Anupam Kher recently added a prestigious feather to his cap by clinching the Best Supporting Actor award at the UK Asian Film Festival for his Indo-Canadian film Calorie. The win holds deep personal significance for the veteran actor. The film revolves around the devastating impact of the Kanishka Air Tragedy on a family. Air India Flight 182, traveling on the Montreal-London-Delhi route, was brought down mid-air by a bomb on June 23, 1985. The aircraft plunged into the Atlantic Ocean off the Irish coast, claiming all 329 lives on board, including 268 Canadian citizens and 24 Indian nationals. "The story was very personal for our director Eisha Marjara as her mother was on the flight. I had to go beyond acting skills and craft to feel the emotions for the film," he shares.
'Competence is the biggest enemy of brilliance,' says Kher on his acting approach
Despite the emotional weight the role carried, Anupam is thrilled that his performance has earned him well-deserved recognition, as reported in Hindustan Times. "Achhe roles ko karne ke liye aur zyada mehnat karni padti hai, and when you have done so much work, there is a possibility that you may become competent. I feel competence is the biggest enemy of brilliance. So, I treat every film as my first. In the last decade or so, I have shifted gears to break the monotony. I choose work where I get to dig my teeth a little deeper," he says.
Kher says he feels he represents 1.4 billion Indians on international platforms
More than four decades into a remarkable career, the thrill of winning an award has never faded for Kher and it hits differently when the achievement comes on an international stage while representing India. "It may sound dramatic but actors don't get to officially represent their country globally like how sportspersons do. So, whenever I work abroad, I do say 'Bharat Mata ki Jai' before every work. Though I am not a brand ambassador for the country, I am somewhere representing 1.4 billion Indians," he insists.
Kher on troll culture: 'Logon ko celebrate karne mein darr lagta hai'
However, Kher acknowledges that basking in such victories is no longer as straightforward as it once was in the film industry. "I was just talking to Anil Kapoor that people have stopped celebrating life and their wins because they think usko bhi log kuch na kuch bol denge. We used to have such amazing Bollywood parties earlier by Yash Chopra or Subhash Ghai, we don't have them today anymore kyunki logon ko celebrate karne mein darr lagta hai ki kahin na kahin koi kuch galat nikaal lega, and that fear is there rightfully so. We live in such a time and we need to adapt ourselves, but takleef to hoti hai kabhi kabhi," he reflects.
The TOI Entertainment Desk is a dynamic and dedicated team of jou...
Read MoreThe TOI Entertainment Desk is a dynamic and dedicated team of journalists, working tirelessly to bring the pulse of the entertainment world straight to the readers of The Times of India. No red carpet goes unrolled, no stage goes dark - our team spans the globe, bringing you the latest scoops and insider insights from Bollywood to Hollywood, and every entertainment hotspot in between. We don't just report; we tell tales of stardom and stories untold. Whether it's the rise of a new sensation or the seasoned journey of an industry veteran, the TOI Entertainment Desk is your front-row seat to the fascinating narratives that shape the entertainment landscape. Beyond the breaking news, we present a celebration of culture. We explore the intersections of entertainment with society, politics, and everyday life.
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