Hollywood's Hero
(Outlook | December 1, 1997)
There's a new hero in Hollywood: Tibet's Dalai Lama. Celebrated
director Jean-Jacques Annaud's Seven Years in Tibet has Brad Pitt
playing Heinrich Harrer, a superstar Austrian mountain-climber and
Nazi poster boy who's humanised while tutoring the preteen Dalai
Lama in Tibet in the '40s and '50s. For an authentic touch, the film
has Dalai Lama's sister Jetsun Pema playing the role of their mother
Amala. Then there's Martin Scorsese's Kundun, scheduled to open on
Christmas day. It narrates the tale of the Dalai Lama more or less
through his own eyes, from his recognition as reincarnated Buddha
of Compassion at age two to his escape to India at 24. The third is
the film Red Corner that stars one of Dalai Lama's most prominent
Hollywood friends Richard Gere who visits Dharamsala at least twice
a year. Gere plays an American lawyer caught up in a frame-up in
China, with the Chinese being portrayed as brutal and corrupt.
Support indeed from the Hollywood Establishment. Coupled with
efforts of celeb Buddha Boosters like Steven Seagal who was hailed
in February as the reincarnated Tulku of the Nyingma lineage of
Tibetan Buddhism. Adam Yauch, singer with punk-rap group Beastie
Boys, organises Tibetan Freedom Concerts. Megastar Richard Gere
recently published a book of photographs featuring Buddhist holy
places. So serious is his commitment to the Dalai Lama that he hosted
a "stateless dinner" on behalf of Tibet, the evening the White House
hosted a state dinner for Chinese President Jiang Zemin last month.
So does the Dalai Lama feel like a pop guru to fickle Hollywood?
"As a Buddhist I don't differentiate between a president, a Hollywood
movie star and a beggar. What matters is people's humanism," says
he. Only time will tell whether Hollywood's newly-discovered love
for His Holiness is reel life or real life.
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