Image Source : FILE IMAGE Pankaj Tripathi speaks on Ram Gopal Varma’s rejection in Aap Ki Adalat

Bollywood and OTT star actor Pankaj Tripathi has revealed how director Ram Gopal Varma once rejected him for a gangster’s role after carrying out a test. “It was good otherwise both he and I would have suffered losses”, Tripathi said. Appearing in Rajat Sharma‘s iconic show ‘Aap Ki Adalat’, to be re-telecast tonight at 10 pm on India TV, Pankaj Tripathi was asked why a noted director like Ram Gopal Varma rejected him for a gangster’s role.

“Yes, I once went to him and found several ferocious-looking ‘gunday’ (gangsters) already waiting there. Some had deep scars on their faces. I asked one of them, are you really an actor? He said that Ram Gopal Varma casts dangerous-looking characters. Those days, aspiring actors used to deliberately cut their faces with blades so that Ram Gopal Varma could spot and cast them,” said Pankaj Tripathi.

Rajat Sharma: Did Ramu (Ram Gopal Varma) call you? 

Pankaj Tripathi: Yes, he called me. It was an interesting incident. Ramu asked me to sit on a bench meant for four people. I sat on the bench in a corner. He told me, ‘No No, come more close to this side’. On a bench meant for four, I was sitting alone and he stared at me intently for 10 to 15 minutes. I felt very sheepish when he continued to stare at me for a long. Then he told me, ‘Jao, Go’. He didn’t call me later…Of course, he is a good director. He met me once later and praised my acting, and said, “You are doing good, Pankaj”.

Rajat Sharma: He must have realised, that if he had cast you then it could have been his gain?

Pankaj Tripathi: It’s all a game of time (Samay Ka Khel Hota Hai). If he had cast me then, then it would have been his loss and my loss too. (Tripathi told the audience) So, if nothing big happens in your life, don’t be disappointed, it is an omen of something good that is going to happen.

‘I never check monitor after shoot,’ Pankaj Tripathi

Pankaj Tripathi revealed he never watched the camera monitor after completing his shoot. “This is a rare thing that few people in the media know about. You (Rajat Sharma) have good spies in Mumbai. I never check the camera monitor after finishing my shoot. I think the director is the captain and it is his job to check the monitor. If he okays the scene, then it means he got what he wanted,” said Tripathi.

Pankaj Tripathi talks about Fukrey and other sequels

He said that at this moment, five of his films have sequels because they were hits. Also when asked whether he sometimes changes his dialogues or even the climax in his films, Pankaj Tripathi admitted in the affirmative. 

Rajat Sharma: Where did you get this idea of mixing Hindi with English in your dialogues?

Pankaj Tripathi: In the first part of the movie Fukrey, it was my idea. I told the director (M S Lamba) I wanted to change my lines. He first refused. While I was rehearsing, lighting work was going on inside the security cabin of Delhi’s Miranda College. The director told me not to mix English in your dialogue, I told him I was only rehearsing. The lighting men began to laugh when I mixed English in my dialogues. By that time, the director had seen my rehearsed dialogue, and he agreed. In ‘Fukrey Returns’, I got the written dialogues, and in ‘Fukrey 3’ too.

Rajat Sharma: In Fukrey Part 1 and Part 2, your picture was not there in the posters, but in Part 3, your picture was there in the poster. So has Pankaj Tripathi become a saleable star now?

Pankaj Tripathi: Yahi Toh Jeevan Hai (This is Life)

Rajat Sharma: That’s why you are doing several sequels of your films? 

Pankaj Tripathi: Sequels are made when the film becomes a hit. Unsuccessful films don’t have sequels. At this moment, five of my films and shows have sequels, including- Stree, Mirzapur, Criminal Justice, Fukrey, and also Gangs of Wasseypur.

Rajat Sharma: There was this ‘Super 30’ movie in which you were doing the role of a neta. Did you deliberately change the dialogue?

Pankaj Tripathi: Vikas Bahl was the director and there was a scene where a student gets admission to Oxford University and asks the neta for money. The neta started blubbering something else. The neta was saying: ‘Ja Rahe Ho? Kahan Ja Rahe Ho? Jao, Jao, London Jao, Paris Jao, Japan Jao, Vietnam Jao, China Jao, Beijing Jao, Dubai Jao, Bahrain Jao.’ It looked like poetry. The lines were not written. The dialogue was delivered spontaneously. I was doing the role of a neta in Bihar (minister Shriram Singh in the movie). I had seen a leader in my village who used to blubber meaninglessly. I told the director Vikas Bahl, I would speak in the same manner. So, the scene developed in that way. It looked different.

Rajat Sharma: Can you repeat the same dialogue here?

Pankaj Tripathi: It was, “Dubai Jao, Bahrain Jao,….. Kya Baat Hai. The boy said, Sir, you had called me. I replied: Hum har us cheez ko bulate hain, jo desh ke liye baat karega. The boy said, I need money. I replied: Jao Jao Jahan Jaana, par paisa aur prem ke chakkar me mat padna. Humne achche achhe ko barbaad hote dekha hai. Bhagat Singh padhe they? Dekho, nahin pade they. Jao Jao.” So you see, the neta starts giving a sermon instead of giving money.

Aap Ki Adalat with actor Pankaj Tripathi will be re-telecast tonight at 10 pm on India TV. 

 





Source link