There was a time I wanted to die
Tells Vidya Malvade in an exclusive rendezvous to Lipika Varma.

Talking about her slow-paced filmy
career she says, “Yeah! But there are so many other things for me to
do. I cannot help if luck has not supported me on my professional
front. You never know what is in store ahead.”
Saying time is a great heeler she
philosophises, “My parents and sisters were my biggest support during
that time. People said time heals and I would wonder if they are mad.
But eventually time has definitely moved on and, when I look back, I
feel that I never knew I was capable of so much happiness. My second
hubby loves me crazily.”
She does not want to lose touch with
her family. “In today’s fast paced world it is the relationship with
your folks that keeps you going, you can cry on their shoulders
whenever you face problems. They are the ones who come to your help.
Always. I make it a point to meet my sisters, both of whom are in the
US, at least once a year. There’s so much violence these days that you
never know what will happen to your loved ones,” says Vidya.
Turning philosophical again, she says,
“So many types of people and tragedies. It doesn’t take a fraction of a
second for them to kill someone for no reason. I know how it is to lose
a loved one, it took me years to come out of it and I was shattered. I
look at my parents and the shock and pain on their faces. Today, when I
see them happy I feel so much proud. Dad is not keeping well and I get
him the best treatment. I want him to be with me always. I know the
pains and anguish of separation from your beloved.”
Vidya’s first husband Capt Arvind Singh
Bagga died in 2000 after his plane collided with a building in Patna.
Vidya, who believes in the phrase ‘there is always a second chance’,
moved on and married Sanjay Dayma, associate director to Ashutosh
Gowariker, in 2009.
All praises for her current mother-in
law she says, “My mom-in-law is very sweet and she loves watching all
the ‘saas-bahu’ sagas. She is very forward in her thinking. I am
allowed to dress the way I wish to. I love wearing Indian clothes, so
during festivals I wear them. My mom-in-law says ‘if she makes my son
happy I will take her’. She feels happy when her friends praise me. I
have learnt how to make ‘daal bati’, ‘churma’, ‘ker sangri ki sabzi’
and ‘daal dhokli’ from her.”
The actress adds, “It is said that the
way to a man’s heart is through his stomach. I have realised that I
cook well. Sanjay is a foodie and eats whatever I cook. I cook
‘biryani’, pastas and a lot of Indian and continental dishes. I watch
cookery shows on TV and love everything from shepherds’ pie to pudding.”
Talking about the obvious glow on her
face, the actress who played the role of the captain of the Indian
hockey team in the 2007 movie, says she is enjoying marital bliss for
now. “You can see the happiness on my face, can’t you? Married to
Sanjay, I feel I have found happiness once again. Our lives are in the
hands of the almighty. He who looks after us has both happiness and
sadness in store for us,” concludes Vidya.
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