Samantha Ruth Prabhu on ‘Shaakuntalam’: We, female actors, have come a long way to find our small place in the film industry

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Samantha Ruth Prabhu on ‘Shaakuntalam’: We, female actors, have come a long way to find our small place in the film industry


Samantha Ruth Prabhu
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

The staff of the Telugu film Shaakuntalam, directed by Gunasekhar and produced by Neelima Guna, held a premiere not too long ago in Hyderabad. In this interview with The Hindu days prior to the film’s nationwide launch on April 14, the film’s lead actor Samantha Ruth Prabhu makes her happiness evident when she says, “It was an experience to witness the animals and the world of Shakuntala in 3D. I am hoping that families with children will come to the theatres. We watch Marvel and other international films in 3D, so why not a story that is steeped in Indian culture?”

Shaakuntalam is the third film in current years that has Samantha in the title position, after Oh! Baby and Yashoda. On the units, she says her course of stays the similar no matter the size of her position as a result of “I give my heart and soul to every character I take up. But it is a different ball game when it comes to box office expectations. There is so much stress and pressure to deliver.” 

Her pre-release nervousness has not dipped in the 13 years of her profession. “I ask myself if this stress will ever go away,” she says and factors to the vivid facet, “We (female actors) have come a long way to find our small place in this industry. Sometimes I think this pressure is worth it.”

The sport has gotten more durable with social media judgment even earlier than the launch of a film. “I did not realise how the negativity has been growing until a film is up for release. I choose not to respond to negativity but at times it makes me sad.”

Divine intervention

Dev Mohan as Dushyanth and Samantha as Shakuntala in ‘Shaakuntalam’

Dev Mohan as Dushyanth and Samantha as Shakuntala in ‘Shaakuntalam’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Samantha is amongst a handful of female actors in South India who will get a rousing welcome when she seems on the huge display screen. The cheers to her introduction scene in Majili and the response to her motion sequences in Yashoda are instances in level. Samantha says it’s this response that retains her going by means of powerful days. “In the last one and a half months when I shot for Citadel (Hindi web series by Raj and DK) or Kushi (director Shiva Nirvana’s Telugu film co-starring Vijay Deverakonda), there were days I did not have the strength (Samantha was diagnosed with myositis last year and has since, recouped and resumed work). My co-stars might think that the shoot will be cancelled since I am not going to make it. But I show up and when I hear the word ‘action’, the energy comes to me like a divine intervention. I want to do my best because no viewer is going to think I might have been sick that day because of which I could not perform well. The love I get from people is a recognition of the honesty in my craft.”

Does she watch her movies in theatres with the viewers? Samantha finds herself disconnecting post-release. “The anxiety before the release is so overwhelming that I need to disconnect. All I want is for the film to be a box office hit so that everyone who has worked on it is happy.”

Reverting to focus on Shaakuntalam, she says she had to put her greatest foot ahead every time with grace and poise, the polar reverse of her character Raji in season two of The Family Man. “Raji’s body language was almost androgynous. For Shaakuntalam, the way I talked, walked, stood or ran had to be graceful.” Training with Aruna Bhikshu, professor of dance at the University of Hyderabad, helped her imbibe what’s required to play Shakuntala.

The motion will get more durable

Samantha preps for an action sequence

Samantha preps for an motion sequence
| Photo Credit:
Instagram

The dances choreographed by Raju Sundaram additionally have classical influences. Samantha factors out that it has been a whereas since she danced. “I wondered where the heroine in me was and when this shift happened. Now I have bruises all over, thanks to Citadel. I recently did an action sequence that is tougher than what I did as Raji. My make-up artist has given up on me since it is tough to cover up those bruises when I shoot for Kushi.”

Ask Samantha if that is a higher house to be than doing the cliched heroine roles and he or she agrees, “Absolutely. For a petite person like me to do these action sequences is fulfilling. People have accepted me and directors write such stories for me. It is a huge step in the opposite direction compared to what was offered to me earlier.”

Vijay Deverakonda and Samantha in ‘Kushi’

Vijay Deverakonda and Samantha in ‘Kushi’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

The icing on the cake can also be having the ability to dub for her characters. Having dubbed for Shaakuntalam in Telugu, Tamil and Hindi, Samantha says talking her strains is the minimal she will be able to do to be a full actor. “When I watched a few of my earlier films, there was a disconnect since it was not my voice. A lot of internalising happens when you enact a role; there is no way a dubbing artiste will know what I felt while performing a scene. It bothered me that there was not a 100% translation of my performance. I am aware that some critics felt my dubbing has not been on point. But I will do my best and will continue to dub.”



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