In the overcrowded café where Mehwish and I meet up, kids flock to
her for selfies; others around us look in our direction to make sure that they
are in the presence of the Mehwish Hayat.
“It’s good to be loved by all,” she says with her megawatt smile.
Although these days one can see her face everywhere — in films, on TV, singing
on a big music show — Mehwish has many secret lives.
Actress, singer, TV-show host and the face of numerous
advertisements, Mehwish Hayat opens up as she gears up for the release of
Punjab Nahi Jaungi, her first female-centric film
“I like to stay mysterious as I like to surprise people,” she
says. The actor-turned-singer believes that a person should live his or her
life fully. “Coke Studio is the ultimate platform for an aspiring singer but it
was certainly not the first time I had sung.” Director Nadeem Baig selected her
to sing the title track of Man Jali and later she was chosen to sing the
opening theme of Nida Yasir’s morning show. “I have always been fond of singing
and was lucky enough to debut under the supervision of talented people such as
Strings and Shiraz Uppal in Coke Studio. Critics were out with their knives but
since I got more positive feedback than negative, I am content with my
performance. I have just completed a US tour where I performed in Houston,
Dallas and New York… that wouldn’t have been possible had I been a failed
experiment.”
Many actors have trended on social media for their acting prowess
but Mehwish became even more famous (and trended on Twitter) during the
Pakistan Super League cricket tournament earlier this year. Be it the falling
of a Lahore Qalandars’ wicket or a Lahori bowler getting one, the pretty face
from Actor In Law (AIL) was all over the stadium’s large screens and TV screens
across Pakistan.
“I had no idea my name was trending on Twitter during Pakistan
Super League,” she says. “Bilal (Ashraf) and I were there in the UAE as brand
ambassadors for the Lahore Qalandars and when our team played, we prayed and
cheered like fans instead of celebrities. Sadly, our team lost most of the
matches but since all the teams were Pakistani, we enjoyed the event even more.
Although I hadn’t been a cricket fan before PSL, I would love to be a part of
it next year as well.”
She expresses her disappointment on missing out on this year’s
Champions Trophy which Pakistan won against India because she could not get a
visa to travel to England.
We also talk about working in India which leads us to Hindi Medium
in which her contemporary Saba Qamar impressed viewers on both sides of the
Indo-Pak border. “I have always maintained that if I get a role like Saba’s in
Hindi Medium or something along the lines of Queen, Heroine or Jab We Met, I
will accept it,” Mehwish points out. She claims that she gave up the biggest
offer of her career to date when she was approached to play the second lead in
Dedh Ishqiya opposite Naseeruddin Shah and Madhuri Dixit because she was
uncomfortable doing an intimate scene required for the role in the film. “If I
ever do an Indian film, it will be on my terms and conditions and not theirs,
because I have made a place for myself in Pakistan with honesty and dedication.
I don’t want to be cast as a showpiece or an object of desire in a film on
either side of the border,” she explains. “I would love to represent my country
with dignity.”
“I have always maintained that if I get a role in India like
Saba’s in Hindi Medium or something along the lines of Queen,
Heroine or Jab We Met, I will accept it.”
People have criticised Mehwish for doing item numbers to get into
films, but she rejects it. “When I started my career, the quality of films was
going down and that’s why TV actresses didn’t switch to films by default. I
wasn’t the first choice to play ‘Billi’ in Na Maloom Afraad but when I was
approached, I liked the concept and went ahead with it. I will not term Billi
an item number because it was important to the story — the Don would never have
found the Na Maloom Afraad had it not been for the Billi character. Yes, the
song did bring crowds back to cinemas but had that been the only reason of my
success, I wouldn’t have had a song-less role in AIL.”
Mehwish has had a fantastic last few years: whatever part she’s
played in different media has been successful. Be it Alyy Khan’s stage play
Aapki Sonia with Sajid Hasan, her debut feature film Jawani Phir Nahi Ani
(JPNA) directed by Nadeem Baig — that went on to become the highest-grossing
Pakistani film ever — followed by the same director’s Dil Lagi that saw her
return to TV, or Nabeel Qureshi and Fizza Ali Meerza’s AIL in which she played
the role of a Parsi so convincingly that even the late Om Puri congratulated
her on her performance, it seems she can’t put a foot wrong.
