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Triptii Dimri has made a major leap from small-budget, artsy films to mainstream blockbusters, and she has a lesson or two to share.
For an actor who started her career headlining niche films in Hindi cinema, like Laila Majnu (2018) — which is now garnering a lot of traction — Bulbbul (2020), and Qala (2022), “very demure, very mindful” seemed to be Triptii Dimri's brand. However, transitioning into last year’s mega-hit Animal, and subsequently jumping genres with Bad Newz, Dimri doesn't want to be boxed into one category.
Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter India, Dimri revealed how it took her a few days to adapt to the world of big-budget movies, and how she doesn't ever want to fall out of love with her craft.
Going from artsy, small-budget films to these big-budget mega-films must feel like whiplash to your body…
Yes, it does. I find it [big-budget films] more difficult, but I've now found my peace there also. Initially, for three or four days, I was very nervous around Vicky [Kaushal]. We shot the song first and the whole time I was very nervous...
You're kidding!
I'm serious. I didn't even interact with Vicky properly because I was just so nervous just looking at him. He was performing so well. I felt like I was back to square one. I was wondering how I was going to do this. It took me 5 to 10 days to get used to the crew, the scale of the film, the director — everybody. They were very nice and welcoming, but I was just so reserved that it took me a while to understand the world of that film.
Again, with Vicky Vidya Ka Woh Wala Video, which was a full-on comedy — when you're acting with Rajkummar Rao and Archana Puran Singh, who are such brilliant actors, then you're like, ‘Man, how are they doing it?’ We would perform [the scene], and the background artists would just laugh at the jokes. It made me realise that the comedy was working for them. It was just very interesting to see how they perform and how they talk about the scene.
During breaks, we would sit in the room and read our scenes. The reading was different, but the performance was a hundred times (in intensity) of that reading. Rajkummar Rao can finish two pages of a monologue in one go, without messing up the lines.
There's so much to learn every day in every film. Now, the kind of films that I'm doing are in a very different space. As an actor, I'm very happy that I'm getting to do something different, getting to learn every day on set. Otherwise, it can become very boring. I don't ever want to fall out of love with acting; that is my one fear. That is why I think it's very important that you keep doing different things. You have to be scared when you're going on set.