|
Bollywood New Plan for Covid wave 2 Lockdown |
![]() |
Views: 872
|
Thread Tools |
Rating: ![]() |
#1
|
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
![]()
#BigStory: With pandemic hitting the film industry hard, how are struggling actors and debutantes coping up with the sudden break in their yet-to-be-launched careers?
Source https://www.wikinewforum.com/showthread.php?t=415872 ![]() Good things may come to those who wait but try telling this to the newcomers who have been waiting with a bated breath for over a year now for their careers to take off. Ever since the world went under a lockdown in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, and opened up later only partially, these Bollywood aspirants--nurturing dreams of watching themselves on the big screen all their lives--have been sitting at home twiddling thumbs, ruing the passing days and wondering what will become of their life. Everyone--from star kids to strugglers with no filmi background--is currently staring at an unknown fate. With working from home not an option for them, they are either honing their s****s further and counting down the days till things open again, or are giving up on the lure of potential limelight for the promise of a stable income at less starry but more secure jobs. On Friday, ETimes reported how, as India grapples with the second wave of the lockdown and curfews are being imposed around the country, cine workers are fleeing back home having been left with no income to sustain themselves in cities. At such a time, what chance do people who were still only looking to make inroads into the close-knit industry, stand? For this week’s #BigStory, we spoke to aspiring actors who are still powering on despite the delays, casting directors, acting institutes, as well as strugglers whose dreams have come crashing down, to understand how has the pandemic affected people who were yet to even become a part of the industry. Read on: No place like home Romit Sardana (Struggling actor): I have decided to stay back in my hometown Karnal and study to become an IAS officer For Romit Sardana, the rogue coronavirus that ****ed more than three million people around the globe also spelled the end of his Bollywood dreams. The aspiring actor who was working as an assistant casting director with Jogi Mallang, has returned to his hometown in Karnal for good. “I come from a well-to-do family and I am a qualified lawyer. My father has retired as a district attorney and also needs me as he has not been keeping well. Therefore, I have decided to stay back and study to become an IAS officer, and if I need to pursue my passion of acting I will do it here, Quote:
Dinesh Kirar (Struggling actor): I have just started a car washing service station to help run the household Meanwhile, struggling actor Dinesh Kirar, who has acted in TV shows like ‘Chandrakanta’, ‘Hanuman’, and ‘Rudra Ke Rakshak’, has also gone back to his hometown in Rajasthan. While he hasn’t quit acting completely, he points out the need for a backup income now that his main source of earning a livelihood has come to a grinding halt. Quote:
Hope makes the world go round Bansshi Nanamma (Struggling actor): The industry is partly shut for the time being but it will reopen Another starry-eyed actor, Bansshi Nanamma, was living out his dreams, performing plays with his troupe and supplementing his passion with a call-center job that paid the bills. However, Covid-19 threw a spanner in the wheels and Bansshi could only stare as plays stopped, and one by one, his colleagues left for their hometowns, never to return to the City of Dreams. “When things seemed to be returning to normalcy at the beginning of the year, I resumed my job and also started practicing for a play with a new group. We were going to stage a play this week but with a strict curfew imposed, it has been called off. I have also lost my job now,” he says dejectedly. However, unlike his peers, he is not giving up hope. Quote:
Micckkie Dudaaney (Actor): For me, the lockdown was a blessing in disguise Micckkie Dudaaney, who plays a pivotal role in the TV show 'Jai Santoshi Maa' has also stayed put in the Maximum City but some of his friends, who didn’t have work, had to leave. Quote:
Practice makes perfect Meghna Puri (CEO, Whistling Woods International): We had invited celebrity guests like Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Honey Trehan to motivate our students Like Bansshi and Micckkie, several other aspiring actors and star kids chose to use the downtime to hone their s****s, even if it was only through online classes. Meghna Puri, the CEO of Whistling Woods International, a film school in Mumbai acknowledges this, adding, “When the first lockdown happened, we thought it will end soon but it got stretched which was stressful for the students. But teachers didn’t let the momentum slip and kept students engaged in performing monologues and making films on their phones. We have a hundred students in our degree program and only a few left due to financial issues”. Their students are eager to return to the premises but government rules are keeping them from doing so. Quote:
Prakash Bhardwaj (Acting coach): Students train with me for one month or three months as it helps them divert their attention from the grim situation Meanwhile, acting coach Prakash Bhardwaj, who conducts online acting classes for aspiring actors, reveals that he keeps getting calls from worried acting students all the time. Quote:
Grim times Sushant Singh (Actor): I know it is a tough time for those actors who earn on a daily basis Actor Sushant Singh, who has been around for over 23 years in the film industry, puts things into perspective as he shares a personal experience of how even he was on the verge of digging into his financial reserves during the first lockdown. Quote:
Mukesh Chhabra (Casting director): The number of auditions that we used to get done physically was much more than we can get done online Casting director Mukesh Chhabra concurs that these indeed are depressing times, pointing out that it is quite difficult to get good online auditions. “There are times when the lighting is not correct, or the voice is not audible, or the camera angle is not correct, and we end up asking the actor to redo it, which is time-consuming. The number of auditions that we used to get done physically was much more than we can get done online,” he laments. However, not all hope is lost. The casting director goes on to assure aspiring actors that he will cast people from any part of the world if they are talented. Quote:
Cashing in on OTT Anmol Dhillon (Actor): The film has just been released on OTT and I am getting such positive and encouraging reactions While these certainly are testing times for those yet to find a break, they are just as harrowing for actors whose first films were ready for the big screen when the pandemic struck. Like Poonam Dhillon’s son Anmol, who made his debut with ‘Tuesdays & Fridays’ that finally squeezed in a theatrical release in the narrow window when the outbreak wasn’t at its worst and theatres were slowly opening up. However, with the audience shying away from theatres, it was far from the dream debut that the star kid would have wished for. But Anmol has no regrets. Quote:
But won’t he always feel bad that his debut film didn’t result in fireworks as he must have expected it to? “There is no disappointment at all,” he clarifies, adding, Quote:
However, the actor acknowledges that it’s not as easy for those who have come to the city to fulfill their dreams. “I can’t imagine what must be going on in their minds and what they must be going through and thinking during these stressful times. Everyone’s journey is extremely different and I think if people have a dream and if they are talented and hardworking, they should just keep at it,” he offers, adding that now that people are watching OTT, even the outsiders are getting recognition. Quote:
Debut delayed isn’t debut denied Suniel Shetty (Actor): As a father, I can see that it has been a very, very tough time for Ahan Suniel Shetty, whose son Ahan Shetty’s debut film ‘Tadap’ would have been released by now had it not been for the pandemic, says that this is the toughest situation we, as a nation, have faced. “I will say it is pretty nasty but, at the same time, when you look at it from a world perspective, when you see innocent people, middle class and lower-middle-class people being destroyed, somewhere you feel you are luckier. We are in different boats but in the same storm. I guess that keeps me going. Also, I have a huge team that I have to take care of”. Ask him if he is worried about his son’s debut film being jeopardised, and he replies, Quote:
Shirley Setia (Debutante): Both my films, ‘Nikamma’ and the Telugu project are waiting for things to get better Shirley Setia was all set to make her big Bollywood debut too but now has to wait it out till things return to normal to see herself on the 70mm screen. Quote:
Similar Threads:
|
![]() |
Tags |
bollywood, interviews, stars |
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | |
Rate This Thread | |
|