Indian family installs Amitabh Bachchan’s statue at New Jersey home; it costs them over Rs 60 lakh

The ceremony was accompanied by bursting of fire-crackers and impromptu dance by a fan club of the Indian superstar

Washington: An Indian-American family has installed a life-size statue of Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan at their home in the Edison City of New Jersey, a PTI report in The Tribune, Chandigarh, says.

Some 600 people gathered outside the house of Rinku and Gopi Seth in Edison, often called Little India for being home to a significantly large Indian-American population, when the statue was formally unveiled by eminent community leader Albert Jasani.

The status is placed inside a large glass box.

The ceremony was accompanied with fire-crackers and impromptu dance by a fan club of the Indian superstar.

“He is nothing less than a god to me and my wife,” Gopi Seth, who is an internet security engineer, told PTI.

“The biggest thing that inspires me about him is not only his reel life, but also the real life … how he manages himself in public, how he conveys and communicates …everything you know. He is very down to earth. He takes care of his fans. He is not like so many other stars. This is why I thought I should have his statue outside my house,” Seth said.

Seth, who arrived in the US from Dahod in eastern Gujarat in 1990, has been running www.BigBEFamily.com, a website for “Big B Extended Family”, for the past three decades.

The website, among other things, he said is a repository of the global fans of Amitabh Bachchan. The database is shared with the 79-year-old Bollywood superstar.

According to Seth, Bachchan is aware about the statue.

Seth said the superstar told him he does not deserve this kind of treatment, but did not stop him from doing so.

The life size statue in which shows Bachchan seated in his “Kaun Banega Carorpati” mode was especially designed and made in Rajasthan and then shipped to the United States. The entire project, Seth said, cost him more than US$ 75,000 (about Rs 60 lakhs).

Seth said he first met “his god” during Navaratri celebrations in New Jersey in 1991.

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