“They seem very, very curious. But curious only about one person—Passi,” says an exasperated Riddhima Kapoor Sahni in one of the many zinger-packed promos from the upcoming Fabulous Lives Vs Bollywood Wives. The third season of what started as The Fabulous Lives of Bollywood Wives now includes three of Delhi’s affluent microcelebrities along with the original Mumbai cast. The new edition follows these sometimes frenemies from two very different cities as they go about life, games, opinions, histrionics, and a solid dose of mudslinging. It’s the sort of reality TV binge that is likely to reach the top of Netflix’s charts within days of its release on October 18.
The standout of this season is Shalini Passi. The grande dame of the Delhi art scene, we’re used to seeing her swanning in and out of exhibits, galas, and parties in custom couture or the latest from the runways. Clashing Pucci prints, exaggerated McQueen shoulders, general Dolce extravagance, or monogrammed Dior—she’ll be the first to tell you that she styles and shops herself, and all her looks come from her personal collection. Over the years, Passi’s played the patron, the collector, the hostess, the fashionista, the philanthropist, the artist, the photographer, and now the social media star (1M and counting on Instagram).
Her museum-like Golf Links home in Delhi is as extra as her wardrobe—here, 17th- and 18th-century antiques from Italy and China go hand in hand with the welded nickel and steel Murmuration Bench by Johnny Swing, Puppy vases by Jeff Koons, and candelabras from Tom Dixon. There is art by every modern Indian master, from MF Husain to SH Raza, and leading contemporaries such as Subodh Gupta, Jitish Kallat, Bharti Kher, and Anish Kapoor. Passi’s connection with art is so deep that even her almost decade-old dog, Boston, cannot disassociate from this world. In 2019, the pug sported a gold and emerald necklace as the star of a performance piece by artist Mithu Sen.
Anyone living in the capital is not new to ostentatious displays of wealth, but Passi, despite every visible trapping of the Rich Delhi Girl, still manages a vague sense of mystique. She doesn’t quite fit into the usual clipped-accented, Chanel-clad Delhi housewife-collector mould, and she’s wildly unpredictable. In 2013, she shaved her head and insisted on only wearing black or white, right after her son Robin left for university (she now calls it her turning point into “becoming an aesthete”). These days, the colours, couture, and waist-length hair, are back. Tall and statuesque with deliberate movements, Passi is unmissable in a crowd. She might seem a Fitzgeraldian invention, but her surreal life is very real.