A Quote by Sangeetha Krish

Acting in a heroine-oriented film is a tough job. — © Sangeetha Krish
Acting in a heroine-oriented film is a tough job.
I don't think a heroine-oriented film has the capacity to pull an audience like a hero-oriented film in any film industry.
I never stopped being a heroine. I began acting when I was four and bagged my first film as a heroine at the age of 15.
Rarely do heroine-oriented films happen in the film industry.
The audience simply don't find a heroine picking a fight with 10 guys as convincing as a hero. So the industry always sticks to psychological thrillers and ghost movies for heroine-oriented projects and this can sustain only for a short time.
I love acting, every job is a dream job when you're an actor. I'd like to do eventually more film work and to collaborate with the best actors and directors in film.
No one watches 'Taxi Driver' and says, 'Oh, it's a male-oriented film.' No one looks at nine-tenths of the films out there that are headlined by men and say, 'It's a male-oriented film.'
Juilliard definitely emphasizes the theater. They don't train - at all really - for film acting. It's mostly process-oriented, pretty much for the stage.
As an actor, technically, when you are off a film, you are out of a job. An actor goes from job to job. By virtue, acting is an unsure profession.
This isn't to play down people who pursue acting... For me, I do acting just as a fun job. It is a phenomenal job, and I have fun doing it, but I relate more to my martial arts, to my baseball, to my film study. There are more facets to my life that I relate to.
There are so many fabulous heroine-oriented projects happening in Mumbai, whether it's 'Kahaani,' 'Bobby Jasoos,' 'Queen' or 'Mardaani.'
You know, it's so tough not to be bit by the acting bug being in this film family.
Acting for me, is a passion, but it's also a job, and I've always approached it as such. I have a certain manual-laborist view of acting. There's no shame in taking a film because you need some money.
Acting is equally a tough job but it didn't attract me. There was no question of not going in designing.
Audiences want to watch heroine-oriented films, and even writers are writing scripts for women. I am very happy to see this change.
There are no hero-heroine films any more. They are more character-oriented.
'Daddy' is an amazing Bollywood debut for me. I don't play a typical Bollywood heroine. It's a performance-oriented role.
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