Boogie Woogie and Takeshi’s Castle brought to TV in the noughties what it was missing – fresh, simple, unadulterated, and literally un-adult-rated, fun for everyone from eight to 80
R&N TV Productions
At the helm of everything out of the box during the ’90s was Jaaferi, the man who blew our minds with his mad skills. The extent of his legacy spread out to different facets of pop culture. Who can forget Jaaved, the prisoner from the Maggi hot-and-sweet ketchup ads? Or his hilarious running commentary underlined with a tapori inflection in the Hindi version of Takeshi’s Castle? My cousins and I would rush home a little early from tuitions, running through a maze of chawls, taking a shortcut through the back of a butchers shop, dodging the arterial spray of a freshly slaughtered chicken, past a desi bar stepping over a passed out patron, and over a makeshift bridge of ply over a naala, just to catch Takeshi’s Castle reruns at 5 pm. We’d joke about this being practice for when we finally made it to Takeshi’s Castle and have Jaaferi commentate on our antics. Boogie Woogie and Takeshi’s Castle brought to TV in the noughties what it was missing – fresh, simple, unadulterated, and literally un-adult-rated fun for everyone from eight to 80. Back then it was all crash zooms and saas bahu drama à la Ekta Kapoor and Jaaved Jaaferi walked a higher path. There was no put-on persona. The whacky, fun Jaaved Jaaferi you saw IRL was the Jaaved Bhai you saw on screen. I’ve met the man twice briefly. In both these meetings, I could surmise that he had a quiet, confident air that immediately put you at ease, a far cry from the manic energy and coke-tinged nasal twitching of our celebrities. Jaaferi or JJ, as those close to him address him, struck me as a man who’d done his time in the sun, and was now chilling in the shade to avoid sunburn. His extremely accurate knowledge of the importance of the self felt like a refreshing break from the cultish personalities some of his peers command. He knows his strengths and plays to them, chilling until it’s time to shine. It’s a worldview that seems straight out of a verse from “Mumbhai”: “Khane ka peene ka marne ka jeene ka, chalne ka phirne ka uthne ka girne ka, tension nai lene ka, bhai se poochne ka, kasa kai, bara hai, I am Mumbhai”. Happy birthday, Jaaved bhai. Here’s to taking your time in a world that can’t stop screaming, “Apna Time Aayega”.The whacky, fun Jaaved Jaaferi you saw IRL was the Jaaved Bhai you saw on screen.

