For 41 years, he has kept audiences and producers happy. And, surprisingly, it is the superstar's humility and sense of being grounded that best explain his unmatched phenomenon
Rajinikanth’s fans revere him so much that they throng to the theatres before dawn to watch his films and bathe his posters with milk
Image: Fotocorp
Muthuraman cites another incident during the filming of Sivaji The Boss (2007), a high budget film by AVM Productions, directed by S Shankar. During a schedule at AVM Studio in Chennai, all the actors were provided with vanity vans and a high-end one was also arranged for Rajinikanth. “When he came to the set, he headed straight for the make-up room in the studio. When I told him a vanity van had been arranged for him, he said there was no need for it and asked us to return it,” says Muthuraman.
These incidents make him popular with everyone in the film industry. Unlike other stars, he does not move around with an entourage. The only person who accompanies him to a shoot, apart from his driver, is his manager. He does not have a dedicated make-up man and gets it done by the person arranged by the production house on the sets. “He does not ask us to pay for his driver, make-up man, security or his manager,” says Thanu. “Rajini sir himself pays salary to the solitary manager who accompanies him.”
The simplicity stems from his personal life. Says Muthuraman, “In real life, he dresses up simply, eats simple food, at times even at roadside eateries, and drives around in a simple car.” For years, he drove a Fiat and preferred an Ambassador when he was chauffeured around. He then switched to a Honda City and that remained his vehicle for a long time, until recently, when his son-in-law (actor Dhanush) presented him with a BMW.
“He has not forgotten his past,” says VM Sudhakar, who was his senior at the Chennai Film Institute and manages his 50,000-plus fan clubs. Rajinikanth had to work as a bus conductor in the Karnataka State Transport Corporation to make ends meet. When he chose to do a course in acting at the film institute, his friends at the transport corporation gave him the money to buy the application form. And he has not forgotten that. He still goes to Bengaluru, often staying at their homes and continues to be close to his friends from the film institute. “I know him since 1974 and the way he treats me has not changed except that both of us have aged,” says Sudhakar.
Ask Akshay Kumar about that one quality that he likes in Rajinikanth and pat comes the reply, “He is a very, very humble man. People adore him [for that quality].” Balachander too gives us a glimpse of that in the foreword he wrote for the biography of the actor The Name is Rajinikanth by Gayathri Sreekanth. “Although unprecedented adoration and adulation as well as unparalleled popularity and power can go to any other person’s head—and it normally does—it is really amazing that Rajini still has the grace and humility to place all his achievements at the feet of his guru and his God—treating them both the same,” he writes. “So it is not that I discovered Rajinikanth, but what I discovered in Rajinikanth that amazes and pleases me.”
He may have become a huge success, but Balachander recalls in the book, “For, when I call—he still rushes, when I smile—he still blushes; and when I ask him to sit—he still nervously perches on the edge of his chair; when I look into his eyes, I see the same awe, the same reverence, the same respect and gratitude that I have seen and recognised all across these 30-odd years.”
The humility is not restricted to just his guru. “From producers to light boys, he treats everyone with the same respect,” says Muthuraman. “He remembers their names and calls and inquires about their family. These things come naturally to him.” He goes out of the way to make his co-stars comfortable and unlike other stars, he has no qualms about giving them greater space in his films. “Films like Mannan (Emperor, 1992), Padayappa (1999) and Chandramukhi (2005) would not have been massive hits if the leading ladies were not given a prominent role as demanded by the script,” says Thanu.
Rajinikanth, who attributes his success to the grace of God, draws unparalleled devotion from his fans. And it is not just because of his on-screen persona—many other reasons that endear him to them.
In public life, he has been open, never trying to hide things, including his wild life before his marriage; his understated philanthropy—he often gives away money for education, health care and marriages to deserving people. Akshay Kumar calls this ‘his goodness’.
For the movie-crazy people of Tamil Nadu, films are akin to a religion and the stars are seen as demi-gods. And if there is one demi-god who seems to have lived up to the reputation, in their view, it is Rajinikanth.
(This story appears in the 06 January, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)