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She is one of
Bollywood’s leading actresses, and her recent appearance and
subsequent victory on Celebrity Big Brother has earned
her a large international audience. Her new movie is the first
Indian film ever to receive the prestigious Leicester Square
treatment. Shilpa Shetty talks to PureMovies.co.uk about
Celebrity Big Brother, racism, destiny and her new film,
Life…in a Metro.
Pure
Movies: Shilpa, welcome back to Britain. Your character is a
different role than that which you are used to taking on, how do
you think your fans will respond to a role like this?
Shilpa Shetty: I
wish I could answer that, it’d make me a clairvoyant rather than
an actor. But I’m very grateful that Anurag Basu [director]
believed in me to take on this role, and it is something
different to the song and dance which is associated with Indian
movies as it is realistic and unpretentious, and therefore I
think it’s going to be very well accepted. And I think the
audiences generally are looking for something different, and
Metro will definitely be able to provide them with that, as
it creates an amalgam between reality and entertainment, and
that for me is the reason I wanted to do this film.
Were you at all
daunted by the role? Presumably a role like this would still be
seen as shocking in parts of India.
No, it was such a good,
meaty role, and I would not have any apprehensions about
portraying this kind of character. Obviously, times have
changed, and the bigger cities, the more modern cities, would
not find this to be as shocking as people in rural India might
find it. But the character of Shikka is quite a common
character; therefore I am very proud to be playing her.
Is your character
quite realistic and true to real-life Indian women?
Definitely, she is a
woman very-deeply rooted in Indian culture, and then suddenly
has a hundred different reasons to get out of her marriage and
depressing lifestyle, and chooses not to which very much
portrays how culturally bound she actually is, and that is how
95% of married Indian women would have reacted. A lot of people
fall in and out of love during marriage, and many go through
unhappy marriages, but most women are usually the reason that
the marriage stays together because of their strong emotions and
resilience. And the fact that she’s a mother sways this decision
for her. But you’re right; a woman like this in a big city is
not uncommon.
How was it
shooting in a big city like Mumbai?
I was okay shooting on
the roads, but every time we were taken to a railway station, I
wanted to kill Anurag! [laughs] And many scenes with me and my
lover are shot about two hours away from Mumbai, so all of that
was quite hectic. But Anurag and Ronny Screwvala [producer] saw
nothing as impossible, and really made it all work.
Of course,
especially since
Metro is the first
Indian film to receive a Leicester Square premiere…
Exactly
[laughs], that in itself is a huge feat, let me tell you. It is
a huge compliment to all of the cast and crew that worked on
this movie, and they really deserved it. It obviously shows how
hard everybody worked to achieve this.
With your new
fanbase here, is it hard to please your fans here and in India?
Well, you can’t please
everyone, and I try and do what’s right. Sometimes, you
unknowingly offend people, but Metro is going to be a
universally accepted film because it doesn’t offend any
sensibilities, and the character I play is believable and real.
But it is the people of Britain that have given me my newfound
fame, and I am really grateful for them for voting for me [to
win Big Brother] and wanting to see me.
Did
you go into the Big Brother house hoping to break onto the
British film scene?
No,
who’d have thought I was going to win? I never thought I’d run
into this kind of luck. It all happened and has turned my life
around overnight, and opportunities are now knocking on my door
and I’m just taking as many as I can. It was obviously
predestined for me.
Predestined?
Do you believe in karma?
I am a believer in
destiny. I have seen the highs and the lows and I believe
whatever happens does so for a reason, and its all for the best.
Maybe this was all meant to be, maybe Big Brother merely worked
as a catalyst to raise issues such as racism, which needed to be
approached sooner or later, and I’m glad I was a part of the
realisation. So yes, it was all karma.
Do you intend to
move here and have a family at any point?
I will take that step in
due course. For the moment, I’m merely shuttling between the two
countries doing a number of different things, so I’m trying to
take things slowly.
What
is next for you then?
I am going to be
launching my new perfume in the next two months. I’ll be the
only Indian girl to do it on a mainstream level, so I hope
everybody likes it. And my musical is also coming out as well as
my book, and hopefully they will both be well received.

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