Pooja Bhatt believes women start blooming in their forties but they are not represented correctly on the screen. Citing the example of American actor-producer Sharon Stone, Pooja, 46, said why can’t writers write about women beyond a certain age.
Actor-director Pooja Bhatt believes women start blooming in their forties but somehow they are not represented correctly on the screen whereas men continue to play characters half their age.
Pooja, who is returning to the silver screen after a gap of 18 years with Sadak 2, had said goodbye to acting but then it pulled her back.
“I had said bye-bye to acting in a way but once an actor always an actor. Life has got other plans for me. Like I did not want to be an actor, I wanted to be an architect or astronaut and Daddy happened and the rest is history.
“I felt I was happy being in the back, launching people like Sunny Leone, repackaging Richa Chadha, John Abraham but life had other plans and it includes Sadak 2 and a web series,” Pooja told PTI in an interview.
Known for her films such as Daddy, Sadak and Zakhm, Pooja will reprise her role in the sequel of Sadak, that marks the return of her filmmaker father Mahesh Bhatt to direction.
Pooja, whose last film as an actor was Everybody Says I’m Fine in 2001, will also be seen in a web series based on Abheek Barua’s book called A City of Death. Set in Kolkata, the story revolves around an alcoholic female cop in her 40s, who is sent to investigate a crime of passion.
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