Vidya unplugged
Vidya Balan is not sitting on her laurels after the success of The Dirty Picture but is ready with her next release Kahaani, in which she plays a seven-month pregnant woman, writes Sreya Basu 

You have emerged as the new ‘Hero’ of Bollywood post The Dirty Picture. How do you feel?

Really filmmaking is team effort. It is very elating when people give the actor credit for the success of a film. So I will also not refuse to it. But I think it is team effort and I am hoping that the success of The Dirty Picture will help me get a chance to work with more good directors and good teams; so that I can continue my performance level.

As Vidya Bagchi in Kahaani, Vidya Balan plays an NRI, who comes to India in search of her husband
As Vidya Bagchi in Kahaani, Vidya Balan plays an NRI, who comes to India in search of her husband

Your dialogue in The Dirty Picture says a film runs only on three things — entertainment, entertainment and entertainment. What does Kahaani have that will make it run at the boxoffice?

See, there are different levels of entertainment. Even now, I will say films only run on three things — entertainment, entertainment and entertainment — and you have to watch Kahaani to find out what kind of entertainment is there in the film. It’s a mystery. So it’s very different.

Tell us about your transformation from a boombat avatar to that of a pregnant woman searching for her husband.

Dirty hone ka yeh hi nateeja hota hai. I am just kidding. In Kahaani, I play a pregnant woman and it’s a mystery. But I can’t say anything more at this point about the film. None-the-less, I enjoyed playing a pregnant woman. I am glad that I am getting the opportunities to essay different characters. I am fortunate that I am getting to play characters like Sabrina (No One Killed Jessica), Silk (The Dirty Picture) and Vidya Bagchi (Kahaani).

Do you think the films you signed in the earlier part of your career were mistakes?

I don’t take them as mistakes but learning experiences that didn’t turn out very well. I think if, at all, they can be called mistakes, they were very important for me to commit so that I can reach here. It’s because of those films, you are calling ‘mistakes’, I realised what kind of work I actually enjoy doing, where I can put my heart and soul.

You are being acknowledged as an actor who can pull off a film on her own shoulders, are you refusing hero-oriented films?

No, not at all. It’s God’s grace that my films have worked. But I like always say, it depends on the role and the overall film that’s being offered to me. I am a very greedy actor. I want to play different people. I want to do different kinds of films. So even if the man or the hero is the central protagonist, as long as I have enough to do, I am more than happy. Also let me clarify, money is more than welcome. Maine roles ke bare mein toh keh diya. But as for money, the more the merrier.

When did you actually realise that you want to be an actor?

I think when Ek Do Teen (song from Tezaab, 1988) was released, tab mujhe Madhuri Dixit ka bhoot chara tha. I used to stand in front of the mirror and dance all the time. I wanted to be junior Madhuri Dixit.

There is a buzz that you are planning to settle down at the end of the year now that your career has reached a peak…

Why? Career is doing well…I am happy…emotionally, mentally I am in a very happy space. I am not at all thinking of marriage as of now. Uska bhi waqt aayega aur zaroor aayega. I believe in the institution of marriage. So I won’t postpone it for too long; but filhal ke liye taal rahi hoon (For now delaying it). — TWF





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