Zeenat Aman opens up about leaving her mother heartbroken when she eloped to marry her husband Mazhar Khan | Hindi Movie News

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Veteran actress Zeenat Aman, who has been hitting headlines for encouraging youths to opt for live-in relationships, has now opened up about how her decision to elope and marry her husband Mazhar Khan had initially caused heartache for her mother. However, the arrival of her first son, who shares a birthday with her mother, brought renewed joy and connection.
She took to Instagram to share old pictures of her parents and recalled her mother’s resilience and determination after her separation from her father in the 1950s. Despite challenges, her mother embraced independence, becoming a successful working woman and ensuring Aman’s education at prestigious boarding schools.
She wrote, “Every Sunday, a dedicated well-wisher sends me old photographs from their archive. Zeenat Aman memorabilia if you please. This Sunday he sent me these two images of my mother, pictured respectively with my father Amanullah Khan and my German stepfather Uncle Heinz.
There has been no more extraordinary woman in the world than my Ma. She was my safe harbour. She was a woman ahead of the curve. She was gracious, beautiful and whip smart.

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After she and my father separated in the 50s, she taught herself business and became a working woman. She sent me to the best of boarding schools and never missed a visit, whence she would come laden with parcels of tuck. When I made up my mind to pursue a career in acting, she gave up her own work to be my manager. She negotiated my contracts, invested my earnings, packed my tiffins, ran my lines, inspired my style, and bolstered my confidence to the nth degree. All this while maintaining her own exciting social life within the expat community in Mumbai.

Mummy never thought any man was worthy of me ( she was onto something there), and it was the only matter that we ever locked horns on. Even then, if I were ever low, I would crawl into her bed in our apartment off Nepean Sea Road, lay by her side and hold her hand. No words would be spoken, but my turmoil would settle and I would feel secure.
It’s true that I broke her heart a little when I eloped, but it mended with the birth of my first son, who shares a birthday with her.

When ma died in 1995, I felt as though a veil of protection was snatched off my shoulders. These pictures are all the more precious to me now that I can only return to her safe harbour in my memories.”

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