Playwright Javed Siddiqui remembers famed writer-director Sagar Sarhadi, who was the mind behind gems Bazaar, Kabhi Kabhie and Noorie
Sagar Sarhadi. Pics/Instagram
In 2008, he was awarded the prestigious Ghalib Award for drama. His numerous plays, including Tanhai and Bhagat Singh Di Wapsi are considered IPTA classics. [In our heydays], we used to meet often at Janki Kutir in Juhu, where several struggling writers would hang out. Kaifi saab and Shaukat [Azmi] aapa were our mentors. [Sarhadi’s] nephew Ramesh Talwar, Bharat Kapoor, Mac Mohan, Shama Zaidi, and I would spend hours, talking literature and poetry.
Javed Siddiqui
I last met him before the lockdown. I could sense he was feeling lonely, and slipping into depression. He was a bachelor and lived alone in Sion. He loved to write, but his weak eyesight, due to advancing age, proved to be a deterrent. I will always remember him as someone who was full of life and ready with one-liners.
Like Gulzar saab, he wrote in Urdu, not Hindi. He wrote screenplay and dialogues for films like Kabhi Kabhie [1976], Noorie [1979] and Silsila [1981], but he is best remembered for his directorial venture, Bazaar [1982]. The film highlighted the bride-buying practice in Hyderabad. Every track of the film was a gem, including Karoge yaad toh har baat yaad aayegi. Now, it’s only his memories that remain with us.
