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The actor on choosing 'Haq', the woman at the heart of it and why a 40-year-old story still matters.
When Yami Gautam read the script of Haq, she wasn’t just drawn to the courtroom or the politics. What stayed with her was the quiet defiance of the woman behind a simple demand for dignity. The film takes inspiration from the 1985 Shah Bano case, a legal milestone that questioned faith, gender, and justice in ways still felt today.
“I studied law for a very brief time,” Gautam says. “And this has to be one of the most discussed cases – not just for legal reasons, but because it changed the political climate of that time. Its ripple effect still stands valid and true even today.”
For her, the story’s power lies in perspective. “It’s so easy today to say, ‘Why do you have to ask for maintenance? You can work on your own.’ Sure, yes. But look at her background, look at who she was,” she says. “She and did what she thought was right for herself and her children,” Gautam adds. “Sometimes, in the most adverse situations, you realise your own potential. You think you’ll crumble, but you don’t.”
Haq, directed by Suparn S. Varma and co-starring Emraan Hashmi, isn’t a direct retelling. “It’s not a biopic,” she clarifies. “It’s inspired by that time, but it’s a film, you have to make it engaging.”
At its core, though, it’s about courage. “It’s about love, separation, and the choices women had to make when society gave them none,” she says. “That’s what makes it timeless.”
Haq is a courtroom drama inspired by the landmark 1985 Shah Bano case. In the film, Yami Gautam plays ‘Shazia Bano’, a character modelled on the real life Shah Bano Begum, who fights for maintenance and rights in the face of social and legal opposition. The film is scheduled for release on November 7, 2025.