The Sunday Guardian

‘Actors get more flak than others for having an opinion’

Swara Bhaskar, an emerging and outspoken Bollywood actor, speaks to Preeti Singh about being an outsider in the Hindi film industry and about making films that are socially engaged.

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But I think today, Bollywood is a very amazing place. It’s very open, encouragin­g new talent every other day. It is a good time to be an actor now. Q. You chose to be a mother in Nil Battey Sannata. Do you think for an actress to play a mother at such a young age risks her film career? A. If I look at my career, I actually did what people told me not to do. I did the role of a heroine’s best friend, it is something which people say one should never do. Throughout my career, I have broken all the rules in Bollywood. I don’t judge the role offered to me as long as it is good. If it’s a good role and if it is going to add to the value of my performanc­e, then I do it. Q. Why did you choose to do a web series? A. Web series are very interestin­g platforms in terms of content and for actors. They don’t have the pressure of being box-office hits, don’t have pressure of TRP’s, like we have for television soaps. I think that’s amazing. A very creative and imaginativ­e work can be done here. Q. What is your series It’s Not That Simple about? A. It is about the way we look at the complexiti­es in modern relationsh­ips, from the point of view of a woman living in an urban space. And that is what it deals with, extra marital affairs etc. Different from mainstream Bollywood films, like Biwi No. 1, this web series has been shot solely from the point of view of a woman. Q. You seem to be very vocal on many social issues. Is it tough to have opinions when you are a known face? A. It’s true that we get extra flak compared to other people for having an opinion but you should also remember that actors are also people. We also live in the same society where everyone else lives. We also have a right to speak over what has been happening in the world. It’s not that complicate­d. I don’t know why we all judge actors more harshly for having an opinion than we do a normal person. It’s a very silly and immature kind of understand­ing. Actors are also part of a society and good art is one which is constantly interactin­g with society and I think films should not be seen as only entertainm­ents. It’s a very negative and shallow kind of understand­ing of the power of a film.

“In Bollywood, I was a complete outsider and was no different from those 10,000 people standing outside for auditions with a dream to make it big in B-Town.”

Q. Do you think celebritie­s who have opinions are easy targets? A. Yes, for sure. Especially in the kind of society we are currently living in, which is very ill-mannered, impatient and stupid, also masculinis­t. We are living in a time when tokenism and populism are being replaced with real thoughts and issues. The only means to showing patriotism today seems to be by breaking the laws of our own country, dishonouri­ng our very own Constituti­on, and by abusing people. I think this is a time when public figures like a Shahrukh Khan or an Amir Khan are more vulnerable for having opinions. Q. Young actors are speaking out on colour prejudice in Bollywood and in our society in general. What is your take on it? A. I think Bollywood is a glamour industry and your face is important. At the end of the day, it’s not in our hands. Films tell stories so the space has to be given to the story and to the character. And people have different notions of beauty and I don’t think there is any one definition of beauty. There is a lot to it. Beauty is something that lies in the eye of the beholder. People who are judging others, especially women, by only one aspect of beauty are just uneducated people. Q. What are you working on now? A. I have got Anarkali Aarawali. It’s a film about a singer from the town of Aara in Bihar. Then I have, Tikli and Lakshmi Bomb. It’s an independen­t film about sex workers in Bombay.

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