Uncovering the Item Girl

A bodacious foil for the restrained sexuality and subservience of the Indian heroine through the ages.

Helen, Indian Cinema's Cabaret Queen (1955)Original Source: MoDE

The Gyrating Item Girl in Indian Cinema

The spin-offs of the Tawaif and Vamp, are not merely a trope for sexual license. 


Female identity and sexuality go hand in hand, and fashion within this cinematic oeuvre is an accurate gauge of the all-pervading male gaze and the satire of emerging feminism through the ages. 

Cuckoo Moray | Ek Do Teen Aaja Mausam Hai Rangeen | Awaara (1951)Original Source: Raj Kapoor (Producer)

The Coquetry of Sexual Liberation

Mysterious, cynical and urban, the 1951 film noir canvas of Awaara’s netherworld urban greed - a grimy basement pub where heroes and villains play out their shenanigans - was the perfect setting for actress Cuckoo Moray to display the allurement of the other woman in Indian cinema, upon whom was bestowed the carnal moniker of Vamp.

Cuckoo Moray was the precursor to the Item girl - coquettish yet daring, clad in western clothes, a sign of loose morals, against the austerity of traditional Indian clothes. She flaunted her taut bare midriff, peek-a-boo garter, and flamboyant dance movements - an antithesis to the pious and restrained heroine of the film, which perhaps made Moray’s characterization a symbol of the sexually liberated woman to arrive in later years in the avatar of the Item Girl.

Ek do teen aaja mausam hai rangeen
Aaja ek do teen aaja mausam hai rangeen
Raat ko chhup-chhup ke milna
Duniya samjhe paap re..

Madhubala | Pyar Kiya to Darna Kya | Mughal-E-Azam (1960)Original Source: Shapoorji Pallonji (Producer)

The Tawaif and the Anthem of Unrequited Love

Mughal-E-Azam (1960) was a gargantuan feat of costume design. Zari and zardozi embroiderers from Delhi and Surat, goldsmiths and jewellery designers from Hyderabad and Kolhapur, and shoemakers from Agra – extraordinary measures were taken to ensure this period drama looked authentic and paid homage to the opulent Mughal courts of India.

The Tawaif - a culturally nuanced performer, entertained nobility, especially during the Mughal era, excelled in music, dance (mujra), theatre, and Urdu poetry (shero-shayari) was regarded as authority on social etiquette (tehzib) and manners (tameez). The noblemen of the time frequented kothas - homes of the tawaifs, for respite from loveless marriages and exacting pressures from toxic patriarchal families.

As the forerunner to the modern Item Girl, Madhubala as the tawaif, swirling in a resplendent Anarkali and Nigar cap, became every paramour’s lyrical anthem of unrequited love overnight.

Pyaar kiya koi chori nahi ki
Chhup chhup aahe bharna kya
Jab pyaar kiya to darna kya

Helen | O Haseena Zulfonwaali | Teesri Manzil (1966)Original Source: Nasir Hussain (Producer)

The Cabaret: the Sum Total of Seduction

“Every girl should flirt with the man who’s handling the camera and not with the hero…he’ll make her look gorgeous, giving her an edge over the leading lady” said Helen, the quintessential cabaret dancer of Indian Cinema. Wearing a body-hugging cat suit wrapped in a playful diaphanous tulle skirt with her blonde hair and twinkling jewels shining against the midnight black ensemble, actress and dancer Helen started as a cabaret dancer in Teesri Manzil (1966) which quickly metamorphosed into Vamp.

This high camp, va-va-voom provocateur of Indian cinema is truly the harbinger of Item Girls of Bollywood, a term that surfaced many years later. Helen's cinematic character, with her taboo-crushing performances, broke the sati-savitri stereotype, as she unapologetically gyrated - both hips and bottom - to control and capture the male gaze. In defiance of the restrained ‘good girl’ of cinema, she was all legs, décolletage and curves, an exhibitionist delirious in her repudiation of the patriarchal storytelling of her time.

Garm hai tej hai yeh nigaahe meri
Kaam aa jaayengi sard aahen meri
Tum kisi raah me toh miloge kahi
Arey ishq hu main
Kahi theharta hi nahi
Mai bhi hu galiyo ki parchhaayi

Helen | Mehbooba Mehbooba | Sholay (1975)Original Source: G.P Sippy (Producer)

The Cinematic Duality: Whore vs. Virgin

In the film, Inteqaam (1969), the cabaret song Aa Jaana Jaan (Come here, My dear) is picturised on Helen, the dancing queen of Indian Cinema. Her entire cabaret accoutrement - feathers, jewelled bustier and crotch-hugging rhinestone leggings, strings of faux diamonds cascading from her hair, an opera-length cigarette holder–are all so overtly provocative that they become the garish tools of lustful thrill.

