If the hype is anywhere close to accurate, the royal wedding will seem like a staid little gathering, the Cannes Film Festival a lacklustre photo op, once the International Indian Film Academy awards come to Toronto this week with a show full of ecstatic, gyrating Bollywood song and dance.
Pearson Airport could be shut down by frenetic fans, some worry, if word gets out when exactly the flights carrying Bollywood’s biggest stars are scheduled to arrive. Downtown, much of the Royal York will be cordoned off and occupied by the superstars and their press events.
Being held for the first time in North America, the 12-year-old IIFA awards exist entirely to promote Bollywood internationally, even if some in Toronto may not know their Priyanka Chopra
The Ontario government has cottoned on though. To bring the event to Toronto, it bid $12-million to host the awards, in the hopes of getting back that sum many times over in publicity for the city and the province.
“The IIFA weekend and awards is about exposure for Ontario, it’s about strengthening business ties and increasing tourism,” said Mukunthan Paramalingham
The ministry had been in discussions with IIFA’s Mumbai-based organizers, Wizcraft, since 2007 when Ontario representatives first attended the awards show, held that year in Yorkshire, England. The bidding process culminated in 2009 with an announcement made during Premier Dalton McGuinty’s visit to India that Toronto would host IIFA in 2011.
The awards weekend, which kicks off with a major press conference and the premiere of the highly commercial comedy
Among the 22,000 seats for the awards show, only 16,000 were available to the public. The rest are going to guests, sponsors and affiliated groups – in other words, come for the business meetings, stay for the show. It’s a strong enticement. The 16,000 public tickets, for instance, were sold in two blocks. Each sold out in five minutes flat.
“The reality is that we have always wanted to get to North America to showcase India’s cinema skills to Hollywood and right in the heart of Western cinema,” said Sabbas Joseph
Mr. Joseph said that this will be the biggest IIFA awards yet. Seven hundred media people from around the world are accredited, which ranks fairly close to the 1,100 journalists typically accredited for TIFF. The worldwide television audience watching the awards show will see a 3½-minute segment touting Ontario early in the broadcast.
