She’s vocal, fearless and a force to reckon with. Taapsee Pannu is at her fittest best with a spate of upcoming releases, all as she continues being the poster girl for what it truly means to be the most authentic version of yourself, no matter what the trolls might say.
Given below is an excerpt from Vogue India’s May/June 2021 issue:
IN IT TO WIN ITWritten by Aditi Bhimjyani
Photographed by Bikramjit Bose
Styled by Priyanka Kapadia
FIGHTING FIT
Assured but unassuming, Pannu has no qualms admitting she’s a lucky girl. “If I had to struggle for roles, I wouldn’t have lasted in this field for so long,” she confesses. But as an outsider is it really luck or hard work? We need to dial back a bit to understand how Pannu’s star was born. She comes from a typically Indian middle-class family of professionals, where it’s taken for granted that you study and get a secure job that pays the bills. “I had the most regular childhood in Delhi. We had no pocket money, we shopped twice a year (and never without a good haggle) and we never changed homes. We studied and worked hard,” she says. But while pursuing her engineering degree, Pannu picked up odd modelling jobs for some extra pocket money. When she graduated in 2009, the film offers rolled in. “I was always this hyperactive multitasker.” So she took a year off to work on improving her CAT score (to get into a top MBA school), even as she signed on two big-banner films in Telugu and Tamil.
RISING
STAR
Soon enough, David Dhawan signed her on for Chashme Baddoor (2013) without
an audition. “Thank God I wasn’t auditioned. I haven’t learnt the craft
formally, my training is all on-set. I would have failed miserably. I was known
as the girl who has the ‘Preity Zinta vibe,’” she says, adding, “which is why I
even got a Bollywood break.”
She didn’t make her mark as an actor with a bang, more a slow and steady
trickle. She comfortably pegs herself a Bollywood outsider and outlier, but a
happy and proud one. “The view is the best from here,” she adds.“People now
expect my work to be interesting and worth their time, so I can’t do four films
a year and look and sound the same in all.”
Does that mean a more picky approach on the number of films she signs on?
“Being a female actor I cannot afford to do just one film a year. I wish I had
that luxury. But I cannot turn my life upside down for a role,” she replies
honestly. Her trade-off is to shoot one film at a go in 45 days. And as a
method actor she simply psyches herself into believing that she is
the woman she’s playing. “I bore
quickly, so new roles and new places help. Fame is not important. I am a Leo,
after all,” she quips. But then clarifies more seriously, “I am the modern
young woman. My roles represent that. People should be able to relate to my
character.”
WAY
AHEAD
Pannu is unarguably a firebrand. She remains strong in her convictions on
social or political issues on her online platforms, no matter if it’s tax raids
or trolls. She is determined to remain true to herself. But how does she deal with
the constant negativity? “I realised that I would get trolled even if I said
the weather is good,” she says. But when Pannu wasn’t a seasoned hand, she
would get angry and respond up a storm with her nameless, faceless trolls. “Now
I enjoy it. I worry when I’m not trolled. I wonder, am I not relevant anymore?”
As for what’s next on her wish list, her main boxes to check were to own her
own home and a car (and be able to shop without looking at a price tag, though
she still cannot bring herself to drop a bomb on a pair of shoes), and she’s
managed to achieve that. “Now I’d rather live each day as it comes and sleep
happy every night,” she says. Push her a little and she confesses that she
really wants to be an Avenger, so the day she signs on as Captain Marvel will
be mission complete.
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