While the sexual vexation of the poor man in the cage, alludes to two cinematic stereotypes: untamed masculine energy, - the caged villain, seemingly so violent that he has to be chained and behind bars; and the ‘morally loose' Vamp’ with her risqué fashion and flamboyance - the sum of total seduction.

It was necessary for the film makers (mostly men) to separate, what psychologists called, the Whore from the Virgin, the duality of women (that apparently couldn't ever co-exist). In order for the narrative of the Virgin - the sati savitri, the pavitra wife to exist, the Whore had to be smothered in exaggerated costume and make-up pointing to western licentiousness, the only way to justify the entry of such salaciousness in Indian culture. Clearly, for the filmmakers and scriptwriters of the time, delicious debauchery was never served at home.

Helen | Piya Tu Ab Toh Aaja | Caravan (1971)Original Source: Tahir Hussain (Producer)

The Sexual Revenge of Provocation

In a telling scene in the film Caravan (1971) - Helen’s shimmering ox-blood sequin dress gets caught in a door hinge, and, very theatrically, she mimics the trauma of clothes being tugged at by, say, an inebriated lout (common in Indian Cinema). But her faux helplessness lasts only a few seconds, as she lets go of the dress, only to unfurl and reveal, a tantalizing cabaret ensemble- an eye-popping gold mini-skirt and bustier, skimpier than the first.

In this spanking avatar, Helen dances with more chutzpah - as if audaciously announcing the frolic and freedom of a ‘flawed’ character, that has no patience for the one-dimensional heroine – pretty and prissy, yes – but annoyingly weighed down by puritanical gloominess and self-righteousness.

Meri haalat pe rahe jo tera karam
Woh baat bhi mujhko kubool hai o sanam
Jiski khatir chhoo liye the mere kadam

Meena Kumari | Chalte Chalte | Pakeezah (1971)Original Source: Kamal Amrohi (Producer)

The Queen of Tragedy and the Plague of the Other Woman

When Meena Kumari performed the song- Chalte Chalte as Sahibjaan in Pakeezah, in a buoyant orange Anarkali, her inner strife as a tawaif was irrefutable – she was always going to be the Other Woman destined to be left at the curb, no matter how enticing her beauty, wit and charm.

In fact, her penchant for this character in films – immersed in romantic melancholia of unrequited love – was so immersive that this legendary beauty earned the moniker of “Queen of Tragedy.” Her stunning costumes, deep-kohled eyes, and Mughal-esque jewellery - ornaments acting as a subplot in themselves - played a big role that nimbly married the allurement of beauty with pathos.

Beauty and sadness together is very powerful and she knew it. It is no wonder that while dancing to Thare Rahiyo, in an unforgettable emerald green Anarkali doused in gold embellishments, her dress was inseparable from the promise and the inevitable futility of love.

Her fashion announced that even when swirling in the emotional doldrums of life, it was important to show grace and beauty, perhaps, in her case, her only weapon against forbidden love. And deserted by the shareefs (upper class) men, with lyrical strokes of her deep-kohled eyes she made nostalgia her palette of love. She exemplified the folly of the Madonna-Whore complex that plagued women then, and continues to plague women now.

Chalte chalte
Chalte chalte yunhi koi mil gaya tha
Yunhi koi mil gaya tha sare-raah chalte chalte
Sare-raah chalte chalte
Wahin tham ke reh gayi hai
Wahin tham ke reh gayi hai meri raat dhalte dhalte
Meri raat dhalte dhalte

Helen’s two-layered hip scarf, skimpy bra-top, dripping with beads and baubles, played the ultimate rabble-rouser-villain or hero; she didn't care. The gypsy Vamp executed her oeuvre - to catch the roving eyes and seduce them. This blockbuster song may have had the entire nation's eyes on her virile hips; but in particular, it made women, stifled in patriarchy in different corners of India, ache for freedom.

