Working across mediums doesn’t take away from my stardom, it elevates it-Prosenjit Chatterjee
8:18 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
The actor, who made his web debut with Jubilee, talks about experimenting with various mediums, his long, successful career in films and more...
Madhureeta Mukherjee (BOMBAY TIMES; July 2, 2023)
Superstar of Bengali cinema, Prosenjit Chatterjee, recently made a remarkable debut on OTT with Jubilee. The actor, who has reigned in his industry for over three decades, as a leading commercial star and has also shown his acting prowess in parallel cinema – which is rare, says that even today, he feels like a frontbencher on set. And in his words, Prosenjit says, “I am ready to take on any challenge to do different kinds of roles, such is my hunger as an actor.” In a conversation with us, he talks about how he lives and breathes cinema.
You recently made a remarkable web debut with the show Jubilee and followed it up with Scoop. Prior to this, in the Bollywood space, you were seen in Shanghai. As a superstar in Bengali cinema, didn’t you want to explore more roles in Hindi cinema, or was the work that was offered to you here not creatively exciting?
After my debut film in Hindi (David Dhawan’s Aandhiyan), while I was shooting in Mumbai for a Bengali film, Pahlaj Nihalini told me, ‘You are a big star, chalo film karte hai.’ I did some more films here, but I never planned or structured my career in Bollywood. I was a rockstar in mainstream Bengali cinema. I had 22 releases in one year. I felt that I was not alone and that I was taking an industry along with me. In Bengal, people would say that I was number 1 and 2, 3, 4, in mainstream cinema. I wasn’t sure that if had come here (Bollywood), I would have become Shah Rukh Khan. If I had taken that chance, I probably wouldn’t have done justice to the filmmakers in Bengali cinema, as they were the ones who believed in me and made me a star. Today, I can do that because I don’t have those challenges. My intent is to get one new audience every day. I like the fact that my audience cuts across generations. I love to work with new directors. Yes, I am a star, but I broke that image for my films. OTT is the future, and all the big actors are doing it. I don’t think working in different mediums takes away from my stardom, it elevates it.
You made a shift from mainstream to middle-of-the-road Bengali cinema at some point, was that well thought through?
Yes, it was planned. I knew back then that the language of cinema would change. Even before I did Srijit Mukherji’s Autograph, I saw the growth of multiplexes. Every ten years, in our cinema, there has to be a shift in the audiences’ tastes. In my own way, I have observed and studied the change that is going to happen. For over 30 years, I have been a mainstream commercial actor, and I am grateful that this is not my area now. I had created a record of sorts—where I was shooting in my own city (Kolkata) for 19 days at a stretch but didn’t go home for 19 days. Back then, there were no vanity vans, so I would sleep in my car. Now I tell the younger actors, ‘Abhi aap log isko aage le jao (laughs!)’. I am enjoying what I am doing now.
But you do believe that commercial cinema needs to thrive, right?
Yes, absolutely! It has to survive, but we have to do it differently. What is commercial cinema – one that will be watched by people in large numbers? But why do we think that the audience will not understand good cinema – whether it’s commercial or not? We are underestimating the audience. Rituparno Ghosh would tell me that he cast me in Chokher Bali, as he, too, wanted to cross that border. So, I feel I need to support this kind of cinema (middle-of-the-road). Chokher Bali that was made 20 years ago, was a pan-India film, but at that time, no one would talk about it. We didn’t do it for business, today, it is a business model.
Bengal has given us so many iconic filmmakers and actors, what do you think the Bengali film industry needs to do to expand the reach of their cinema and get their footprint pan-India?
Cinema of every language has its own strength, and we need to tap that. Bengali cinema won’t be able to do a Baahubali or an RRR right now, and it’s not because of the budget. Bangla’s strength lies in its literature. We need to make subjects that stem from there and resonate across audiences. Why did I like Kantara? It’s because it struck a chord as it spoke about something close to their culture, which I wasn’t aware of. We need to give the larger audience those subjects that are close to our culture. I would love to do South films and Marathi films. The Marathi film industry has such great actors and directors.
Is your son Mishuk showing a keen interest in becoming an actor?
He is a big fan of Shah Rukh Khan and Bengali actor Dev. He’s a good footballer, and now he’s turned 18 and I feel ki usko actor banna hai. I have told him that I will help him prepare and guide him as I know what a commercial actor needs to do and be. But then, mein usko market mein chhod doonga. I have told him that I am not going to launch him, even I wasn’t launched by anyone. His journey has to be his.
This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under
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