INTERVIEW| I don’t like most of the scripts: Nana Patekar

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INTERVIEW| I don’t like most of the scripts: Nana Patekar



You are working with a youngster like Utkarsh Sharma. What was the experience like?Utkarsh Sharma may be a newcomer and younger than me, but he has performed excellently. He is young, so I put no pressure on him. He plays a vagabond guide, but he changes with time and has used the Banarasi dialect so well. We take time picking up a new dialect, but he has done it brilliantly.You have shifted to the outskirts of the city now. Don’t you miss the glamour of the city?I used to miss my childhood days, so I have shifted out of the city. We are fortunate to hear the birds chirping in the mornings. If people like to watch me on screen, they will go to the cinemas to watch my films.You have become selective with roles; what do you look for in scripts now?I am not selective, but I don’t like most of the scripts. If they give me a good film, I will certainly accept it. I am a common man, and I listen to the narration. If the story appeals to me and I feel that the common man will love to watch the film, I go ahead with the film. I don’t believe in the concept of making films for the niche or the intellectual audience. Films are meant for everybody, like my last film, Welcome.Will we see you doing the next Welcome series?I have refused, and so has Anil Kapoor. You should have the guts to say no to a bad script. What will I lose by saying no? Just money. I have already earned a lot. How much more will I accumulate now?Is this role in any way similar to your character in the Marathi film Natasamrat?No, it’s very different. The only similarity is that I have played a father’s role in both the films. The genres are completely different.Do you take time to come out of a character?I am a switch-on and-off kind of actor. When I am on the sets, I immerse myself in a role completely, but when the shooting is over, I leave my character then and there. With Vanvaas, it was a little difficult. I took time because it was an emotional character. But I can’t take the character home.



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