Bollywood siren Sameera Reddy has stepped out from the shadow of her model siblings into the sizzling world of the big screen. Recently seen schmoozing with the likes of Shakira and George Clooney at the Toronto Film Festival which showcased two of her films, the sultry star, who was also in the news for battling to save an orphanage, reveals to SITANSHI TALATI-PARIKH, that under all that glamour, she is just a simple girl with simple desires
Sameera
Speak...
Being glamorous doesn’t turn my head,
because I have been on the receiving end of never being looked at, of
never getting a rose on Rose Day in college, of being alone. I am now
more wary of superficiality.
It was a painful time
when nobody even knew I existed – that there were just two Reddy sisters
who were models, Sushma and Meghana.
We are so opinionated and headstrong,
all with ideas about what’s best for the other! Now, when my sisters
and I spend precious moments together, it is a riot.
Being sexy is just a facet,
not the whole. I didn’t start out being a sex symbol, or think that
I would be an actress. It was almost like an overnight change.
It isn’t fair to be under
constant pressure of having to wake up every morning, roll out of bed
and come down looking as if you have just stepped out of a Yash Chopra
film! But it is a part of who we are and what we are expected to do.
I go with the flow, from
bubble-headed bizarre roles in Telugu films, to serious acting in Bengali
cinema, to masala parts in Bollywood.
I am meticulous about
learning all the languages in which I act and I understand the meaning
of every word that I speak.
Being an actor makes you
an extrovert. It throws you into the water and forces you to learn to
swim. The image is just an extension of what I am supposed to be – but
it is really not who I am.
The adulation is fantastic –
it is what makes all the baniyawalas and rikshawalas
recognise me. But, one day it’s going to go away. The day most actors
dread, is the day I feel I will be set free...
The turning point of my
career was being a part of Buddhadeb Dasgupta’s film, Kalpurush.
You can’t hide in Buddhadeb’s cinema, it is just you and your character
and it is the true test of real acting.
I
got a renewed sense of confidence when Buddhadeb chose
to cast someone like me, when everyone else dismissed me as just a glamour
doll.
Toronto was a crazy picnic.
I went to the Festival with no expectations and ended up meeting all
these international celebrities who are so unbelievably down to earth.
Having dinner with them seemed like the most normal thing to do!
The Indian sari is the
sexiest outfit in the world. Why wear Versace and Armani to International
festivals?
I am mad about travel
and I love places with history and culture, like Turkey. I like backpacking;
I have spent a month in Thailand, where I learnt how to ride a bike.
I am a loner and an introvert.
I love sitting by the poolside reading and writing in my diary – which
would probably make a fantastic best-seller! I also enjoy knitting.
I shock myself. I can
be unpredictable, because I am very impulsive. I follow a strict fitness
and diet regime; yet one day I can wake up and decide to eat pani
puri off the road, or fly to Paris, and actually do it!
I can say something, and then do something completely different.
I would never reveal my inner self to anybody.
My portable PlayStation is always with me. I love Need For Speed and car racing games. Sam’s Mission, a video game revolving around me, is a great kick, pun intended!
My love life suffers because guys are really intimidated by my image. At the end of the day, I am just a girl, who wants a simple guy she can come home to, not a model, actor or cricketer!
My role model is my mother, a part of my dad’s business, a social worker and a constant learner, whose energy even at the age of 61 makes me want to better myself.
In a world full of superficiality, taking care of orphan kids has been a reality check. The plasma TV, the diamond ring, every big thing became so redundant.
I emotionally blackmailed all my friends, found out what fancy new thing they were about to buy and made them put the money into the orphanage instead. I’m proud of them for coming through for me.
I am not a party animal. I like simplicity. My favourite thing in the world is plopping down with a big bag of popcorn and watching a movie. What really gives me pleasure is coming home to safety and comfort after a hard day’s work.
It is a tight slap in the face, if you think that when you win the Filmfare Award you will be happy, or when you find the perfect man or lose weight you will feel good. None of that matters – happiness should begin right at this moment with no end goal in sight.
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