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The actress speaks about finding her voice in the industry while being the daughter of a screen icon.
Shruti Haasan, who was last seen in Coolie as Preethi, the kind but resilient aide of Rajinikanth's Deva, has carved a niche for herself in the industry as an actress and a musician. While Haasan is known for her unique brand of sensibilities, she stands in the shadow of her father, the Tamil screen icon Kamal Haasan, who has clocked over 60 illustrious years in cinema. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter India, the actress speaks about finding her voice amidst the "shadow from the sun shine" her father often casts.
"The shadow is always there. But do I face it? Or do I keep walking in my direction, knowing it’s there. Appa’s presence in my life is like the sun shining that creates a shadow, rather than him being the shadow that covers my light," Shruti tells THR India. "He’s my papa first, but like for all of you, he’s a great inspiration, and is someone we can’t really be and so take lessons from, and that’s the approach. It’s not that it becomes sparkly up close or scarier up close. He doesn’t let anybody feel the weight of his achievements."
Haasan recalls the beginning of her career, trying to find her feet in three different industries - Tamil, Telugu and Hindi. "The Telugu industry was lucrative, but it gave me the first taste of acceptance and freedom as an artist. There was always a stigma around it for being commercial. But I see it as a great word because stardom gives you the power to move into places and make decisions." It was never her intention to do the opposite of what was expected of her as a star child, but she was determined to make her journey original.
"People have their perception of what this gentleman’s daughter should dress like, sound like, behave like. I didn’t categorically go opposite of it, but I wanted to do something that's right by my stride." Haasan's latest collaboration with her father was in the song 'Vinveli Nayaga' in Thug Life, which opened to mixed reviews. How does her dad make sense of box office numbers? "The numbers conversation was not happening ten years ago. My dad comes from a mindset where he puts all his own money into the cinema. The numbers game doesn’t affect him in the way that people perceive. I think it’s a new nouveau riche problem."
Watch our full interview with the actress on The Hollywood Reporter India's YouTube channel.