
Sathya Saran profiles the rise of Aishwarya Rai
I knew
Aishwarya before I really knew her. Knew her as a Miss India certainly. As a
model incarnate. As one hell of a pretty girl, who came alive in front of the
camera and wowed the senses.
I hadn’t met her then, of course.
I saw her first in the Pepsi ad and told myself, hmm, maybe there’s
something more to this girl than all the talk. Make-up men, photographers, hair
stylists cannot all be wrong, I thought — as I sent the first feelers out
to her to send in her entry for the Femina Miss India Contest.
The
year was 1993.
She would, she wouldn’t. She wanted to, she
didn’t. Her parents were not keen; she did not feel
prepared.
The rumours floated in thick, the feedback came from
everyone who professed to know her - meanwhile, a host of other entrants backed
down and almost pulled out their entry forms, when they heard she was a possible
contender.
Then in 1994, Aishwarya sent in her entry. The rest is her
story as history.
She walked away with the preliminary titles, made
Goa sizzle in the midst of January. Her contenders were reduced to shadows even
as she walked the ramp. And then, she won, not the title she had wanted —
the Femina Miss Universe title — but the one that qualified her for
competing at Miss World.
Come May, Sushmita Sen won the Miss Universe
title. And giving all the doubting Thomases the lie, Ash went on to win Miss
World 1994 just five months later, in October, thus staking her claim to be
without any doubt, the world’s most beautiful woman.
A star
every bit of the way, every Indian male’s dream woman, and every Bollywood
producer’s dream heroine... Subhash Ghai’s offer already a given,
Aishwarya was the cynosure of all eyes. But film offers notwithstanding, Ash
remained steadfast to her commitment to Miss World Inc. And spent her reign
dazzling the underprivileged, the sick, the orphans and the needy as much with
her cognac eyes and warm smile as with the sparkle of the gems in her turquoise
and aquamarine crown.
Internationally, she wowed talent scouts with
her level headedness and chutzpah — and there was no hesitation in
Longines signing her on and placing her on par with the legendary Audrey Hepburn
as a symbol of elegance. It was the first of the many statements that would go
towards the building up of a very real woman, a very real icon.
But
ever so quickly, the year was gone. Aishwarya Rai, Miss World 1994, had to
become good old Ash again. The ball was over, the crown had been handed back,
and even as she stood on stage, crowning another Miss World, as she had crowned
another Femina Miss India, her world must have seemed to turn from being
many-splendoured to sepia.
I
wondered what she would do next