Anasuya Sengupta Talks About Her Cannes 2024 Win

‘The Shameless’ actor reflects on her historic achievement and the emotional impact of winning the Un Certain Regard Award at the 77th Cannes Film Festival

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: NOV 28, 2024, 16:54 IST|5 min read
Anasuya Sengupta for THR India
Anasuya Sengupta for THR India

In May this year, Anasuya Sengupta made history as the first Indian actor to win the Un Certain Regard Award for Best Actress at the 77th Cannes Film Festival for her role in Konstantin Bojanov’s The Shameless.

At a recent roundtable for Hollywood Reporter India’s Next Big Thing, Sengupta was asked about the highlight of her year. She responded, “I think it’s a little obvious…” referring to her groundbreaking win.

The actor shared that she had a strong feeling about staying at the festival until the very last day: “I did not go for the festival thinking of it or expecting it in any way. In fact, I kind of was struggling to even stay longer than the stipulated three days at the festival, trying to pull out all the stops because something made me feel like I really wanted to stay till the end.”

The award ceremony took place on the final day of the festival, and Sengupta explained that she was only able to stay thanks to some "jugaad" (a Hindi term for resourceful improvisation).

However, when her name was called, the actor was overwhelmed with emotion. “Of course, I won the award, which is so incredible. But what moved me so profoundly was another feeling; that so many people can be happy for an accomplishment which is technically mine… that really took it somewhere else.”

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Becoming the first Indian to receive such an honor, Sengupta felt the collective joy of those who celebrated with her. “Because it also made me realise that it didn’t even feel like my accomplishment alone. It isn’t. It can’t be. Because then how are so many people, thousands, celebrating? It felt so special. It was a moment of humanity and what we are capable of. We are capable of so much happiness for others. And for me too, I just merely felt like a conduit — like I’m the vessel for this and how lucky for me that I am. But that was quite something, just to feel that.”

She went on to say, “That was such a satisfying moment artistically. I think all of you will also understand that to be able to move people and give others that kind of happiness — that just brought in a new life into me and fueled me.”

Sengupta also reflected on the feeling of collective pride, a sentiment she had only previously witnessed in sports: “I’ve obviously never felt anything like that before. I’ve only seen emotions that strong and that big in sports. I remember when I landed back in Delhi, they put a flag in my hand. And when I saw the pictures the next day, I remember telling my family that I look like a hockey player coming back from the celebration. That kind of purity I have seen in the sporting world personally. But to see it in films and to see cinema recognised like that, to see the arts being celebrated to that scale — it was thrilling.”

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