<script language="javascript"
src="Config?Configid=33166483"></script>

Antonia Minnecola Hussain is yet besotted by her husband of 25
years. Nupur Mahajan gets a rare insight into Zakir Hussain’s marriage
through the eyes of his American bride
Honey-brown hair, crisp burnt
honey gold cotton sari and horn-rimmed honey brown glasses hiding bright blue
eyes. She could have passed of as any one from Zakir Hussain’s mammoth
female following as she sat there with her Handycam zoomed on him.
Antonia Minnecola Hussain, so caught up with her husband’s
performance, and ensuring the right camera angle, did not notice the swaying
make-shift electricity pole. But Zakir did on stage. “Tony watch
out!” he yelled, hands still on the
tabla
, the beat unbroken — but
concern flashing in his eyes, emotion betrayed in the tenor of his voice.
The Years Gone
By
It’s been 30 years since their first meeting in California
— her tryst with his
tabla
ranging back to their days together at the Ali Akbar Foundation in Los Angeles
— and watching her lost to his beats, one would think she’s only
just been introduced to Zakir Hussain’s magic. And that, she confesses, is
one of the secrets of a cross-cultural marriage that is soon going to celebrate
25 years of togetherness.
“It is only when I see our two
grown-up daughters that I believe it will actually be 25 years this
August,” she sighs. “They’ve gone by in a flash, it was just
now that we met, and then we had kids. I can actually turn around and see all
our time together — the time before we had children, the days when I was
learning
Kathak
and he, Ustad
Allahrakha’s son, was mastering his skill. It just seems a kiss
away.”
You don’t need to be a multi-certificated
psychiatrist to see that she is besotted by her man. And though this
wasn’t her type, her regular ‘stars and stripes’
Starting Out
Yorker, he
never fell short of her expectations. “When 17-year-old Zakir landed in
New York, he wasn’t sure of his English,” she recounts what is
obviously a special anecdote between husband and wife.
“Walking up to a local to ask for directions, he first
apologised for his English. The man told Zakir, ‘You speak better English
than most Americans!”’ she preens. Nothing special about the tale.
Nothing but an insight into the respect that Zakir commands from his lovely
wife.
When Tony decided to study under Sitara Devi, Zakir smiled.
“She just lives down the road,” he told her. For Zakir, Sitara Devi
was Abbaji’s contemporary whom he knew since he was a little boy and soon
Tony had found her guru. “I can’t tell you what it meant for me to
learn from Sitara. I was blown away to be learning from a woman with so much
shakti
and history. And this was just a
sample of Zakir’s mindful ways which he yet has.”
Embracing Indian Traditions
An Indian love, born in New York, with schooling in LA, Tony is
today settled in California — but is by choice an Indian. She not only
married Zakir Hussain, she married India. Today when she celebrates
Basant Panchami
and stops by at the
temple, or as she visits Umed Bhavan with her guru Sitara Devi, and even in her
ensuring that both their daughters pick up
Kathak
— she is every bit an
Indian, every bit Abbaji’s
bahu
.
And she doesn’t pitch that to be voted the most compromising American
desi,
she merely attributes it to
Zakir.
“Zakir is part of a great Indian tradition which I have
assimilated. Having a father like Ustad Allahrakha, his responsibilities were
predetermined, but he was always supportive of me and made an effort to include
me into his family. I too, understand where he comes from and how it is
important for him to find himself.”
When prodded, she admits
that this is another of the secrets of their successful marriage.
“Marriage is a constant give and take. Our differences make the bond
stronger; I am as full of a certain culture as he is. And we have managed to
balance it out. But mind you, it’s a little mysterious — what works
for me may not work for you!”
In
Love Forever
But peculiarity is the essence of each relationship.
And in the Zakir-Tony love serenade, Cupid, though he didn’t work at first
sight, has stayed put all this while. “Love at second sight,” laughs
Antonia. “It just happened and trust me, it was easy. Zakir is loveable.
He is so incredibly sweet and what I respect is that his charm isn’t a
façade — it’s natural. I call it God’s gift.”
Ask her what she thinks of him being nicknamed ‘the ladies
man’ and she brushes it off. “It’s just his mild and easygoing
nature. People get drawn to him because of his ability to make them feel good
about themselves. And why point fingers at others? At times even I feel
overwhelmed at being married to such a great artiste. But he’s the man for
me. My man who yet surprises me with the things he does. My man at whom I point
with pride and say, hey that’s my Valentine, my husband of 25
years!”
ANTONIA’S
SECRETS
“Marry the right person. It is so easy to
confuse infatuation with love.”
“Averages be damned, let
every second American be divorced, Antonia doesn’t believe in it.
“Marriage is for life, and to ensure that the appeal endures, make sure
you have separate lives. You just can’t be together every minute. Go visit
your mother, a little separation does good.”
So, on the 28th
of this month, Zakir and Antonia perform together in London. She dances, he
plays. Post which they do their own thing. Till they meet for the big
celebration on August 22, for which there are no plans as yet. Mommy and Daddy
have left it to the girls.