The comedy collective’s public event, which put Bollywood actors Ranveer Singh and Arjun Kapoor on the mat, featured Johar as the “roastmaster” or master of ceremonies. An edited version of the event posted online on Wednesday opens with the disclaimer that it will be “filthy, rude and offensive”. The three videos on YouTube are faithful to this promise.
One of the running gags in the show is about whether Johar is gay. AIB member Ashish Shakya thanks the packed auditorium for “coming out” and “Karan for not”. Ranveer Singh smooches Johar (in the online video, the visual is replaced by a bee on a flower), there are references to Johar participating in group sex and jokes about how male actors need to please him in order to be cast in his films. Johar declares that he doesn’t like “hairy men”, and blushes when Shakya said, “Let’s just address the elephant in the room.”
Going strictly by his movies, television shows and public appearances, Johar has been addressing the elephant in the room one scene and one joke at a time. The successful director and producer has turned the tables on whispers and rumours about his sexual orientation by using the comedic trope of ridicule in his films and in his television appearances. He has allowed celebrity guests on his popular television show Koffee with Karan to wonder about his single status, lampooned homosexuality in his box-office hits Kal Ho Na Ho and Dostana, and tackled sexual orientation head-on in his contribution to the 2013 Bombay Talkies omnibus movie, featuring two gay men, one out and the other closeted, and a male-to-male kiss.
Showbiz strategy
In a country in which homosexuality remains illegal, it is unethical, not to mention downright dangerous, to identify public figures, especially a film celebrity of Johar’s stature, as queer unless they have chosen to do so themselves. Johar’s private life remains, as it should, out of bounds, for the public. But since he is an expert practitioner of show business, he recognises the commercial value of confronting puritanical ideas about sexuality in public forums. Johar understood a long time ago that one way to talk about suppressed desire and make it acceptable for conservative audiences is to giggle at it.
One of the pleasures of watching Koffee With Karan, and the reason the celebrity talk show has no rivals, was Johar’s ability to convert tabloid chatter about his movie star guests into jokes and gags. By getting his guests to confirm or deny rumours about themselves and share their uncensored views on their peers, Johar allowed them to take control of their own narratives – and ensured that viewers were hooked week after week, awaiting the next big revelation.
In a sense, the AIB Roast is a more explicit version of what Johar has been practising in his movies since his 2003 production, Kal Ho Na Ho. Directed by Nikhil Advani, the movie has a sequence in which a shocked maid suspects that there is something more to the friendship between the characters played by Shah Rukh Khan and Saif Ali Khan. The naughty sequence sends up the well-established convention of male bonding in Hindi cinema. Amitabh Bachchan and Shashi Kapoor showered together in Silsila, Bachchan and Vinod Khanna had the kind of charged friendship in Muqaddar Ka Sikandar that could keep queer theorists occupied for the rest of their lives. By lampooning this tradition, Kal Ho Na Ho flirted with the possibility that the traditional love triangle can be differently imagined.
Breaking the mould
In Dostana, written and directed by Tarun Manshukani for Johar’s banner Dharma Productions in 2008, two male friends pretend to be in a relationship in order to rent the apartment of a woman they both love. One of them has a caricatured Punjabi mother, played by Kirron Kher, who expresses her horror at her son’s sexuality in the song Ma Da Laadla Bigad Gaya.
The film industry, like the rest of the country, is packed with closeted individuals as well as figures who are openly gay. Some of them openly explore queer themes in their films, as Onir did in My Brother Nikhil and parts of his anthology film I Am. The hand that pushes the envelope in a Dharma film is always perfectly manicured, and the characters that break the mould, whether quasi-queer or straight, are dressed to the nines. Their masks might drop, as does Kabhi Alvida Na Kehnaa’s Maya, who has an extra-marital affair, but the maquillage stays intact. The characters who breach the iron-clad boundaries of the traditional Indian family, prefer kith to kin, and choose to live life on their terms might be too perfect-looking and air-headed to be labelled truly radical, but they do represent a break from convention.
Love triangle
It’s now possible to cast Johar’s directorial debut in 1998, Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, in a whole new light. The movie was a smash hit on account of its cast (it stars Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Rani Mukerji), its unrelenting glamour and razzmatazz, and its chart-topping soundtrack. The love triangle that powers the plot is curious, to say the least. The tomboyish Anjali loves Rahul, but he loses his heart to the ultra-feminine Tina. Rahul and Tina get married, while Anjali goes off to heal her broken heart. Tina dies in childbirth, but manages to arrange the union of Anjali and Rahul from beyond the grave. This she does through a series of letters she writes in advance to her daughter.
The daughter meets Anjali, who has shed her boyishness and swapped her sportswear for saris – Tina has been reincarnated, in one sense. Rahul, who has until now not expressed any desire for Anjali, finds that his heart has actually been beating for her all along even though he married another woman and had a child with her. The love triangle is unconvincing, but it works better if you replace Anjali with a man. Suddenly, Kuch Kuch Hota Hai makes perfect sense. Two men love each other in college, but neither can admit it. One of them goes to extreme lengths to affirm his heterosexuality (marriage, children), but his need to put up a façade ends when his wife dies. Free to follow the beats of his heart, he meets his old college friend again, who is now openly gay.
Fanciful? Perhaps. But not as eyebrow-raising as Johar’s immense courage in allowing himself be ridiculed along with Ranveer Singh and Arjun Kapoor for the AIB show. The event proves that all comedy is, at the end of the day, deadly serious. The thousands of clicks that the AIB videos are notching up on the internet prove that there is a huge constituency for popular culture products that articulate the unmentionable. If the only way to come out, or pretend to, is in full public glare, to an audience that has paid for steeply priced tickets, and earn praise and acclaim in the bargain, who is the joke really on?