
PHOTO: HINDUSTAN TIMES
"See, that was the character. When people see the film they will understand that it is not making fun of colour. It is a film that is trying to break the basic bias or the obsession that people have with fair-skinned India," Bhumi shared in an interview.
PHOTO: LUX"I have been reading up all the articles and, again, it comes down to the same thing that started the ageism debate over Saand Ki Aankh. I don't think there is a right or a wrong. As an actor I am doing my duty. I am an actor so that I can play different characters. If that doesn't happen, I won't exist," she said, adding: "For instance, if that doesn't happen, in Dum Laga Ke Haisha it shouldn't have been me because I had to gain 30 kilos for the film. It should have been somebody else playing the role," she added.
PHOTO: FILEBhumi had gained 30 kilos for her debut film Dum Laga Ke Haisha, just as she went through a complex prosthetic process for her role of one of India''s two oldest sharpshooters in her new film, Saand Ki Aankh.
"All my films are different and in all my films I look different. I am very clear. Even if I have to play a man I will do it. I'll do whatever it takes," she said.
Bhumi stressed, "It's my director's prerogative. If he comes to me with an interesting part, why will I not do it?"
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