Helen | Mehbooba Mehbooba | Sholay (1975)Original Source: G.P Sippy (Producer)

The Gypsy Vamp - the Siren of Freedom

Mehbooba Mehbooba from the film Sholay (1975), etched in the minds of every Indian worth their movie ticket, had everything – a seductive tempo that fanned the connivance and chicanery of heroes and villains, a caravan of itinerant musicians - exotic and distrustful; and of course, a tantalising Item Girl - Helen, the gypsy-temptress, belly-dancing in the glow of a desert bonfire, her bodacious sexuality offered willingly to the lascivious gaze of gangster supremo - Gabbar Singh.

Gulshan Mein Gul Khilte Hain 
Jab Sehra Mein Milte Hain 
Gulshan Mein Gul Khilte Hain 
Jab Sehra Mein Milte Hain 
Main Aur Tu 
Mehbooba Ae Mehbooba

Rekha | Aankhon Ki Masti | Umrao Jaan (1981)Original Source: Muzaffar Ali (Producer)

The Refined Tawaif and the Subversion of Vice

Director Muzzafar Ali’s film Umrao Jaan (1981), with the spellbinding performance of the protagonist - Rekha, was a magnum opus of courtesan glory, the depiction of the life of an illustrious tawaif within the cultural cauldron of Awad (now Lucknow). The portrayal of Indo-Mughal refinement was extraordinary: poetically refined speech, lyrical depth of song and dance, opulent costumes and jewellery (styled by the brilliant Subhashini Ali), made jaws drop in awe.

But it was the subtlety of adaa, the punctiliousness of everyday living, along with the opulent costume and jewellery - Guluband made from precious gemstones and worn tightly around the neck, Lara haar - double stranded necklaces embedded with pearls, rubies and emeralds – that added to the genius of this film.

Through this lens of refined culture, nishatkhana (pleasure house) or kotha, was not about housing ordinary prostitutes; it was an institution of beauty, art, Hindustani classical music and dance, Urdu poetry, amorous entanglements - and all-round blandishment, couched in the coquetry of tawaifs.

In her seminal essay “Lifestyle as Resistance: The Case of the Courtesans of Lucknow”, the writer Veena Talwar Oldenberg, argues that tawaifs were “independent and consciously involved in the covert subversion of a male-dominated world” Without any attachment to ‘real’ families like the shareef (upper class) women, “their way of life is not complicitous with male authority”. But the hypocrisy of men was amply evident in the film - they savoured the tawaifs for the heat, but ran home for the hearth.

Kehne ko to duniya mein makhaane hazaaron hain
Makhaane hazaaron hain
In aankhon ki masti ke mastaane hazaaron hain
In aankhon ki masti ke

Madhuri Dixit | Choli Ke Peeche Kya Hai | Khalnayak (1992)Original Source: Subhash Ghai (Producer)

The Libidinous Choli (or the lack thereof)

Indian film costumes, over time, have shown us that it's not the unravelling of the sari, but the sexualization of the traditional ghagra-choli, that has been an indicator of the moral fabric of India. 

In Choli Ke Peche Kai Hai (What is Behind the Blouse) in the film Khalnayak (1992), the lyrics, packed with sexual innuendos went hand-in-hand with the heaving rhythm of both- blouse (choli) and bosom.

The delightful blasphemy of wearing a choli sans dupatta (hitherto a classic symbol of Indian modesty) completely demolished the sanctity of nursing bosoms to the carnality of voluptuous breasts. Despite the titillating criss-crossed Gujarati blouse, teamed with a navel grazing ghagra, body adorned with tribal tattoos and faux Rajasthani ivory bangles, adornment of wayward banjarans (gypsies), the dancing seductress is quick to remind us that behind the sexy blouse, dummy, lies the heart, the fount of love.

But the damage was done. For every libidinous man drooling over this raunchy song - the choli and premika (lover) had already become one. Sure, the sexy blouse tightened, but across the country, moral compunctions certainly began to loosen.

Lahanga Utha Ke Chalu,
Ghunghat Gira Ke Chalu
Kya Kya Bacha Ke Chalu Ramaji Ramaji

Malaika Arora | Chhaiya Chhaiya | Dil Se (1998)Original Source: Mani Ratnam, Ram Gopal Varma & Shekhar Kapur (Producers)

The Item-escapism of Rural Romance

This is a seminal Bollywood song - Chhaiya Chhaiya (Keep Walking in the Shade of Love) from Dil Se (1998), where the Item Girl was firmly established in the imagination of the Indian film lovers as someone to reckon with. The sight of this tantalizing dancer, lithe and sensual, atop a moving train, the hitherto alpha posturing of boorish men, took a backseat.

