Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Huma Qureshi - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Indian actress Huma Qureshi.
Last updated on April 19, 2025.
For me, growth and empowerment are about giving a woman a choice.
One thing we need to learn from the West is how professional they are about their work. A 7:30 A.M. call time means just that. That's something we need to imbibe from them. And people in the West need to learn from us how we work with our stories.
Whether my film becomes commercially successful or not, only God can tell, or the box-office numbers. So why worry about it and get distracted? — © Huma Qureshi
Whether my film becomes commercially successful or not, only God can tell, or the box-office numbers. So why worry about it and get distracted?
I know that when you do similar kind of films, one after the other, people tend to stereotype and say, 'She is only good at this.'
Co-directing is not possible with my brother. We have very different opinions.
Collaboration between different parts of the world will bring us closer. From a business point of view, it opens up new markets as well.
I am an insecure person. I have my own insecurities about lots of things, but I am pretty secure as an actor.
In India and elsewhere in the world, the moment a woman speaks out against harassment, people sort of start making all sorts of character judgments about her, about her morality, about what she was wearing, and all such things, and I think that is not fair.
I have always said that Twitter is my forum to talk to people about what's happening in my life.
One would be lying if they say nepotism doesn't exist.
After 'Gangs,' people thought that I couldn't speak a sentence in English or that I don't wear jeans or, you know, I am a city girl.
Indian actors are afraid to go and work abroad because people are very professional over there. In India, we have become very lazy. Everything happens slowly, and as per God's will. A 9 A.M. call time means we start working at whatever time we wish.
Maybe at 55, I would like to direct. I will go the Angelina Jolie way. — © Huma Qureshi
Maybe at 55, I would like to direct. I will go the Angelina Jolie way.
If I'm playing an Indian in a Hollywood film, I won't do it in any funny Indian accent.
I don't have any ego, and I will go and audition for parts if I'm offered an interesting script.
What I miss most about Lucknow is its chaat.
I have always been cool and open about my body.
It is a challenge to work away from India and with a cast and crew from all over the world. But it's also very gratifying, and you learn so much by just being with them.
As a middle class girl from Delhi, with practically no backing in films, this industry and the audience have given me a lot of love.
As an actor, I don't have an agenda. I don't have to prove a point; I am not a bastion of a particular brand of cinema. I am doing what makes me happy.
I believe in content. Just looking pretty next to the hero gives me no joy. I believe I have more to offer than that.
I believe in equal pay for equal work. Gender, race, skin colour, or ethnicity should not be the parameters to hire someone or to decide how much they should be paid.
The film is intended to unite people and not create division in the society. 'Partition' talks about peace and humanity.
I don't think one should be a slave to one medium.
I have been told too much - to talk less, to keep my opinions to myself, to not sound intelligent - all this was told to me so that I could fit in. But I never thought I fit in anyway. So if you don't fit in, at least stand out.
Cinema and cricket are two professions in this country that people have an opinion on.
The very fact that I got to work with Akshay Kumar was special.
I just cannot do a boring film. It has to be interesting with a good character. — © Huma Qureshi
I just cannot do a boring film. It has to be interesting with a good character.
As a woman, absolutely, I have had to deal with people making advances at me, but not just people from the business of film industry but people across different professions and different strata. I think it has a lot to do with power; it is not only limited to the film business.
A lot of issues that we have in the world today rise from the fact that we do not know enough about each other's cultures, that we don't respect each other's origins and there is so much negativity and strife around because we don't know where the other person is coming from.
As a member of the audience, when you see someone from your country working in an international project, your curiosity about that film increases manifold.
I grew as an actress, and I feel I gained a lot, whenever I have worked with any great director in the past.
I wouldn't say that I haven't got my fair share of good roles. This industry has been very kind to me.
No one likes it when their personal life is talked about, and I am no exception. But I guess it's the price an actor has to pay for being in the public eye.
I make it a point to pick films that tell you a story in an engaging way. I can't compromise on the content. The script has to be substantial and impactful.
Working with directors like Gurinder Chadha was a learning experience for me.
My parents gave me a strong sense of entitlement. And I use that in a very good way.
I would love to do a biopic or a situational comedy. — © Huma Qureshi
I would love to do a biopic or a situational comedy.
If a woman is saying something out loud, she is asking for help, and you have no business to character assassinating her. You have to reach out to her and help her and protect her, and I think we need to protect our women, and we need to protect our children.
There are a lot of people out there who are just bullies. They constantly keep telling you that you are too fat, too thin, your teeth are not fine, you can't speak English really well, and you are too short, etc.
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