aishwarya Rai and Chess, the Game of the Goddess.
And so, I set out on a journey to discover what I could from the deep,
dark and dirty bowels of the internet. Board games scholars beware what
is reported here has almost ALL been discovered on the internet
and thus is not fit to be seen by your eyes, because it has not come from
books in a public library!!! So, scholars (you know who you are),
STOP READING NOW.
I
would not have believed it possible, but it's true: despite thousands
of pages of information available on the internet about Rai I was not
able to determine in a Rai interview that she actually plays chess!
I looked and looked, and finally gave up. I am left with a thin
thread only - there was some gossip awhile back that implies that Rai knows how to play chess. In an interview in April, 2004
reported at bollyvista.com,
former Rai beau Vivek Oberoi (see Meera's rant, above) answered this question:
| Is
it true that you and Ash were playing chess and making the unit
wait for both of you while shooting for KHGN in Scotland?(2)
It is a white lie. The
day used to start at 3:30 am and end at 11:30 pm when we were
shooting in Scotland. At times we used to work round the
clock for as many as 16 hours. We were at the mercy of
the lights there. Tell me where was the time to play chess
when we had to complete the schedule and come back to Mumbai?
I was pained when we were both dubbed unprofessional in spite
of our having worked for 16 hours every day.
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What
I deduce from this quote is that while the crew and cast were shooting
16-hour days in Scotland there was no time to play chess (there was hardly
time to sleep), but once everyone was back in Mumbai there was plenty
of chessplaying going on.
Hmmm,
not exactly enough information on which to hang a chess-related article.
But, I found a new hook --
The
term "six degrees of separation" was popularized in a play of
the same name by John Guare in 1990 (made into a film in 1993). The concept
is simple but also awe-inspiring - any two people anywhere in the world
can be connected at most by six other people.(3)
Not
sure if anything would result, I nonetheless went ahead and applied the
"six degrees" concept in a slightly different way to see if
I could connect Rai to chess. What follows is a sampling of the
sometimes surprising chess connections I discovered.
Category
I: Bride and Prejudice/Pride and Prejudice and Chess
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The
English Chess Federation website has a page
on the all-female "Pride and Prejudice" chess team, composed
of Maria Yurenok, Claire Summerscale, Sarah de Lisle, Heather Lang,
Rosalind Kieran, Cathy Warwick (October, 2006). I love this
particular connection!
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In
the 1985 BBC production of "Pride and Prejudice" (on VHS)
starring Elizabeth Garvie as Elizabeth Bennet and David Rintoul
as Fitzwilliam Darcy, there is a candle-lit scene that takes place
at the Bennet homestead; it must be after Lydia has gone off to
Brighton, because Mrs. Bennet is lavishing attention on a petulant
Kitty, fitting a lace collar or inset around Kitty's dress, as Jane
and Elizabeth embroider. Mr. Bennet is engrossed in reading
a book and playing a game of chess - against himself. He reads
a paragraph and makes a move; then he reads another paragraph and
moves a piece on the other side.
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2005's
big-screen remake of "Pride and Prejudice" starred Keira
Knightley as Elizabeth Bennet. Knightley (get it - Knightley,
ha ha ha) had her break-out role in 2002's "Bend It Like Beckham",
directed by Gurinder Chadha. Chadha directed Rai in "Bride
and Prejudice" and co-wrote the screenplay for the 2005 film
"The Mistress of Spices" also starring Rai.
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Category
II: Chess Players Who Are Aishwarya Rai Fans
There
are more, probably; here are two:
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Live
chat at Chathurangam's
website held on June 17, 2003 with GM Viswanathan Anand, he said
that Ash is his favorite actress.
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In
an interview
at The Hindu newspaper on November 29, 2000, GM Valery Salov, who
was a commentator at the 2000 Chess Olympiad, comments that Rai
is one of his favorite actresses.
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Category
III: Movie/Chess Connections to Aishwarya Rai
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"Chess"
(2004) is a suspense murder mystery starring Anupam Kher and Mahima
Chaudhry. Kher played Rai's father in "Bride and Prejudice"
and also co-starred with Rai in 2005's "The Mistress of Spices."
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"Umrao
Jaan"
stars both Rai and her fiance, Abhishek Bachchan. Rai plays
the character Umrao, a courtesan and poet who uses the pen name
"Ada". This is one of the verses written by Ada:
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"Life
for her was like the game of chess.
With the kings, the queens and the pawns.
The pawns were many, the queen just one - She!
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In
the upcoming movie "Jodha-Akbar" Rai plays the wife/empress
of Mughal Emperor Akbar (1542-1605). Akbar constructed a large
outdoor chessboard at his capital Fatehpur Sikri, situated 26 miles
west of Agra, and it is said he played chess there with humans as
his chess pieces. |
Category
IV: Rai Fans and Chess
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At
the Accenture
website which actually includes a place where employees can host
their own blogs, Ed Gottsman wrote this on January 12, 2006:
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In April of 2005
(I'm still catching up on my reading), Sony patented a technique
for using ultrasonic waves to stimulate various centers of the
human brain in order to produce extremely high-fidelity sensory
impressions. The idea is apparently to build really, really
immersive environments for games.
So What?
The problem here is one someone once raised regarding Star Trek
TNG's "holodeck." To wit: If I had a fantasy machine
that powerful, I wouldn't spend my time matching wits with a
simulated Sherlock Holmes--I'd spend it playing chess with Aishwarya
Rai.
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We
would love to hear about and publish any "six degrees" connections
between Rai and chess that you discover. Email us.
Footnotes:
(1)
There is an old saying, "people who live in glass houses shouldn't
throw stones." While Meera said that Rai is vulgar and immoral
for her "Dhoom 2" kiss, Meera herself was fined
for kissing in a 2005 Bollywood film "Nazar." The
lady is a hypocrite.
(2)
"Ash" is a nickname for Rai. "KHGN" is shorthand
for the movie "Kyon? Ho Gaya Na?" KHGN was directed by
none other than Amitabh Bachchan, Rai's future father-in-law.
(3)
The Wikipedia entry on "six degrees of separation" is fascinating.
Rai
Biographical Information:
There
are numerous Rai websites. I found a lot of my information here:
Biography
at http://www.asiafinest.com/india/aishwarya-rai.htm
Biography,
New York Times, at http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?
p_id=232903&mod=bio
Conventions:
Mughal
is the spelling I have used in this article, but it is also variously
spelled as Mugal, Moghul, etc.
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(c) The
Goddesschess Partnership. All rights reserved.
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