November 10, 1997  
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Special Appearance

Govinda with Ramesh"I want to meet Govinda," said the ad in The Bombay Times. Loads of his fans do, you know. Just that this one happened to be eight-year-old Ramesh Dhdiban Pokale, a blood-cancer patient and a farmer's son. The nice part comes now. The star's daughter spotted the ad -- placed by the Make A Wish (MAW) Foundation of India -- and insisted that daddy dearest play the good guy. Who would dare defy a daughter? Govinda dropped by soon after and spent an hour chatting with Ramesh in Marathi. "When you're well," he promised, "I'll take you to my studio and we can dance together." Says Jayanthi Shekhar, an maw volunteer: "The visit made a world of difference. Ramesh is now a happier child." One complaint: our Hero No. 1 forgot his Promise No. 1, that he would help the boy financially "in the next 24 hours". "He needs a bone-marrow transplant," says Shekhar. Well, if this star is no longer smiling on him, surely someone will.

One Man and a Boat

Dominique LapierreHe's moved beyond the city and into the river. Dominique Lapierre -- author of The City of Joy , co-author of Freedom at Midnight, and architect of many a mission on Calcutta's streets -- is back to the rescue, this time in the Ganges delta. A boat-dispensary he launches this month will come to the aid of the region's impoverished citizens, plagued as they are, says Lapierre, by "tuberculosis, man-eating tigers and worse". The $120,000 (Rs 43.2 lakh) project was the result of royalties from The City ..., donations and Dominiqueda's determination. At 66, how does he manage? "India gives me my vitamins," he replies. The favour is well-returned.

Duet with Dad

Amit Kumar"Zindagi ke safar mein guzar jate hain jo moqam/ Woh phir nahi aate ... (The moments in life that pass you by will never return ...)" Actually, sometimes they do. Especially if you're actor-singer Kishore Kumar, and your son Amit Kumar is re-enacting your life. In Zindagi ka Safar, a serial to be shown on don't-know-yet-which-channel, Junior plays the whimsical genius that was his late pater. Says director Chandra Barot (best known for the film Don): "Fans will get to see all sides of Kishore Kumar -- a good father, a wonderful human being." And they'll have his son's word for it. Adds Barot: "Amit is paying a tribute to his father." For a young man whose singing career has not quite taken off, some blessings from daddy wouldn't hurt.

Book 'Er, He Says

E K NayanarYou thought she won the Booker prize for some great writing. Nope, says E.K. Nayanar, she won it for spewing "anti-communist venom". Denouncing Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things in the party paper, Deshabhimani, Kerala's communist CM dismisses the Booker as a prize instituted by "an mnc selling foodstuff including fishmeal". But hadn't he congratulated Roy when she won? "I did it before reading the book and because she is a Malayali, and the daughter of an illustrious woman. Last week I read it and was stunned. She has not even spared her mother!" O brother! this girl's in trouble (and never mind her agent, David Godwin's remark that "the book speaks for itself"). Says senior CPI(M) ideologue, P. Govinda Pillai: "The book is a squint-eyed view of Kerala reality which suits the prejudices of the Orientalist West." Ouch!

 

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