Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

I'm More Liberated As An Actor In My Late 40s: Manisha Koirala

IANS, 09 Jul, 2018 12:53 PM
  • I'm More Liberated As An Actor In My Late 40s: Manisha Koirala
Her 40s have been eventful and enlightening. Actress Manisha Koirala, a cancer survivor, says contrary to common perception that middle-aged female actors get less work in Bollywood, she feels liberated more than ever.
 
 
"I think I am more liberated as an artiste in my late 40s. I was having a conversation with Shabana Azmiji where she was saying, 'As an actress and as a woman, we always want to look good. How did you become so carefree?' I think the greedy actor in me takes over at times.
 
 
"Being a woman, I want to look pretty in every phase of my life... but I also love acting. If I have to sacrifice my vanity for a character that I am excited to play, I am ready," Manisha, 47, told IANS in an interview.
 
 
Having said that, Manisha pointed out that tomorrow if she is offered a role that demands glamour, she will again work on her looks.
 
 
"Basically, my priority is the character first. I have done my share of looking glamorous on-screen in many films," said the actress, who mesmerised audiences with her performance in "1942: A Love Story".
 
 
Of late, Manisha has fetched praise for her performance in Rajkumar Hirani's "Sanju" -- in which she has played the iconic Nargis Dutt -- and in a web film "Lust Stories".
 
 
On "Sanju", Manisha said: "I was quite nervous about how people will receive me in the film where I am playing the role of such an icon as Nargis Dutt. I was more worried because I knew how great the rest of the actors were in the film. They were brilliant and the worry was whether people would notice my performance among those great performances.
 
 
"I am still one of those actresses who need people's appreciation to know that I have done the right thing. Even after spending a substantial time in the entertainment business, before the release of a film, I am nervous," laughed the "Khamoshi" actress, adding that such nervousness also occurs on the first day of the shoot.
 
 
According to her, from her first film till today -- a journey that has spanned 27 years -- she has treated every film like her first film.
 
 
"It is never 'just another film' for me. It is a new opportunity to act, tell a story," said the "Bombay" actress, who has her roots in Nepal.
 
 
In "Lust Stories", an anthology of four films, Manisha plays a complex woman in a relationship with her on-screen husband's best friend. She says it was the first time she has worn a swimsuit for a film.
 
 
"That was the idea of director Dibakar Banejee. He came saying this is how he wants the scene to be, and my first reaction was like, 'Why? I mean in my youth, I never wore a swimsuit in films'."
 
 
She says in real life, she loves swimming, and wears a swimsuit.
 
 
"But on-screen? Then, Dibakar put his best effort and logic to convince me saying, 'People have not see you in a swimsuit on-screen and that is precisely the reason we should do it.' Well, then I took it up," she said, breaking into a laugh.
 
 
Manisha said she was initially reluctant to play the role as it was difficult for her to comprehend certain aspects of the character.
 
 
"That is where I had to trust the director," she said.
 
 
Did she judge the character for her difficult relationship with her husband and for having an affair with his best friend?
 
 
"Well, I went through the dilemma in my head while playing Reena. It is not easy to be non-judgmental about the character I play," said Manisha as she recounted a conversation with the actor who played the villain in "Clockwork Orange".
 
 
"I met him after I finished shooting 'Lust Stories' and I had a conversation with him regarding the same. I agreed with what he said. We, as actors, should be non-judgmental about the characters we play on-screen, otherwise we are limiting ourselves."
 
 
Will she accept the role of mother that usually middle-aged women get in Bollywood film?
 
 
"I will wait for the right role instead of the typical ones. But I think now cinema is changing and filmmakers, audiences and critics have started appreciating all kinds of cinema. Meaty roles are written for middle-aged women. If I am offered something like that, I will surely do it."

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Learnt To Be Content In Insecure, Competitive Industry: Karishma Tanna

Actress Karishma Tanna, who will seen in the upcoming fantasy thriller "Qayamat Ki Raat", says in an industry where there is a lot of insecurity and competition, she has learnt how to be content.

Learnt To Be Content In Insecure, Competitive Industry: Karishma Tanna

Assistant Dancer To Lead Actor: Daisy Shah Overwhelmed By Bollywood

Actress Daisy Shah says that having started as a humble assistant dancer, she feels overwhelmed to be one of the leading ladies of a commercially successful franchise like "Race 3".

Assistant Dancer To Lead Actor: Daisy Shah Overwhelmed By Bollywood

MISS YOU DAD: Priyanka Chopra On Father's Fifth Death Anniversary

MISS YOU DAD: Priyanka Chopra On Father's Fifth Death Anniversary
Actress Priyanka Chopra shared images and short footages on her father Ashok Chopra's fifth death anniversary on Sunday, with an emotional message saying that she misses him.

MISS YOU DAD: Priyanka Chopra On Father's Fifth Death Anniversary

Priyanka Chopra Apologises For 'Hindu Terror' Plot In American TV Series ‘Quantico'

Priyanka Chopra Apologises For 'Hindu Terror' Plot In American TV Series ‘Quantico'
Actress Priyanka Chopra has apologised for an episode in her American TV series "Quantico" which portrayed Indian nationalists as terrorists who were trying to frame Pakistan in a terror plot.

Priyanka Chopra Apologises For 'Hindu Terror' Plot In American TV Series ‘Quantico'

Fiji Indians: For Whom Bollywood Acts As Cultural Bridge

Fiji Indians: For Whom Bollywood Acts As Cultural Bridge
"Laakhon hain yahan dilwale...". That evergreen Mahendra Kapoor number from the 1960s played on at a boutique island resort here -- bringing smiles to a group of Indian tourists.

Fiji Indians: For Whom Bollywood Acts As Cultural Bridge

I'm Not Holding My Breath For Love Any More: Manisha Koirala

Actress Manisha Koirala, who will soon be seen playing Nargis in the late legendary actressson Sanjay Dutts biopic "Sanju", says she is no longer looking for romantic love.

I'm Not Holding My Breath For Love Any More: Manisha Koirala