The 72-year-old actor, whose portrayal of an alcoholic in the film is considered as a benchmark for a drunkard's role by actors even today, revealed the idea of the movie was conceived while he and director Prakash mehra were travelling over the Atlantic ocean.
"It's 31 years of 'Sharaabi'... Goodness feels like just the other day we were on the World Tour of 1983, the very first of its kind for the Industry and having performed in almost 10 cities in US and London, flying to Trinidad & Tobago from NYC, when Prakash Mehra also travelling with me, suggests we should do a film based on a father son relationship where the son is an alcoholic!!
A tee-totaller in real life, Bachchan wanted to perfect the act of an alcoholic on-screen so he suggested Mehra to have short dialogues because a person takes time to speak in the inebriated state.
"A major observation was made by me after the first day of the shoot. I told Prakash Ji, since my character is intoxicated for most of the film, and since a drunk takes a lot more time to say his dialogues, if the dialogues were going to be long and lengthy, then he should be prepared for a 5 hour film, for, it would take time for me to say those lines since they were going to be measured and in a state of intoxication. Point noted. And the scenes were shortened and made amenable for the situation," Bachchan wrote.
"It was also during the making of 'Sharaabi' that a Divali bomb blew up my left hand. The dates had been allocated and the shoot could not be canceled, so I went ahead in order not to disturb or cause delay. The hand had been reduced to pulp..," he added.
Describing the story behind the fight sequence, which he choreographed, Bachchan wrote, "Many impromptu suggestions used to come up in those days. They do even now, but I think then they were more last minute and unprepared! Like the fight sequence in the bar when I take on the guys that had stolen my watch and chain etc. That was choreographed by me...
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