Bollywood discusses #MeToo in BBC documentary
Film stars such as Radhika Apte and Usha Jadhav have spoken out in a new documentary over their concerns about sexual harassment in the Indian film industry.
In a BBC World News report, Apte and Jadhav are among those who have opened up about the culture of silence in Bollywood.
“Some people are regarded as gods. They are so powerful that people just don’t think that my voice is going to matter, or people think that if I speak, probably my career is going to get ruined,” Apte tells BBC’s Rajini Vaidyanathan in Bollywood’s Dark Secret.
Asked what she thought about the #MeToo campaign in Hollywood, Apte added: “The way the women, and the men of course, came together and decided that as a team we are not going to let this happen, I wish that could happen here.”
Vaidyanathan has also spoken to actresses who have faced unwanted advances, as well as stars who believe a dark secret lies behind Bollywood’s glamour.
Award-winning Marathi actress Jadhav reveals that it is common for powerful men in the industry to demand sexual favours. Describing one conversation, she says that she was told she would need to give something in return for the opportunity she had been given.
“I said something as in ‘what? I don’t have money’. He said ‘no, no, no, no, it’s not about money, it’s [that] you need to sleep with [someone], maybe it can be a producer, maybe it can be a director, it can be both too’,” she said.