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The "Khallaas Girl" Isha
koppikar !
The
latest heart throbe after she acted in the song Khallaas from
the movie Company... "Isha koppikar" was born during 1976 in
India. She has acted in a number of dramas during her school
days. After that she hase done modelling for four years for
reputed concerns like Deepam Sarees, Ponds .... she has
started her acting career in Tamil with her first films
including Yen Suvaasakkaattrae, Kaathal Kavithai.
Isha Koppikar's sexy gaze mesmerises moviegoers as she swings
and sways to Sandeep Chowta's thundering music in Ram Gopal
Varma's Company. The film is making waves because of its
star-studded cast, but its most memorable sequence is the
dance in which Isha sings the Khallas number. If looks could
kill, this Mumbai girl who started out as a model would be
lethal. Tall, beau-tiful, talented, she has transformed her
walk-on role into a sensational experience for moviegoers.
She is no glorified prop, for she takes work very seriously.
Her roles have been sketchy-be it in Fiza, Aamdani Athani
Kharcha Rupaiya or Pyar Ishq Aur Mohabbat. She plays second
fiddle with style, and each shot has her striving for the
best. With her head on her shoulders and feet on the ground,
this twenty-something is ready to take on the industry. Yet,
never in her wildest dreams had she imagined that she would
become an actress. Instead, she had hoped to walk in her
father's footsteps and become a doctor. "I did not get enough
marks to enrol for MBBS," says Isha, who graduated in life
sciences from Ruia College. Modelling assignments trickled in
after she did a photo shoot with Gautam Rajyadhyaksha when
she was still in junior college. "Initially it used to be
just one or two ads a year," she says. Besides some prominent
assignments for Ponds, Camay, Rexona, Synergy, Coke, L'Oreal
and Tips & Toes, she did a few ramp shows. "I did only five
or six ramp shows," she says, "as I used to be plump in those
days." Such candid admissions make her the person she is.
At the Miss India 1995 contest when she won the Miss Talent
crown, there was only one question on her mind. "Indian
beauty contestants who get the opportunity to participate at
international levels wear gha-gara cholis and say namaste.
But why don't they introduce themselves in Hindi, our
national language?" she asks. "Contestants from other coun-tries
speak in their national language, don't they?"
Well, she is candid on camera too. It was this qual-ity in
her which fetched Isha her first film, En Swasa Katre in
Tamil. In her debut role, she was cast opposite Arvind Swamy,
who was at the peak of his fame following the success of Roja
and Bombay. "I was a total newcomer," says Isha. The film got
her rave reviews from the industry pundits in the south, who
predicted that she would be the next Mumbai girl to make it
to the top after Simran.
Her first frays into Bolly-wood were unlucky. Her first film,
Ek Tha Dil Ek Thi Dhadkan, directed by Shah Rukh Sultan in
1997, never saw the light of day. But the actress in her did.
Her second film was with Tamil superstar Prashant. "I have
done over ten films in the south and have worked in all south
Indian languages except Malayalam," says Isha, whose
performance in Tamil film Kaathal Kavithai fetched her the
Filmfare award for the best newcomer in the south in 2000-01.
So why did she return to Bollywood? "I always wanted to be in
Bollywood," she is quick to reply. "Mumbai is my home so
Bollywood is like home ground. It would give me more kicks if
I could make it here. Thank God, the Khallas song has done
wonders for me."
Many people asked why she had done a small role in Fiza. "I
have no godfather," she says, "but I wanted to show my
talent. So I accepted that role and gave it my best." It was
repeat performance in her other two Hindi films.
Ram Gopal Varma signed her on, she says, "after he saw me on
the cover of Just Like That maga-zine." She was offered a
small role. "But ÔRamuji' said that the small role that had
just a few scenes would go unnoticed and that a special
appearance through a song would be better."
Isha believed him. "He has bro-ken the conventional star
casting," she says. "However big the stars are, they do not
look out of place in Company." The star cast includes
Mohanlal, Ajay Devgan, Manisha Koirala and Vivek Oberoi.
Placing full faith in the film-maker, Isha outperformed
herself. "I freaked out while shooting the song," she says.
"I knew if I felt uncomfortable the camera would catch it."
She had never done a hot number before, and her friends were
stunned. "They could not believe it was me," she says. "They
never imagined I would be able to do such a hot and sexy
number. I have not got a single negative reaction about the
song. Nobody has told me that it is vulgar."
Her parents were also supportive. "My father is very cool. In
fact, he is my best boyfriend," she says. "My family is my
biggest asset and my sensitivity is my strength."
Isha loves to make friends, is Net-savvy and does a lot of
chat-ting. "I love dancing but no discos and pubs. I am not a
night person. I start my day early," says Isha, who paints
and makes candles in her free time. She is not much of a
bibliophile, but is at home with self-help books.
If there is something else this Konkani girl loves doing, it
is gorging on her mother's cooking-she is a food freak who
hankers after butter chicken, biryani, seafood and Chinese!
"I can't cook, I just do the eating."
Wonder where she gets the time, considering the number of
films she has on hand, including Sanjay Gupta's multistarrer
Kaante, Plan with Dino Morea, a Harry Baweja venture, and Ram
Gopal Varma's Road. "Ramuji has told me that he would cast me
in a role that suits me," she says. Well, Isha Koppikar has
finally arrived.