Anaita Shroff Adajania on Styling and Due Credit in Bollywood: "Costumes Are Forgotten If Film Flops"

Costume designer Anaita Shroff Adajania highlights the struggles of behind-the-scenes artists

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: DEC 20, 2024, 14:15 IST|5 min read
Anaita Shroff Adajania for The Hollywood Reporter India
Anaita Shroff Adajania for The Hollywood Reporter India

At the first-ever Technicians Roundtable hosted by The Hollywood Reporter India, celebrated costume designer Anaita Shroff Adajania shed light on a longstanding issue plaguing the industry: the lack of recognition for behind-the-scenes talent. Speaking candidly, Adajania emphasized the importance of credit and respect for technicians who are often left fighting to have their contributions acknowledged.

“To be allowed to be a part of the promotions is a huge challenge because someone needs to think you’re worthy of it,” she pointed out. “Fortunately for a lot of us, the kind of work that we do is there to be seen.” Yet, the struggle remains—technicians routinely find themselves sidelined despite their work being integral to a film’s visual identity.

Adajania, whose work on Ananya Panday-starrer Call Me Bae (2024) earned her a lot of love, highlighted the frustrating link between a film’s success and how technicians’ efforts are perceived. “The minute the film comes out and, say, by some chance doesn’t do well, those costumes are forgotten forever. You will never get an award for great costumes because the film didn’t do well. But why? I did a great job. The film didn’t do well. I feel that gap needs to close.”

The pressure under which technicians operate is immense, often amplified by unrealistic timelines. “It would be more respectful for people to give us the right amount of time to prep,” she stressed. “We make huge sacrifices in our personal lives for the work we do… Let’s give each other mutual respect.”

Her statements highlight an industry-wide need to treat technicians—costume designers, editors, cinematographers, and more—not as afterthoughts but as collaborators deserving of equal recognition. Credit is not a privilege but a right, and it’s high time technicians are valued for their work, irrespective of a film’s box office fate.

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