Large portions of popular Hindi film narratives are devoted to the depiction – and glorification– of “yaari” or “dosti” (roughly translating to friendship) between heterosexual men.
But in the small gaps left between the spaces which are occupied and dominated by men, there emerge locations in which female characters attempt to carve space where they can collectively express and negotiate with their gendered identity.
Film poster for 'Pakeezah' by Perfect Printers, BombayMuseum of Art & Photography
In her seminal essay Queering Bollywood: Alternative Sexualities in Popular Indian Cinema academic Gayatri Gopinath largely devotes her attention to Hindi films between 1960 and 1994 that feature typical spaces of female homosociality such as “brothels, women’s prisons, girl’s schools, the middle class home, and the zenana”. Indeed, such examples abound in popular Hindi cinema.
For instance, Paakezah (1972) outlines female relationships in the life of a courtesan, while Akeli Mat Jaiyo (1963) briefly sketches a portrait of female fraternity – or lack thereof – in a women’s hostel.
But female homosociality in Hindi cinema has proven to be extremely fluid, frequently leaking out of private spaces and predefined categories.
Film poster for 'Padosan' by Sri Ram Offset Printers, Virudhunagar (printer)Museum of Art & Photography
In Padosan (1968), for instance, this relationship spills out on the streets. Bindu (Saira Bano) cycles down wide roads with a platoon of female friends, singing about striding confidently into the bylanes of love, declaring that no one can stop her from exploring this newly discovered terrain.
She simultaneously asserts her agency over public spaces and her own body, even as her female friend cautions her to refrain from going down the path, lest she be looted by a male thug (lootera).
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Photographic lobby still for the film 'Karigar' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
In Karigar (1958), the relationship between Parvati (Nirupa Roy) and her female employer is situated in an upper-class home, where Gopinath locates most homosocial relationships between women.
However, the relationship crosses class barriers. Although it is embedded in an obvious hegemony and defined by the politics of charity, the richer woman demonstrates genuine concern for Paro: she offers her a glass of milk when a pregnant Paro faints on the job.
She also calls her husband to insist that Parvati’s unemployed husband Shanker be given a job by the family’s firm.
Their relationship remains friendly and cordial despite the disapproval of the domineering male cook in the household.
Sisters, Companions and Mirrors
Since examples are few and far in between in the 1950s, female friendships depicted popular Hindi cinema of that decade have gone largely unexamined.
Photographic lobby card for the film 'Raj Hath' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Raj Hath (1956), centered on the rivalry between two Indian kings, stands out as an exception because of the space that it devotes to the relationship between the princess Raja Beti (Madhubala) and her friend and aide Juhi (Kammo).
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Raj Hath' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Raja Beti and Juhi are close companions, clearly sharing an intimate relationship with each other. When the princess’ father Daljeet (Sohrab Modi) implies that she must seek revenge on the king of Sultanpur (Ulhas) for rejecting a proposal of marriage between the princess and his son, she leans on Juhi for support.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Raj Hath' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Juhi and Raja Beti masquerade as men, acquiring the permission and blessing of the king to infiltrate Sultanpur with the goal of bringing back a detailed map of the palace.
They are involved in several adventures, sometimes disguised as male ascetics, and other times as a couple with Juhi impersonating a man.
Buoyed by each other’s support, the two women stake their claim to several spaces- material and ideological- in which Hindi film heroines were seldom seen.
Juhi, as the understanding female friend who advises the heroine in matters of heterosexual love and romance, represents a recurring trope in Hindi cinema. The figure of the “sakhi” or “saheli” (conventionally translated as female friend) appears in several Hindi films, including Sujata (1969), Babar (1960), and Akeli Mat Jaiyo (1963).
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Mehlon Ke Khwab' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
In Mehlon Ke Khwaab (1960), this position is occupied by the heroine’s sister, Bela (Chanchal). She is an extension of her sister Asha’s (Madhubala) personality, offering assistance and counsel when necessary.
The sakhi is often the mirror-image of the female protagonist. She believes in the same values as the heroine, and reflects back her proclivities and desires to her. While filmic heroes stand in front of mirrors to deliver long monologues in which they seek (and find) themselves, heroines turn to their friends.
Much like a mirrored reflection, the sakhi is often an inversion of the heroine: playful when the heroine is staid, effusive while the protagonist is quiet, boldly extroverted while the latter is shy and silent.
She offers a foil to the character of the heroine, as is evident in films such as Mughal-E-Azam (1960), in which Anarkali’s (Madhubala) gracefully understated strength is balanced by Suriaya’s (Sheela Delaya) sparkling ebullience.
Photographic lobby still/card (?) for the film 'Babar' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
This dynamic is perhaps the most compelling aspect of Babar (1960), in which the effervescent and cheerful Hizab (Shobha Khote) nudges her cousin Hamida (Azra) into a romantic relationship with prince Humayun (Sohan Kapila). She even recites the prince’s love letter to Hamida with the song Salaam-E-Hasrat Qubool Kar Lo, singing with palpable intensity about love and yearning. While the words have presumably been written by Humayun, Hizab does not refer to the letter beyond a glance that she takes at it before commencing the song. Hamida appreciates Hizab’s song, not knowing that the words have been written by the prince.
