Updated On: 12 May, 2024 06:56 AM IST | Mumbai | Paromita Vohra
They shape each other like dreams and waking, music and lyrics, sexual desire and ‘respectable’ society, tawaifs and Hindi cinema

Illustration/Uday Mohite
No one can blame us for thinking Sanjay Leela Bhansali made Heeramandi primarily to troll historians. Debates around the show have followed a familiar binary. Despair at its lack of relationship to reality versus contempt at the expectation of reality from a director devoted to artifice and fantasy. Neither is wrong, but neither feel right enough. Fantasy and reality do not exist at a chaste distance. They shape each other like dreams and waking, music and lyrics, sexual desire and ‘respectable’ society, tawaifs and Hindi cinema.
If we see Heeramandi in the continuum of recent Hindi cinema, so preoccupied with sex, gender and nationhood, its ambitions become piquant.