Amala Paul talks about her career-defining role in Rajesh Pillai's film Mili, and her fiancé, A.L. Vijay
Amala Paul, the Myna actress, is flying high on
romance. She has stardust in her eyes as she talks about her fiancé,
Tamil filmmaker A.L. Vijay. However, Amala, says firmly that marriage
does not mean the end of her
engagement with films. “Acting is in my
blood and I will continue to act. I became an actress by choice. But
there is a change in my priorities now and I plan to be choosy in my
roles after my marriage. No more potboilers for me. I want to act in
roles of substance and in films that have a time schedule,” she says.
At present, the actress is acting in Mili, helmed by Rajesh Pillai of Traffic
fame. She is not the wallflower she plays in Rajesh’s film. “That is
why I was keen on playing this character,” she says during a break in
the shooting of the film that is going on in the city.
The actress has erased all glamour for her role in the film that is about an introvert who finds her own place in the sun.
“This is one role that I was not able to relate to when I read the
script. I am an independent person and I have never suffered from stage
fright. But all of us know a Mili, the quiet girl who always sat on the
back bench, the shy student who would never speak up. There is also a
Mili in each of us, perhaps an occasion when we felt inadequate. I have
observed such students in my class and have always wondered what would
have to be done to give them their share of sunlight to help them
blossom. I am sure all those observations will help me give shape to my
character who also suffers from a huge inferiority complex. It is a real
challenge to be a person who is so different from you,” she says.
Mili is also very different from Renuka and Irene Gardener, her characters in Run Baby Run and Oru Indian Pranayakatha
respectively, both of which raked in the moolah at the box office. It
also saw the young actress work with Mohanlal and Fahadh Faasil, two of
the most happening actors in Mollywood. In Mili, Amala works with Nivin Pauly, who has made it big in Tollywood and Mollywood.
“I was lucky to get the opportunity to work with them so early in my career. Even Mili,
I feel, was destined for me. I got the offer last year but was unable
to take it up because I had no dates for the film. Then, again I was
offered the film and finally Rajesh told me through a friend that he
would do the film if I did the role. I replied that I would be in the
film if Rajesh was helming it!” she says with a smile.
As
soon as this schedule of the film is over, Amala heads to Kochi to get
ready for her wedding. And what is it that made her say ‘yes’ to Vijay?
“I am a great fan of his. Many people fall for the hero. I fell for the
director,” she says with a grin. She continues: We worked together in a
couple of Tamil films and while Vijay’s professionalism and enthusiasm
are noteworthy, what caught my attention is the way he treats women on
the sets. He is so courteous to junior artistes, stars…everyone.
“He
has been a positive influence on me. For instance, I like the way he
bonds with his mother. My mother is a pillar of strength and we are very
close. But many of us take mothers for granted; we often forget to
express what they mean to us. Now, following his example, I take the
effort to express my love for my mother,” gushes Amala.
In
fact, in keeping with her mother’s wish to see her daughter in a white
wedding gown, Amala’s engagement in Kochi will have her wearing a gown
by Delhi-based designer Himangi.
A fashonista, who
enjoys dressing, Amala has finished all the shopping for her clothes and
jewellery for her wedding. “In fact, I had everything planned in my
head even before the dates were announced,” she says.
As
you tell her that June is named after Juno, the Roman goddess of
marriage, she chips in with a smile, “Yes, I know, I researched all that
on the net.”
The conversation veers towards cinema,
and she says that though she might not step behind the camera, she
hints at scripts that she might take up with her beau. That will be
another story altogether.
Here comes the bride
Her
engagement and sangeet ceremony will be held in Kochi on June 7 and the
marriage is in Chennai on June 12. She dons a dress designed by Anita
Dongre for the sangeet while it is a traditional Kancheevaram sari for
the marriage ceremony. For the reception, she is wearing a Sabyasachi
creation. “The marriage is a typical Chettiar ceremony and I am wearing
jewels from Amraapali, while the rest are from Joy Alukkas,” says Amala.
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