Speaking about her break from TV a few years back, Mehwish says
she “had left television because of a few issues with some people.” It was
during that period that the actor found the time to explore and try her hand at
other projects.
“Aapki Sonia is a Javed Siddiqui masterpiece and would have done
better had it been staged somewhere in the city instead of the elite club where
it was staged. JPNA and AIL made me a film star while Dil Lagi was a way to
reach out to the audience all over Pakistan — especially those who don’t go to
cinemas to watch films.”
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While Mehwish claims to be choosy about selecting film roles, she
doesn’t seem to take much time pondering over TV commercial offers. The
advertorial segments seem to show that the actor easily agrees to take up TVCs.
Does she prefer to be recognised as an actor or a model? “Both,” comes the
prompt reply. “Both professions are two sides of the same coin. I consider
working in TV commercials a bonus since it is one of the best ways to reach a
wider audience. You get to play a character in less amount of time for more
amount of money. But there is a problem. The ad people must have a policy of
discarding an ad after it has run its course over a few years. There are a few
commercials of mine in which even I can’t recognise myself.”
There was a time when Mehwish was the brand ambassador for a
popular skin whitening cream, something that is now criticised as
‘discriminatory’ and ‘racist’ by the artist community all over the world. “I am
against discrimination myself but when I agreed to do the commercial a long
time back, I was naïve and had no understanding of how things worked. With the
passage of time, I have learned that a beautiful heart matters more than one’s
complexion. That’s why now I am very careful in choosing what brands I
represent. When you go abroad you realise that a wheatish complexion is
preferred over being gori which sadly still remains the beauty standard in this
part of the world,” she says. Interestingly, she has featured on lists of most
desirable celebrities in the last 10 years. “I don’t make an effort to be on
such lists but feel honoured if they consider me as someone with good looks.”
Mehwish may be one of the most recognised faces in the country but
she doesn’t have an award shelf at home that proves her to be an actor to
reckon with. “Awards don’t matter to me. I hardly attend award functions as I
don’t really feel that getting an award is any criterion for deciding who the
best is.”
She was recently snubbed in two categories — Best Actress TV and
Best Actress Film — at a celebrated award show. “I am my own competition. I
respect everybody’s view, be it someone who likes me or not, because it’s due
to them that I strive to become even better at what I do.”
She feels that in the coming days, there will be an improvement in
Pakistani films just as there was in TV dramas some time back. “When I started
my career, Star Plus dramas were a rage, much like Turkish plays these days,
but thankfully due to some well thought-out characters and intelligent choices,
I broke free of that monotony by playing real characters. That was one of the
main reasons the audience switched to Pakistani plays and that’s how we plan to
revive cinema as well.”
And then there is Punjab Nahi Jaungi (PNJ), her upcoming film. She
has impressed all in the trailer for the film with her expressive acting
besides sharing the screen with Humayun Saeed, Urwa Hocane, Ahmed Ali Butt and
Azfar Rehman. While some claim that her character is an extension of Anmol, her
role in Dil Lagi, Mehwish doesn’t think so. “It might look similar to JPNA and
Dil Lagi because it has more or less the same co-actors. People who know me
weren’t surprised when they saw me playing basketball in the teaser. As for the
character in PNJ, we have tried to make her different from all characters we
had done before.”
Not many Pakistani actors can claim to have worked in films with
female-centric titles. Mehwish believes that such a chance occurs once in an
actor’s career and she couldn’t have asked for a better one. “Carrying the responsibility
of a film is the best thing that could have happened to me. This film is the
struggle of a girl who embarks on a beautiful journey. Khalil ur Rehman Qamar’s
script was a bonus since the dialogue is both a challenge and a treat. The best
part of the film was our staying together as a family for the entire Bahawalpur
spell. The weather was cold and freezing when we shot the rain song and I had
to look both comfortable and beautiful.”
Now that PNJ is about to release (the film releases on Eidul Azha)
what is next for Mehwish? Another rom-com or something different? “I have a
number of offers to act in films but would be more interested in doing a film
based on women’s issues. I am also open to doing quality theatre where the play
gets at least 15 days to make its presence felt. There is also an option to
turn to direction which is something I would like to do in the long run.” And
will she go to Punjab or not? “Well, that’s something you will have to find
out,” Mehwish says.
Published in Dawn, ICON,
September 1st, 2017
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