For years, actor
Mohit Malhotra believed what many still do. That acting was all about talent. That one magical role could change everything overnight.
Today, he laughs at the idea. “I genuinely thought acting was only about talent,” Mohit says. “Then I entered the industry and realised talent gets you through the door. But discipline is what keeps you in the room.”
Mohit started with Splitsvilla 2, before finding recognition as an actor. He later earned immense popularity for playing Kartik Sharma in Bade Achhe Lagte Hain. Over the years he went on to play Yash Mehra in Jamai Raja, Akarsh Chaudhary in Daayan, Hriday in Naagin 5, and most recently Vikrant Kakkar in Bhagya Lakshmi. He also made his film debut as Rohan Mehra in Vikram Bhatt’s Hacked in 2020.
For Mohit, the real work began once the auditions started. "The biggest lessons were not about dialogue delivery or camera angles. They were about patience, consistency and emotional resilience. You need professionalism, and the ability to keep showing up even when things aren’t going your way,” he explains. “That part nobody talks about in the beginning.”
The biggest surprise? "Success is not built on one big break. It is built on everything that happens before it. I think the biggest myth is that one role changes your life overnight,” Mohit shares. “In reality, it is usually the many small decisions you make consistently that build a career.”
From Sasural Genda Phool to Beintehaa and Laal Ishq, he calls it the daily grind of an actor. "Early call times, endless rehearsals, rejections, callbacks, and the quiet discipline of working on your craft when no one is watching. The big moments eventually come, but they are built on years of showing up and doing the work,” he says.
For Mohit, talent might spark the journey, but discipline sustains it.
"And it is that mindset, not just a breakout role, that has kept me going in an industry where overnight success is the most persistent myth of all. At the end of the day, careers are not made in one night. They are made every morning you choose to show up," he concludes.