Millennium Post

‘BEEN THROUGH HICCUPS PERSONALLY PROFESSION­ALLY’

Rani Mukerji is making her comeback to the silver screen after four years with ‘Hichki’, in which the actor is playing the role of Naina Mathur - a character who suffers from speech difficulty

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NEW DELHI: “What is life without a few hiccups” – the tagline of the upcoming film Hichki resonates with the ideology of the film’s lead actor Rani Mukerji.

Hichki, meaning a hiccup, is about Naina who suffers from a speech difficulty. It is about turning disadvanta­ges into opportunit­ies and staring down at challenges and ultimately winning over them.

Asked if she has faced any hiccups in her two-decade career, Rani said, “Yes, of course. I think hiccup is a normal process for any actor, for any person in their life. Sometimes you have a hiccup in your personal life and sometimes in your profession­al life. “The beauty of a hiccup is that you can get over it as well. It’s not like that you have a hiccup and you keep hiccuping all your life... There have been times profession­ally and personally I have been through hiccups.”

Without elucidatin­g on the hurdles she has faced, Rani said hiccups can be a learning experience.

“We can learn how do we get out of it and how do we come out stronger.” The actor is making her comeback to the silver screen after four years with the Siddharth P Malhotra directoria­l, which is produced by Maneesh Sharma for Yash Raj Films (YRF), and is releasing on February 23.

This is not the first time Rani will be playing a character with a disability. In 2005, the actor portrayed Michelle Mcnally, a visually and hearing impaired woman in Black. In Hichki, she plays Naina Mathur, a character with the Tourette syndrome – a condition that forces an individual to make involuntar­y repetitive movements or sounds.

“I think every role is difficult because for every role, I am trying to take Rani Mukerji out and put the character in it. So, whether it is Naina, Michelle or Babli (of ‘Bunty Aur Babli’), the role has to be distinct from each other. They can’t be the same. I have to put in a lot of thought in every particular character,” said Rani. She says a lot of research work goes behind playing a character with special needs.

“When you do special roles like this, there is certain amount of research or work behind it because you have to get it right,” she said.

“When as an actor, we decide to do a role, it is very important to immerse ourselves and believe that we are one of them. And this is what I have done in my career where I have always tried to understand the aspects of the people who are going through a particular syndrome or a weakness and how are the people around them getting affected,” Rani added.

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