New Delhi: Shabana Azmi still remembers the conversation she had with her father, legendary poet Kaifi Azmi, before becoming an actor.
"Will you support me?" she recalls asking her father.
"He said, 'I will support you in whatever you do. If you want to become a shoemaker, I will support you provided you tell yourself that you will try to become the best shoemaker in the business'," the actor told PTI in an interview.
Elaborating on the relationship with her father, Shabana Azmi shared a childhood anecdote when she wanted to have a doll with "blonde hair and blue eyes".
"At the age of seven, I wanted a doll with blonde hair and blue eyes like other girls in my class. But my father gave me a black doll and said 'black is beautiful'. Telling this to a seven-year-old was quite peculiar, but these were the values we inherited from him," she said.
Kaifi Azmi also instilled a love for India's "composite culture" in his children that they have carried forward in their works, latest being the film Mee Raqsam (I Dance).
Shabana Azmi and her brother, cinematographer Baba Azmi are paying tributes to their father through the film that revolves around Salim (Danish Husain) who stands resolutely with his daughter Mariam (Aditi Subedi) when she wants to become a Bharatnatyam dancer.
Though the film is not based on the relationship that the 69-year-old actor shared with her father, she said the poet-lyricist was equally supportive of her in real life.
"The film is not based on my life with my father, but it celebrates the father-daughter bond. It was shot in Mijwan, a village in eastern UP, when my father was born. So Baba decided to make this film in his birthplace in the year of his birth centenary. There cannot be a better tribute to him," she said.
Born on January 14, 1919 in Mijwan village, near Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh, Kaifi Azmi would have turned 101 this year.
Mee Raqsam, which marks Baba Azmi's directorial debut, celebrates India's inclusiveness and pluralism, which the actor described as the country's "greatest strength".
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"This film details the difference between our religion and cultural heritage. It celebrates India's composite culture which is an extremely important message in today's times. My father used to celebrate all festivals like Eid, Diwali, Holi, Christmas, etc with great gusto. We have carried on that tradition. It makes me happy that Zoya and Farhan have also carried on that tradition."
Mee Raqsam also features Naseeruddin Shah, her co-star of many movies. He plays the narrow-minded community leader averse to Mariam pursuing Bharatnatyam, a character in stark contrast to his real life persona.
Calling Shah her "most favourite" co-actor, Shabana Azmi said he played the role so well that "obscurantism was coming out from every pore of his body".