A Quote by Sudha Chandran

I am required to shoot for 'Jaiyam' only for five days in a month. Being able to speak Tamil fluently, I complete 25 episodes each time I visit Chennai. — © Sudha Chandran
I am required to shoot for 'Jaiyam' only for five days in a month. Being able to speak Tamil fluently, I complete 25 episodes each time I visit Chennai.
We changed our rules. If a player does not have some sot of altercation on or off the court once each month, we fine him...The guys that are our top four scorers, each of them will be required once every two months to appear on MTV. The guys who shoot the worst free throws over a one-month period, next time we have a TV game they're required to look into the camera and beat their chests after they make a good play.
I can speak Tamil fluently, and the sentence structures in Telugu are quite similar.
I have grown up in Chennai, so I speak Tamil fluent.
The first time I visited Chennai was in 2013, July, I think. I came here to meet the director of my first Tamil film, Pa Ranjith for 'Madras.' We did a test shoot and I left the same evening. I didn't get to explore the city much at that time.
It's hard to prep a movie in five days and shoot it in five days and cut it in barely any time. You don't get quite enough time to make the thing, let alone tell the story.
I am a Malayali who was brought up in Chennai. I know both Malayalam and Tamil.
On 'B&B,' we shoot so fast and eight episodes a week, so we have to always be on our A-game. There's really no time to make certain adjustments. We usually shoot a scene in one take, maybe two or three only if needed.
I'm home maybe five days a month, but they're never next to each other.
I speak Tamil well and I am proud to be living as a Tamil. but above it all, I am very proud Indian!
I can fluently speak five languages: English, emoji, sexting, sarcasm and sass.
I speak Marathi fluently and even during shoots I make it a point to speak in the language for most of the time.
True, I was born and raised in Chennai, fluent in Tamil, but essentially, I am a Telugu guy and a Telugu actor.
Gradually my whole concept of time changed until I thought of a month as having twenty-five days of humanness and five others when I might just as well have been an animal in a steel trap.
I'll always love movies. But there's something I love very much about TV, when you shoot episodes while other episodes are still being written.
We shoot double episodes in 15 days in Los Angeles.
The bigger budget films only shoot about a page or two a day, so there's very specific amount of time spent on detail and getting each tidbit exactly how they want it. In a movie or TV show, you shoot eight or ten pages and you aren't afforded as much time to do each scene.
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