Photographic lobby still/card (?) for the film 'Babar' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Writ large in the song, particularly in Hamida’s small smile, is the slippage that often occurs in Hindi cinema between homosociality and homoeroticism. As Sunny Singh notes in a perceptive historiography of Indian folk art, this is the kind of slippage with which Indian audiences are amply familiar and culturally comfortable. These movements towards homoeroticism could be slipped into popular Hindi cinema also due to the fact that the heroine finally winds up betrothed to the man in these narratives.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Raj Hath' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The friendship between Juhi and Raja Beti in Raj Hath can also be read as homoerotic, particularly when the women are in their private space, or when they impersonate a couple.
This implication is never overt, and any hints of homoeroticism are thoroughly expunged when Raja Beti meets the prince to whom she was initially betrothed, and falls in love with him despite herself.
Her friendship with Juhi then becomes the space in which Raja Beti sorts through the clutter of her conflicting emotions for the man.
In the world of popular Hindi cinema of the early post-Independence era, in which explicitly homosexual relations were either avoided or treated with derision, these socially accepted slippages were particularly significant. As several scholars have observed, popular Hindi cinema has frequently used homosociality as an “alibi” for homoeroticism.
Film poster for 'Naya Daur' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Songs in which two women enact the dynamic between a heterosexual couple also offer interesting examples of female friendship and confraternity. In Reshmi Salwaar Kurta Jaali Ka from Naya Daur (1957), for instance, women play both male and female roles, and in the process, also play with their gendered identities as they engage in friendly romantic banter with each other.
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Photographic lobby still for the film 'Laila' by Possibly Mudnaney Film ServiceMuseum of Art & Photography
Despite ambivalence of their attires, the women's distinctly feminine voices anchor them in their gendered identity. This play with gendered identity is rendered socially acceptable since it is emplaced it within the situation of a stage performance.
These performances were not perceived as threats to heteronormativity also since they were invested in depicting a relationship that was, by all appearances, heterosexual.
Meanwhile, this form of 'heterosexual' romance, which is enacted solely by women and meant for female audiences, is rescued from the charges of vulgarity or indecency that are normally associated with the depiction of sexuality and romance between a male and a female.
Song-and-dance sequences pictured on two women frequently depicted women singing of their love for a man. Much like space created by female friendships in most of the films discussed so far, they create a place in which women can safely share and resolve anxieties associated with heterosexual romance and intimacy.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Halaku' by Possibly Studio Shangri-LaMuseum of Art & Photography
Songs such as Apalam Chapalam from Azaad (1955) or Bechain dil khoi si nazar from Yahudi (1958) create a space in which two women, through their body and voice, engage in competitive displays of hyperfemininity without threatening each other’s romantic prospects.
Despite the gender play permitted in these depictions, the 1950s and 1960s were marked with a tremendous discomfort and anxiety with slippages of homosociality into homoeroticism, especially with regard to female bodies.
Although Chanda (Kamini Kaushal) singing and dancing around female statues in Poonam (1952) escaped censors, Dildar (1947) was not quite as fortunate. According to a 1948 Filmindia report on Censor Board-mandated cuts in films, a sequence was cut out of Dildar because a female character appeared to be “rubbing and patting the statue of a woman as if making love to it”.
Men, Women and Friendships
Regardless of the frequency with which they slide towards homoeroticism, masculine expressions of friendship and confraternity, such as those seen in Naya Daur (1957), Zanjeer (1973), or Sholay (1975) are frequently cast in popular Hindi cinema as compatible with a patriarchal and nationalistic traditional social order.
Female friendships are located at a much more precarious juncture: they are simultaneously viewed as a threat to a male-dominated cultural schema, and as resonant of the investment in female empowerment exhibited by several Indian leaders at the time of its independence from British rule.
Film still for 'Dahej' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Spaces of female homosociality and confraternity in Dahej (1950) exemplify and resolve this precariousness.
Dahej is meant to be a critique of the practice of dowry, seen as the product of a regressive and uneducated society.
Film still for 'Dahej' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
An unmarried Chanda (Jayshree) is protected and happy in the spaces which are populated by her female friends, while she is dreaming of marriage.
Film still for 'Dahej' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
After she is married, domains conventionally regarded as feminine and populated by women, represent the most severe threat to her mental and physical health.
Dahej regards female homosociality as a tool that must be adopted insofar as it enables women to be educated into the practices of heterosexual conjugality,
and discarded as soon as the woman sets foot into her married home lest it allow her to build solidarity against patriarchy.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Mehlon Ke Khwab' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
As this exhibition demonstrates, Hindi film songs and narratives have found ways in which to depict female friendships, and even hint at slippages from friendship to eroticism, despite pressures from the state, heteronormative ideas of conjugality and patriarchal ideas associated with friendship and camaraderie.
References:
Queering Bollywood: Alternative Sexualities in Popular Indian Cinema by Gayatri Gopinath in Journal of Homosexuality, Volume 39
Remembering Bhangaśvana: Towards an Inclusive, Fluid Construction of Gender and Sexuality in Commercial Indian Cinema(s) by Sunny Singh