Knew at the age of 18 that marriage is not for me: Rahul Bose
Mumbai, March 17
In his latest Netflix series, Rahul Bose plays a father to a confused teenager eager for love but as he looks back, the actor says he was sure even as a young boy that he desires “beautiful relationships” but never marriage.
Bose, star of acclaimed films like “Mr and Mrs Iyer”, “The Japanese Wife”, “Jhankaar Beats”, currently features on the young adult series “Eternally Confused and Eager for Love”.
When asked if there was ever a phase where he was eager for love, the actor, who has been fiercely, guarded about his private life, quipped, “I am so eager for love, I can’t tell you. Can somebody please? I am very eager. I have many qualities but eagerness is a big quality of mine”.
The 54-year-old actor, however, told PTI that he has operated with remarkable clarity when it comes to getting married- it was never on the cards.
“At the age of 18, I said I will never get married and my mother said, ‘That’s ok, we will see five or ten years from now’. If she had been alive today, she probably would have realised that I just knew.”
“Love, togetherness, companionships? Yes. Long, beautiful relationships with laughter and truth and moments? Yes. But marriage and all that stuff was never part of my imagination,” the Mumbai-born actor said.
On the series, scheduled to premiere on March 18, Bose plays the father of Ray, an awkward young man, navigating adulthood and the world of romance in the 21st century.
Bose said he is perplexed when one says that they are looking for love, because it can’t be engineered.
“I eagerly looked for lust a lot when I was younger. But how do you look for love? The only way of getting love is to give love. You just have to give it unconditionally to anyone and anything. If it comes, it comes, if it doesn’t, it is still beautiful to love,” he added.
Created and directed by Rahul Nair, the show stars Vihaan Samat, Suchitra Pillai, Jim Sarbh, Ankur Rathee and Dalai.
The show is Netflix’s first joint series with Farhan Akhtar and Ritesh Sidhwani’s Excel Entertainment and Tiger Baby, the production banner from Reema Kagti and Zoya Akhtar.
Bose said one of the reasons for him to come on board with the series was that it was set in a genre rarely tapped in the country.
“It is a slacker series. That genre has not at all been explored in India. In America, the genre is slightly dark, sometimes in the zone of Zombies, at its best it’s a bit profane, lewd and on the edge. But our series isn’t like that. It is just lovable. He (Ray) is a lovable slacker and the series has that scent. Everything is warm in it. There was no reason not to be a part of it.” What also worked for the actor was how the show was a departure from his last work, “Bulbull” on the streamer.