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‘Kishore would sing to anybody’s tune but not the government’s’

He snubbed Sanjay Gandhi, and cared less about repercussions. A just-released biography looks back at the life and times of veteran singer-actor Kishore Kumar, whose impertinence was as legendary as his music

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Pic/Wikimedia Commons; (right) Sanjay Gandhi with his mother, Indira Gandhi during the Assam session of the All India Congress Committee, November 19, 1976. Pic/Getty Images

Pic/Wikimedia Commons; (right) Sanjay Gandhi with his mother, Indira Gandhi during the Assam session of the All India Congress Committee, November 19, 1976. Pic/Getty Images

It was around January 1976. Geeton Bhari Shaam was Sanjay’s brainchild, and it was decided to rope in film celebrities to do films for television eulogising the Twenty Point Programme. The session was to be the antidote for a nation engulfed in despondency. And who better to lift them from the despair than Kishore, by now the authority on live shows?  

He wanted Kishore to sing jingles in praise of the government and its schemes. “Wanted” would be a wrong choice of word for Sanjay of those days. It was more of a demand than an appeal. Kishore was basking in the glory of a Filmfare Award, his first in six years, when the trunk call came from Delhi. Not known to pick up phone calls directly, Kishore had made an exception that day.  

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