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The screen legend shares her approach to the craft, and how she has endured 50 prolific years in the industry.
For veteran actor Shabana Azmi, enduring 50 remarkable years in the world of acting is about luck, and an unrelenting love for the craft. In a roundtable discussion with Anupama Chopra, Editor of The Hollywood Reporter India, she talks about the anxieties being of an actor, the problems that crop up, and how to move forward.
“I love acting.” she said. “Since I was three years old, my mother was [working] in theatre.” The journey of self-discovery never stops for her. “Let me tell you, there have been moments when I’ve been very pleased with a shot, but nobody else would notice it!"
Acting, for Azmi, is a blend of discipline and magic. But complacency is the bane of any actor. In theatre, she observes, this is particularly true. “When you’ve done 30 shows [of a play] you know how the audience is going to react, so you become over-confident,” she explained, because the truth is, the audience catches on to that complacency and stops reacting in that manner.
Azmi believes the essence of acting lies in being truthful and present. Each role demands a unique approach. “When I approach a role, there's no one standard way of doing it. To inhabit a character, sometimes I open a window to look in and then close it. Other times, I come in through the kitchen door, and sometimes I go in straight to the drawing room.” This unpredictability is what keeps things interesting for her.
Actor Anna Ben similarly admits to fearing both criticism and compliments equally. Azmi justified it, saying, “If someone says it's very good, you want to imitate it in the next shot instead of [approaching] it organically. I get unnerved if the director likes it very much!"
This blend of vulnerability, curiosity and constant reinvention is the real reason behind a career as prolific as hers.