Neha Maheshwri (BOMBAY TIMES; February 21, 2026)

After years of steady perseverance, Anup Soni feels he is finally arriving at a phase he had long been working towards. The journey, he admits, required patience, resilience and the willingness to live with a strong image shaped by his long association with Crime Patrol.

He says, “I never felt the need to break the Crime Patrol image because I didn’t want to appear ungrateful to something that gave me so much love and credibility. When people said the image was very strong, I accepted that for them to envision me in a different light would take time. I was willing to wait and choose the kind of work I genuinely wanted to do. To stay creatively fulfilled during that phase, I returned to theatre, as it doesn’t demand that you live up to a fixed image.”

At this stage, Anup says he feels lighter and more assured, especially as meaningful opportunities are finally coming his way. He says, “There is such a crowd of actors today that only strong work stands out. You have to trust your instinct and choose wisely. I’m happy with the kind of work being offered to me now. It genuinely feels like a payoff for the patience I showed.”

Citing Akshaye Khanna as an example, he adds, “I feel extremely happy watching Akshaye’s journey. I have taught him acting and have done several classes with him. I’ve always admired his clarity of thought. He has experienced the journey of being a leading man, and what he is doing today is truly commendable. He has reached a stage where he is such a credible and dependable actor that you can cast him in any role. That kind of freedom as an actor is wonderful.”

On whether variety remains skewed towards stars, Anup is practical. “Complaining won’t change anything. The star system exists everywhere. My journey is my own, and my focus is simple. I have to keep working and let my performances speak. Sometimes, all it takes is one role that truly lands. There’s nothing more fulfilling than earning work through good work, and I finally feel I’m seeing the results of that patience now,” he says.