Anwar Solangi – State of the Pakistani Artist
March 28, 2008
Well-known TV and Radio artiste Anwar Solangi, known popularly as Makno Khan after one of the characters he portrayed in Urdu serial Deewarain, passed away yesterday in Civil Hospital Karachi after a prolonged illness at the age of 64. Despite having worked in over 500 TV plays, 1200 radio programs and over a dozen Sindhi films, Anwar Solangi enjoyed neither the fame nor fortune that actors with such a portfolio are able to achieve in other countries. On the contrary, Solangi lived almost hand to mouth in a rented house, supported by small payments made to him whenever he could find some work.
Being very bitter about the system and the lack of acknowledgement for artists in the country, Solangi once admitted that he would never have ventured into acting had he known beforehand how artists are treated in Pakistan. In an interview in 2002 he had said, ” I run from pillar to post each month when my telephone connection is terminated for non-payment of bill. With 5000 or so rupees of cash per episode, I have to keep focusing on how to keep my bills cleared and my stomach full. I live from episode to episode for a livelihood in the most basic sense.”
Once, having received an award for best actor of Sindhi dramas, he had said, “An award is the biggest form of appreciation for an actor and all I received with this award was a total of 4500 rupees with 500 deducted as tax. The award is sitting in my drawing room. I can’t eat it. Don’t artistes have a right to a normal life? I have given this field my best. My youth, my energy, my devotion. And what have I received in return? Regrets, bitterness and poverty.”
Solangi’s example speaks volumes of the state of performing arts and artists in the country. Despite the mushrooming of TV channels in the country, many artists are not able to make ends meet. Some private channels do pay well, however by far the majority of channels, including PTV and especially regional or non-Urdu language channels simply are either unwilling or unable to compensate actors in line with their talent, time and efforts. Most artists therefore either act as a part-time profession or as a hobby – it is becoming rarer and rarer to find full-time actors.
If cricketers can be paid millions of additional rupees and other ’gifts’ for winning matches, surely our actors and artists can also be paid in line with their talents. It is high time that the Ministry of Culture, Sports & Tourism, under whose jurisdiction this falls, revisits and regulates the dismal wage, employment and royalties structure of TV and Radio actors in Pakistan.
Anwar Solangi will probably not be the last artist to die in poverty and bitterness, but may his death mark the beginning of change.
Entry Filed under: actors, art, culture. Tags: actors, anwar solangi, art, culture.
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muneeba | April 10, 2008 at 2:05 pm
Aruna, I’ve heard that the showbusiness folks in India also have several sad stories like Solangi’s. I remember once watching an interview on Zee TV (loooooong ago) with this old music composer-cum-character actor (can’t remember his name now, but he was in the movie Zanjeer). It was pretty much the same with him. He was doing alright while he was young & still getting work, BUT once the jobs stopped coming & the money ran out, these ppl often don’t have anything to fall back on. The idea of “investing” their money when they have it was a foreign concept for many ppl back in those days – not all actors came from an educated background. So at one point they may have seen the fruits of their 5 mins of fame, but it was only fleeting. And showbusiness is a fickle business – out of sight means out of mind.
2.
arunahussain | April 10, 2008 at 7:08 pm
Muneebs, I agree with you and perhaps that is how it is for most actors in the sub-continent, but as I was saying to someone the other day, more needs to be done in this part of the world for such people. It is not just true for actors – some years ago I remember seeing a short documentary on one of our boxers who won a medal at the Olympics – the guy had sold his medals and cups etc off for peanuts so he could get himself a meal! One cant help but feel totally appalled at times.