Showing posts with label Nautanki Saala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nautanki Saala. Show all posts

Every time, I think I will start developing a film after finishing the series but that doesn’t happen-Rohan Sippy


Even as he is toying with film ideas, Duranga 2 director Sippy says helming back-to-back series has left him with no time to make features
Priyanka Sharma (MID-DAY; October 17, 2023)

In Rohan Sippy’s head, the ending of Duranga’s first season is an interval point, and a gripping one at that. The Gulshan Devaiah and Drashti Dhami-led crime drama ended by revealing the true identity of Amit Sadh’s character. When Sippy was approached to helm the second instalment, he knew it would be an exciting starting point.

“The writing was so clever, with Amit Sadh waking up as the real Samit Patel at the end of the first season. I saw that as the right scene for an interval point of a film. So, there is a great promise of a second half,” he says.

The opportunity to reconnect with an old collaborator was another highlight for the director. “I worked with Gulshan in Dum Maaro Dum 12 years ago. More than their work, I am drawn to people’s nature, and Gulshan is a lovely person. He has built an [admirable] repertoire.”

In the past few years, Sippy seamlessly shifted to digital entertainment, helming The Office, Criminal Justice, and Aranyak. It has left the director, whose last film offering was Nautanki Saala (2013), with little time to focus on features. But he is not complaining.

“I’ve got so many fun opportunities in OTT in the last two years that before I know, six months to a year go by in making a show. Every time, I think I will start developing a film after finishing the series in hand. But that doesn’t happen,” he smiles, adding that he is toying with a few movie ideas.

With theatres back to their old glory, larger-than-life spectacles have worked wonders at the box office, as have sequels—from Gadar 2: The Katha Continues to Fukrey 3. Would he like to make a sequel to any of his films?  “Taxi No 9211 [2006] would be fun to reimagine. Its themes are good to revisit 15 years later. But I haven’t thought of it actively.”

I think I own the quirky film genre-Ayushmann Khurrana


Madhureeta Mukherjee (BOMBAY TIMES; April 3, 2018)

He’s a many-sided man. Showing off his acting chops on celluloid is only one part of it. Ayushmann Khurrana is a singer, composer, poet and now he’s found new love in shayari, too. He believes that if he only pursues acting, he will “get lost somewhere,” and this is where his strong sense of security stems from. The fact that he can tap in to his variety of talent, gives him that edge of confidence. Slowly but surely, he nestled himself in the showbiz game, where fate is fickle, but talent is lauded. He went through the grind, but he found his groove. And last year, he had an impressive run at the BO with films like Bareilly Ki Barfi and Shubh Mangal Saavdhan. His upcoming Junglee Pictures’ and Chrome Pictures’ Badhaai Ho, is another film that’s driven totally by an innovative concept. In a free-flowing chat with BT, he talks to us about his take on life and acting, confesses that he’s never followed advice doled out to him on ‘how to behave like a star’ and how he’s never lost touch with reality. Read on...

You started working at the age of 17 on reality shows on TV, then you went on to become a VJ, anchor et al. Was it all a means to make it to the silver screen?
I always knew that I wanted to be actor. I started working when I was 17, but I was participating in reality shows, so I didn’t take it as a job. I was a part of the reality show wave in 2002. Back then, no one had seen non-fiction on TV and we had no reference point, so we all were just excited to see cameras around us. Not many know that I had done a fiction show called Kayaamat for exactly one month. I also did Ek Thi Rajkumari, though I don’t think anyone watched the show. That was the plan — I wanted to be on TV, but in such a way that no one watched me. I got paid while preparing to be an actor. Earlier, there was this notion that if you do TV you can’t do films. My experience of doing fiction, non-fiction, anchoring shows like India’s Got Talent, Just Dance and many more, gave me the confidence for my career. I realised that if you connect with the youth, you are home. Children love Varun Dhawan for the kind of films he is doing. If you can successfully connect with kids and the youth — you have cracked it.

Did you face the kind of roadblocks that many people who transition from the small screen to the big screen experience? However prepared you might be as an actor; the dynamics of the big screen are different…
I was told by industry people, “You are so normal; you are like just another guy. Why don’t you behave like a star? When you walk in, people should be falling for you”. But I tried telling them that I wanted to do real cinema and real stuff. I wanted to play roles that people could connect with. This was around 2007-08, at that time no one understood what I was trying to say. I would give auditions and people would say, “Woh star material dikhna chahiye”. I said theek hai, but I never took them seriously. I am glad that I was part of that phase of cinema that started in 2012 with films like Kahaani and Vicky Donor. Now, it’s caught on, content is the king and you have to own the character. It is not about being somebody else on screen, but discovering yourself.