Here was the archetype of a totemic woman, who seemed to have no attachment, other than with a band of migrants with no fixed destination, who swayed and writhed to a catchy song with nonchalant ease that had no relation to the film's narrative.

Malaika Arora’s clothes were disarmingly simple - a maroon blouse and a simple black ghagra or skirt; but the body language fired the urban imagination and the forgotten romance of our rural past, of free-spirits that roamed the paddy fields, and perhaps reminded us of living in the moment.

This character existed solely for the purpose of Item-escapism; and despite her one-song extravaganza, it was the confidence of her joyful sexuality that got the entire nation swaying like her skirt and the lyrics of an unforgettable song: “Those who walk under the shade of love, heaven will be below their feet.”

Saare ishq ki chhaaon chal chaiyya chaiyya 
Saare ishq ki chhaaon chal chaiyya 
Pau janat chale chal chaiyya chaiyya Pau janat chale chal chaiyya 

Aishwarya Rai | Kajra Re | Bunty Aur Babli (2005)Original Source: Aditya Chopra (Producer)

The Bollywoodization of the Tawaif

Kajra Re from the film Bunty aur Babli (2005) is great example of a convenient amalgam of old and new for an audience, that is perhaps, unaware of the entangled trajectory of the Other woman in Indian Cinema - from tawaif to vamp to Item Girl. 

Performed by Aishwarya Rai, the item number borrows nuances from the traditional mujra, the musical opus of qawwali, and the permissiveness of the kotha culture; but Kajra Re is all bait and beguilement, without the poetry of love and longing that made films like Pakeezah or Umrao Jaan etched in our minds.

In short, the Item girl is not only bereft of the existential angst that haunted cinematic tawaifs of the past, this new avatar carried not an ounce of moral baggage either. Distancing herself not only from the depth and breadth of the tawaif experience, she also forsakes the ostentatious exuberance of the Vamp in the 70s.

Aishwarya Rai is in her minimal best - a relatively muted lehenga choli (at least by Indian standards), pared-down makeup, and hair adorned only by the passa. But sensuality she has plenty of, what with the choli notoriously short, and the low-waist lehenga exposing such a well gym-toned torso that it would be criminal to cover it with a dupatta. So, she doesn't. This modern-day, one-song courtesan, is now firmly established as pure Item, a thing of beauty and titillation only. With no reason to be part of the film’s narrative except for a spike in adrenaline, it added to the box-office success of the film.

Mera Chain Bain Sab Ujda, Jaalim Nazar Hata Le
Barbaad Ho Rahe Hai Ji…
Tere Apne Shaher Wale
Meri Angdai Na Toote Tu Aaja…

Katrina Kaif | Sheila Ki Jawani | Tees Maar Khan (2010)Original Source: Twinkle Khanna, Shirish Kunder & Ronnie Screwvala (Producers)

The Death of Moral Dilemma

“I know you want it but you never gonna get it” sang Katrina Kaif wrapped in a satin bed sheet, in her Item song debut Sheila Ki Jawani in the film Tees Maar Khan (2010). It was so raucously popular that one could argue it set the tone for subsequent Item songs in for the 21st Century. 

Henceforth, it was not about the moral dilemma of the Good-girl vs. Bad-girl whatsoever; in fact, it was the upholding of an old Mae West truism, now the current urban mantra of the TikTok generation: good girls go to heaven; bad girls go everywhere.  

The outright display of sexual ownership in gold harem pants and itsy-bitsy blouse, and an intoxicating declaration of body-worship, were in fact, the beginning of an era where women didn't need men to objectify them; women did it themselves. So, Sheila libidinously rotates on a pink bed allowing lascivious six-pack carnival of testosterone to lust after her, sure; but they are, in Sheila's teasing words, 'never gonna get it'.

Whether this sexual bravado is seen as new-age empowerment or simply cinematic license afforded only to Item girls in Bollywood, it must be said that the popularity of this song outside movie theatres was enough to assert that women were ready to 'get it' whenever they wanted it.

In one song sequence, the white shirt-tie-hat combination worn by the pole-dancing Demi Moore in Striptease was copied meticulously by Katrina Kaif. It was evidently clear that if she is treated like a game, she will show you how it's played.

I Know You Want It But You Never Gonna Get It
Tere Haath Kabhi Na Aani
Maane Na Maane Koi Duniya Yeh Saari
Mere Ishq Ki Hai Deewani

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