Washington, July 15 : Freida Pinto, who became an
overnight celebrity after the multiple-Oscar winning "Slumdog
Millionaire", views her new film "Trishna" as a "very beautiful and yet
tragic" tale of a village girl torn between her traditional upbringing
and the dreams of a girl from modern India.
Based on Thomas
Hardy's classic "Tess of the d'Urbervilles", British filmmaker Michael
Winterbottom's newest film is set in rural Rajasthan. It has Pinto
playing the title role of Trishna, an auto-rickshaw driver's daughter
who falls for a rich boy.
"I guess the journey is very beautiful
and at the same time very tragic," she says, "because it goes from being
really innocent to being in a situation of almost desperation and
finally to redemption."
"It's quite an intense journey for one
girl to go through," Pinto told IANS over phone from New York, where she
arrived for the red carpet premiere of the film at the IFC Centre in
Manhattan earlier this week.
She felt Trishna was a tough role to
play "because it's so different from what I am in real life," said
Pinto, who has a very outspoken personality and "just can't kind of lay
back and just get bombarded with things that I don't believe in."
"So
I guess that was really hard for me, especially because we didn't
really have a solid script," she said. "So every time, I would try to
say something or speak out against something, Michael would just say,
'No, you don't say anything in this situation. Just observe'."
"Now
as an actor who is very outspoken, it was very tough and again such a
welcome challenge," said Pinto, who "would love to be something like
that again."
To prepare for her role, she spent some time in
Rajasthan's Osian village in a family setting and interviewed a number
of girls who worked at hotels and one who worked as ground staff in an
airline.
"It was very interesting that all the stories were
different from the other, but the bottom line came down to 'whatever dad
thinks is probably right and we'll just follow that or whatever our
future husband thinks is right is going to be our life from then on,'"
she said.
"And that for me was the startling reality that I had to just come to terms with to understand my character better," Pinto said.
Pinto,
who came to limelight with her very first film, Danny Boyle's "Slumdog
Millionaire", considers both Boyle and Winterbottom as "absolutely
amazing filmmakers," with definitely different working styles.
For
one thing they are "very completely different films", Pinto said. "
'Slumdog' is a love story that has a beautiful message of hope at the
end of it. And the other one is a tragic love story which can be very
sad."
Secondly, while she had a detailed script for "Slumdog
Millionaire", "as far as 'Trishna' went, all the experience I had
gathered was going to be put to the test with Michael because we did not
have a solid script and I had to really let go if I had any kind of
inhibitions."
Pinto thinks her co-star Anurag Kashyap, who has
made a mark for himself in Indian cinema as a brilliant director, is a
"really good" actor too. "I think, yeah, if he gives acting a shot, he
will be pretty good."
She hopes some day she'll get a chance to
work with Kashyap "because he is such an eclectic filmmaker, who is not
afraid to take challenges upon himself and is so brave".
Asked if
she feared being typed as an 'exotic Indian beauty' by Hollywood, Pinto
said: "I am not afraid of that any more because I have made sure people
don't look at me like that."
And does Bollywood have anything to
offer her? "Well, when people use the term 'Bollywood', I hope they are
including Anurag Kashyap, Dibakar Banerjee and all these wonderful
filmmakers as well because definitely I would love to work with them,"
said Pinto, adding: "Why not?"
Although she lives in Los Angeles
these days for convenience's sake, Mumbai will always be number one for
Pinto because "it has made me the person I am today - very outspoken".
"Oh, my god, there is no comparison. Mumbai is Mumbai."
By Arun Kumar © IANS
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