Seeing success and rejection at the start of your career must have toughened you up for the journey ahead…
I am a passionate actor, but I am also very practical. I started with plan C to reach plan A. Like I mentioned earlier, I have had such a variety of experiences before I became a big screen actor, that now I don’t feel any sense of insecurity. Tomorrow, if I want to pack my bags and go back, I can do it. I can be a programming head in Shimla, do my morning shows and enjoy it. If my films don’t do well, I won’t feel insecure about the question, ‘what will you do next?’ I also pursue music passionately. If I only pursue acting then I will get lost somewhere. I need to do other things to make my life interesting. Only if you live your life fully can you translate all of that on celluloid. If you are only an actor 24/7, then what else will you do? If you are only surrounded by people from the cinema world, then, you can’t be in touch with normal people. I often go with my manager to the chai ki tapri, and talk to them about kya chal raha hai unke zindagi mein. The people who are sitting there and reading the paper, un logon ne shaayad meri filmein bhi nahin dekhi hai. Right now, I am a multiplex actor. Kuch bhi bolo, main abhi bhi single screen ka hero nahin hoon. I want to become one. I want to reach out to those people, hence I need to know them. A lot of my experiences also come from doing theatre in my younger days. I had formed two theatre groups in Chandigarh. In those days, we would travel from Chandigarh to Mumbai in second class sleeper compartments. We were 15 boys who would carry our guitars and dholaks and do street theatre. During our train journey, we would go from one bogie to the other and sing for the passengers. They would be so thrilled that they would give us anything ranging from Rs 5 to Rs 100. I have gone through these amazing experiences and that’s why I say that I am a trained singer, kyunki maine train mein gaya hai (laughs).

Well, now there are more opportunities for all kinds of actors to fit into the Bollywood space, owing to the kind of films that are being made. In your case, it appears that you were lucky to be there in the right place at the right time, too?
Life is like musical chairs, when the music stops, there has to be an empty chair next to you. Most of the time, it doesn’t depend on you. If I wanted to be an actor in the ’80s or ’90s, it would have been a lot tougher, because back then nepotism was prevalent, not now. I don’t think it happens now, as every day new directors, producers and actors are coming up. There is no filter that isko nahin aane denge. If you have talent you will survive.

Earlier, most of the strugglers would stand outside big movie studios, with stars in their eyes and wonder… kabhi entry milegi yahaan? Right now, the casting system is so streamlined, if you are talented and get selected for the audition, you can make it work. That’s how every few months we see debutantes doing well. We are living in a time when only talent counts.

After a great start in the movies with Vicky Donor, was there immense pressure about what to do next? Your following films Nautanki Sala, Bewakoofiyaan, Hawaizaada were disappointments at the box office. Did you grapple to find your ground?
Yes, there was pressure. I had said no to a lot of films even before signing Vicky Donor. I always thought that my first film should be really good. As an outsider, if your first film is not good, then you are finished. Nobody will give you a second chance. Post my debut, I had to choose something path-breaking like Vicky Donor, and I was not getting that kind of film again… Aisi filmein mushkil se banti hai. I went the conventional route and did films like Nautanki Saala and Bewakoofiyaan, which didn’t do well at all. When that happens, more than the pressure felt by the actor, the producer of his next film gets the heebie-jeebies. Today, when I listen to a film’s narration, I don’t look at it as what it will do to my image or the fact that isme mujhe kya karna hai. The priority is that the story should work in totality. If that is okay, then, I come to my part in the story. Initially, I would think about myself first and that’s been a learning process. As an actor you should not get lost in the crowd, you need to create a space for yourself.

Has success changed you? Do you view life from a different lens now?
The highs and lows that I have seen in the past 5 years have kept me sane. I always feel that success is very fickle, while failure is your friend, philosopher and guide. It teaches you a lot and makes you rational. In this volatile industry, things change every Friday. Apart from that, being a family man gives me a different perspective towards life. I became a father when I was 27, so I am not living the life of a bachelor or thinking… main toh superstar hoon, yeh ho jayega, woh ho jayega. I can’t do that, I have to think about the future as well.

