Friday, May 29, 2026
27.1 C
New Delhi

Pooja Bhatt clarifies she was not naked in body paint cover

Pooja Bhatt clarifies she was ‘not naked’ in controversial body paint cover inspired by Demi Moore: ‘The idea was never to shock people’

Pooja Bhatt was one of the most outspoken and unconventional voices in Bollywood during the 1990s, often making headlines for her bold choices and candid opinions. Among the most talked-about moments of her career was her body paint magazine cover shoot, inspired by Demi Moore’s famous Vanity Fair cover.Though the image created a storm at the time, Pooja now says the intention behind the shoot was never to invite controversy.In a recent conversation with Vickey Lalwani, the actress looked back on the iconic photoshoot, the public reaction it received and the misconceptions that surrounded it.

‘Demi Moore looked glorious’

Pooja revealed that the idea for the shoot came after journalist Dinesh Raheja introduced her to Demi Moore’s celebrated magazine cover.“I received a lot of flak from one section of people and a lot of love from another. But for me, it was never designed to be controversial,” she said.Recalling the meeting, she added, “Dinesh Raheja, a journalist for whom I still have a great deal of respect, showed me the cover of Vanity Fair featuring Demi Moore. Jeetu and Dinesh came to meet me and said, ‘Pooja, look at this cover.’ I thought it was stunning. Demi Moore looked glorious. They said they wanted to recreate something similar and asked if I would do it. I said, ‘Sure.’ When I asked who would do the body painting, they said Anna Singh would.”

The shoot happened after filming Tere Dar Par Sanam

The actress shared that the photoshoot took place after a long day of shooting for the song Tere Dar Par Sanam from Phir Teri Kahani Yaad Aayee.“I was shooting for the song Tere Dar Par Sanam from Phir Teri Kahani Yaad Aayee. I finished work around 9.30 pm and then went to Jagdish Mali’s house. They painted me and we did the shoot. After that, I completely forgot about it,” she recalled.According to Pooja, the real frenzy began only after the magazine cover was published.“The magazine came out and there was mayhem. But then an unfortunate incident took place in the city. One of the most horrific tragedies happened — the bomb blasts. Naturally, people had far more important things to worry about than a woman who had chosen to paint her body.”

‘We knew exactly where the line was’

Addressing assumptions that she posed nude for the shoot, Pooja clarified that she was not naked in the photograph.“I was not naked in the photograph. In Demi Moore’s case, the cover referred to a ‘birthday suit’, which meant she was naked underneath the paint. I was not. I was wearing underwear because we knew exactly where the line was and we chose not to cross it,” she said.Pooja admitted that the image may have appeared daring for its time but insisted it was never done with the aim of creating outrage.“I suppose it was audacious and unthinkable for many people. But I simply did it because I liked the idea that was presented to me. I trusted the people I was working with and went ahead with it. The idea was never to be controversial. It was just me being my authentic self.”

‘Truth itself has become controversial today’

Reflecting on the enduring legacy of the cover, Pooja said she finds it surprising that people still discuss the image decades later.“Very recently, it was brought up again and people started calling it a cult image. But you can’t create something like that by design. I was simply being my authentic self. The problem is that we are living in a world full of lies, so truth itself has become controversial today.”The memorable photograph was shot for Movie magazine. Designer Anna Singh handled the body painting, while noted photographer Jagdish Mali captured the now-iconic image. Go to Source

Hot this week

‘When I see desis…’: Sabeer Bhatia reacts to Indians doing garba on Vietnam airport tarmac

Hotmail co-founder Sabeer Bhatia reacted to the viral video showing a group of Indian tourists performing ‘Garba’ on an airport tarmac in Vietnam. He said culture is more about behaviour than public display. Read More

Vivek Ramswamy says it never happened after blogger claims Knicks denied him entry to locker room

Vivek Ramaswamy blasted the fake news that he was denied entry to the Knicks locker room and said he did not even wait after his team was crushed. Read More

Eliminating language, culture & faith: Xi’s repression of Uyghurs enters new phase

AI image Nearly a decade after China launched its sweeping crackdown in Xinjiang, rights groups and researchers say Beijing’s campaign against Uyghurs has entered a new phase, one focused less on mass internment camps and more on re Read More

How tomatoes have become the latest symbol of America’s affordability squeeze

Tomato prices in the US have jumped nearly 40 per cent in a year, outpacing most grocery items and becoming a symbol of rising living costs. Read More

US judge blocks Trump administration’s $1.8 billion ‘anti-weaponisation’ fund

A federal judge has temporarily halted the Trump administration’s plan to create a $1. Read More

Topics

‘When I see desis…’: Sabeer Bhatia reacts to Indians doing garba on Vietnam airport tarmac

Hotmail co-founder Sabeer Bhatia reacted to the viral video showing a group of Indian tourists performing ‘Garba’ on an airport tarmac in Vietnam. He said culture is more about behaviour than public display. Read More

Vivek Ramswamy says it never happened after blogger claims Knicks denied him entry to locker room

Vivek Ramaswamy blasted the fake news that he was denied entry to the Knicks locker room and said he did not even wait after his team was crushed. Read More

Eliminating language, culture & faith: Xi’s repression of Uyghurs enters new phase

AI image Nearly a decade after China launched its sweeping crackdown in Xinjiang, rights groups and researchers say Beijing’s campaign against Uyghurs has entered a new phase, one focused less on mass internment camps and more on re Read More

How tomatoes have become the latest symbol of America’s affordability squeeze

Tomato prices in the US have jumped nearly 40 per cent in a year, outpacing most grocery items and becoming a symbol of rising living costs. Read More

US judge blocks Trump administration’s $1.8 billion ‘anti-weaponisation’ fund

A federal judge has temporarily halted the Trump administration’s plan to create a $1. Read More

Trump says making ‘final determination’ on Iran deal as Tehran rejects ‘excessive demands’

Trump said any agreement would require Iran to permanently abandon nuclear weapons ambitions and fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while Tehran accused Washington of making shifting and excessive demands. Read More

Nuclear Curbs, Sanctions, War: What Are The Possible Scenarios If Trump-Iran Deal Is Finalised

US and Iran near 60 day ceasefire extension, Trump to lift naval blockade and reopen Strait of Hormuz, proposed deal would ease some sanctions but deep nuclear disputes remain Go to Source Read More

Should New York Have Free Housing? JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon Has This Advice For Zohran Mamdani

Jamie Dimon said the discussion focused heavily on affordable housing and childcare- two pillars of Zohran Mamdani’s progressive economic agenda. Read More

Related Articles