A Quote by Mohan Joshi

I do television, films and theatre simultaneously. — © Mohan Joshi
I do television, films and theatre simultaneously.
Television has dried up for my generation, so it's plays and films. You get used to being lazy doing films, but classical theatre's going to finish me off.
I've done great theatre, great films and had a lot of opportunities in television. I also love to sing, and I've been able to do that once or twice in the television shows.
I never felt typecast because when I was in television, I was also, simultaneously, in films. I was seen across platforms, so that's why I have not been put in a category.
The publicity machine for films and television is so much bigger than for theatre.
The money is better in films and television. But in terms of acting, theatre is more rewarding.
I like films that are so funny, dramatic and lifelike simultaneously, that you are laughing and cringing simultaneously all throughout the film.
On the one hand, young theatre directors were coming to television theatre, because they wanted to get closer to the cinema, despite having studied and worked for the theatre.
Theatre is done largely for the love of the craft. Television makes you famous. And films immortalize you. That's the relationship between the three.
It is hard to get good actors who also do television, ads and films. Theatre requires six weeks of rehearsal for a play.
I was a good student. For a while, my parents did make me cope with school and films simultaneously. But after a point, this wasn't practical. I had to choose between studies and films. I chose films.
Television theatre, as is implied in its name, should rely on adaptations of scripts written for the theatre.
Work is work for me. I can do any work in the field of acting. Be it films, television or theatre, I am willing to do anything.
To move from a discussion of the early relationship between theatre and television to an examination of the current situation of live performance is to confront the irony that whereas television initially sought to replicate and, implicitly, to replace live theatre, live performance itself has developed since that time toward the replication of the discourse of mediatization.
I grew up seeing a lot of theatre, and it was theatre that really seduced me into acting - not film or television.
Each medium has its own beauty and way of working. While television offers immense reach and long-running shows, films are shorter and they are presented differently. With theatre, it's the thrill of instant feedback.
I grew up in the theatre. It's where I got my start. Writing a television drama with theatrical dialogue about the theatre is beyond perfection.
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