Did you start off with ambitions of being a superstar? Today, are you aggressively ambitious?
Andar se sabhi ambitious hote hai. You are faking it if you say mujhe yeh nahin banna hai. But yes, I am ambitious as far as my craft and passion is concerned. I want to do good quality cinema and path-breaking roles. Beyond that, no one has control over what happens in this business.

You just wrapped up the Delhi schedule of your next Junglee Pictures’ and Chrome Pictures’ Badhaai Ho, directed by Amit Sharma. I believe that this one is also an unconventional story in the quirky space…
Yes, it is again a quirky film; I think I own the quirky film genre. Agar koi actor aisey film karna chahata hai, he should be told, ‘Ayushmann ke type ki film kar rahe ho (laughs)’. The best part of my character in the film is that he’s very urban in the office space and very desi when he’s home. Most middleclass Delhi guys are like that. They speak English in office, par ghar pe koi English bolta hi nahi. It’s a very cool story, though I can’t reveal too much about it.

While you career as an actor is flourishing, your passion for music has never moved out of focus. Did you dream of being a rockstar, someday?
If you love doing something, you don’t need to make time for it. You will figure out how to do it. Yes, I have always dreamt of being a rockstar. My friend Rochak and I had a band in school, and we would jam with geometry boxes and sing along. In college, we would do street plays with eight guitarists and a few guys on the dholak. Imagine the visual and the sound… it is overwhelming. It creates euphoria and madness. So in our heads we were rockstars and we would own that space. We would love performing in an all-girls college as our band was from an all-boys college. It was a crazy high.

Success is a very lousy teacher-Ayushmaan Khurrana

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Ayushmann Khurrana breathes a sigh of relief as Dum Laga Ke Haisha comes as a welcome respite from his spate of current failures
Sneha Mahadevan (DNA; March 7, 2015)

As a multi-faceted personality, Ayushmann Khurrana has done it all — be it acting, singing or anchoring a TV show. His debut film, Vicky Donor turned out to be a huge success and catapulted him to the elite league. However, that very film dragged him down because the parameters for judging success were always as high as his debut film. With Dum Laga Ke Haisha, he has not only proved his worth but also made his parents proud. Excerpts from a conversation...

Your debut Vicky Donor was a huge hit, but you couldn’t make a mark with your other films after that. Was it disappointing?
I have been rejected in most auditions so I am immune to success and failure. I also believe that success is a very lousy teacher. You learn a lot from your failures. Apart from that, you learn a lot from every film. Your craft just improves with every film and I am just glad I did all those films. It was the curse of the first benchmark film — the debut film was so big that it reached a cult status. It was a film made with Rs 4 crores and it reached Rs 50 crores. That’s why I think the expectations were so high! But after the last film (Hawaizaada), I think the expectations weren’t there at all! (Laughs)

Ever have self-doubt in the period that your films weren’t doing well?
Till the time your craft is being appreciated, there can’t be any self-doubt. You can doubt your decisions for sure but you cannot doubt your craft. I have been doing this — music and theatre since childhood. So there was no self-doubt. I always believed in myself.

Your choices in terms of films have been slightly off-beat. Is it a conscious decision?
I don’t know! Bewakoofiyaan was a conventional rom-com but apart from that, every film was unconventional. Sometimes, you get close to the character and choose scripts with roles that are similar to you in real life as well. Dum Laga Ke Haisha is also different as I had to speak a language I didn’t really know. There is this guy Mahesh in the film who was sent to Gujarat so I used to just eat with him, converse with him, that is how I picked up the accent. I can grasp languages easily.

You think this is one movie that has made you Ayushmann Khurrana beyond Vicky Donor because until now, VD was the only film that did really well.
Of course. Definitely and thank God for that. Nautanki Saala was a hit but the perception was that it didn’t do well. My father thinks this is bigger than Vicky Donor and my mother thinks I have surpassed my debut film as well. I have grown a lot in this film for sure. It is also progressive like my debut film was, though in its own way. It speaks about woman emancipation. It is also about a guy who is very complex. As a nation, we have not really spoken about male emancipation. And this film talks about it.

How do you manage to juggle both singing and acting?
I used to unwind with music when I was anchoring on television but now it has become a part of my profession. If your passion is your profession, nothing can beat that. You are very lucky and fortunate that whatever comes naturally to you, you are doing it to earn a living. Not many people have the liberty of saying that. Every person who is an actor or an artist, is following that passion and you are getting paid to follow that, then you are just lucky.