Jaideep Ahlawat On 'Paatal Lok' And Surviving The Brutal Business Of Acting

In a candid conversation, the 'Paatal Lok' actor reflects on rejection, the obsession with social media in casting, and how to avoid the trap of typecasting.

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: JAN 17, 2025, 16:45 IST|3 min read
Actor Jaideep Ahlawat
Actor Jaideep Ahlawat

“Everybody wants to be famous,” said actor Jaideep Ahlawat in a recent interview with Anupama Chopra, Editor of The Hollywood Reporter India, delving into the problems of the acting community. They're more focused on the number of followers they have on social media, he said.

Glad he got into the business before this culture set in, Ahlawat mentioned his own lack of followers — to which Sudip Sharma, producer of Paatal Lok (2020) recalled a “ridiculous” notion he came across while casting for films. “When you get casting decks and acting profiles today, it comes with how many followers the actor has,” he revealed, shaking his head.

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Ahead of the release of the second season of the show, Ahlawat discussed his biggest learning as an actor: accepting different perceptions in life. “When you feel you failed because you were rejected, it’s because you just didn’t fit into the particular frame of [that project]. You need to get out of the desperation to want something so badly that you lose your focus,” he added.

Read more | How Jaideep Ahlawat and Vijay Varma Signed on for ‘Baaghi 3’

Ahlawat revealed that while everyone praised his role in Raazi (2018), he didn't receive any offers after that. And when they did, “Everyone wanted me to play a RAW officer. But I didn’t want to, because I had just done it.” He added, “After Paatal Lok, I got another 100 scripts of [playing] a cop. The height was when they said [a role] was a mixture of Paatal Lok and Mirzapur (2018)!"

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But his biggest learning to date was to constantly keep working on oneself. “Evaluate yourself. Sometimes you’re in a bubble thinking you’re working so hard, but you’re not,” said Ahlawat. “There are different bubbles and different groups of actors that live in a certain society. After some time they all start thinking alike. If there are four to five people going to the gym, everybody goes there. If four of them are doing theatre, everybody follows that..."

He said that actors don’t see themselves as having a unique personality after a point, and added, “Everyone is scared, and trying to do something that would make them famous. It’s more important for others to see them as actors."

Ahlawat gives the example of learning to speak in Hindi, in order to work in the Hindi film industry. He said, “I love my Haryanvi, but if I can't speak Hindi properly I won't get much work. I have limited my resources and then I can’t say I’m doing everything.” He did admit though that this is only a problem until one makes a name for themselves.

Deeming it to be a “brutal business”, Ahlawat signed off with some valuable advice. He said, “the actor community is so worried looking at each other. It’s important to breathe when you’re running... if that's even your track. Do what's right for you.”

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