4 - What the Stars Tell: Celebrity Lifewriting in India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2021
Summary
Four Bollywood stars—three established and one “moderately famous,” as she describes herself—contributed to the genre of star auto/biographies in India in 2017–18: Rishi Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt, Karan Johar, and Soha Ali Khan. Two of the books list a coauthor, although the extent of the collaborations is unspecified. As befits the star memoir or biography, each text is interspersed with photographs of the star's illustrious family, the star in the company of other celebrities, and occasionally film posters or stills. These books include a considerable amount of family history, which in all cases is also a history of Bollywood's top film-families. They offer glimpses into scandals, rumors, and individual moments of despair and uncertainty. In what follows I will discuss select features common to these star biographies.
Life Writing, Adaptation, and Interart
Star biographies, especially those that have their provenance in the world of arts, may be profitably read as adaptations that result in “interart” forms (Kamilla Elliot's term, cited in Andrews 368). Discussing the use of poetry in biopics of poets, Hannah Andrews argues that the incorporation of artwork into the written life of the artist emphasizes the “biographical understanding of artwork.” Further, it raises questions as to whether poetry is an appropriate form for “textual transferal” (370).
Following Andrews, my proposition is that the star reinforces their starvalue through the generation of an interart work, in which the life story is framed within the film history of the individual, and the films are framed by the life of the actor. The films are the subjects of the adaptation process, and they underscore the fact that the life of the star has been adapted for life writing in print. In other words, we as readers recognize that the star's life has been adapted for our consumption precisely because the filmic elements are part of this narrative. We are never allowed to move too far away from the auto/biographical subject because the art—the films—is always intruding in the form of a paratextual apparatus.
In star life writing, the paratexts—or the films—extend the main text, as Gérard Genette suggests. The filmic photographs included in these print biographies are paratexts that move from one form of narrative representation—memoir, biography—into another, the film, and back again.
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- Essays in Celebrity CultureStars and Styles, pp. 67 - 74Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2021