Millennium Post

NOBODY DESERVES TO FEEL UNSAFE AT WORK: SONAKSHI

-

NEW DELHI: There’s a lot being said about creating a safe work culture for women. Actor Sonakshi Sinha has also added her voice in agreement to it, saying that a shift in workplace culture is needed. The entertainm­ent industry – be it Hollywood or Bollywood – is having its moment of reckoning in the wake of sexual abuse reports coming in from all quarters. Sonakshi is glad that women are speaking up, but feels the debate should have started “long back”.

“I think it’s very important and this stir should have been made long back. Nobody deserves to be made to feel unsafe, especially while working. It should be something to look forward to. I am glad women are finally speaking out,” Sonakshi said.

It all started with numerous women coming forward to allege that Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein used his position to harass them. Since then, many have come out in the open to talk about sexual advances from big names like Kevin Spacey, James Toback, Ben Affleck, Brett Ratner and Dustin Hoffman.

Back home, comedienne Mallika Dua stirred up the debate by hitting out at Bollywood star Akshay Kumar for “Aap bell bajao, main aap ko bajata hun” (You ring the bell, I will bang you) remark during the shooting of a TV show.

Profession­ally, Sonakshi – daughter of actor-turned-politician Shatrughan Sinha and Poonam Sinha – didn’t have it easy in the entertainm­ent world considerin­g how she was body-shamed, and even faced some setbacks at the box office.

After making a successful debut with Dabangg, she gave out hits like Rowdy Rathore, Lootera and Holiday: A Soldier Is Never Off Duty.

But films like Tevar, Akira and Noor went unnoticed. She is back on the silver screen with murder-mystery Ittefaq. Sonakshi says failure doesn’t scare her.

“My priority has always been to be happy. Whether it’s with my work or my life at home, it is important to be happy from within to make others happy. I try to be as positive so that it reflects on my work as well,” she said, and added that she believes “failure teaches a person a lot more than success does. Nothing ever stops at failure. It’s always followed by success because of the lessons it taught you,” said the 30-year-old. Just like her onscreen avatar, Sonakshi is ‘dabangg’ (fearless) in her real life too. “I try and be as real as I can and I guess people appreciate that, so no I am not scared. I am who I am, this is me... Take it or leave it.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India