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'At 40 I'm playing best parts of my life'

June 15, 2022 09:44 IST

Photograph: Kind courtesy Dia Mirza/Instagram

Ageism is something women have to contend with, believes Dia Mirza, adding it is 'empowering' to see that roles are being written for actors of her age today.

The actor, who was last seen in the 2020 film Thappad, said she is glad to challenge the status quo where women characters are still stereotyped.

"Ageism is something that we have to contend with and I am glad the opportunities that are coming my way today in so many ways have fixed this problem," Dia says.

"Every time I get to play a powerful character in a good film, I am challenging that norm, resetting the big divide that the industry had created for women post the age of 35 and limited them only to playing certain kinds of parts."

Before foraying into the film industry in 2001 with the romantic-drama Rehnaa Hai Terre Dil Mein, the Hyderabad-born actor was a successful model and had won the Miss Asia Pacific title a year before.

Over the years, she has made a mark for herself as an actor with roles in Parineeta, Lage Raho Munna Bhai and Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd.

 

 

IMAGE: Dia Mirza on the sets of Dhak Dhak. Photograph: Kind courtesy Dia Mirza/Instagram

Expressing gratitude to film-makers for writing parts for older female actors, Mirza said she is thrilled to get the opportunity to essay well-rounded roles at the age of 40.

"It is a powerful recognition and intervention that I am playing the best parts of my life now when I am 40. This is just so amazing, liberating, empowering and wonderful. It is a reflection of the fact that there are individuals in the industry that are evolving.

"And it is proof of the fact that you have to remain persistent, consistent and want to continue to push boundaries as a performer as opportunities will open up for you," she said.

Each role contributed to more interest and understanding of the kind of work she wants, she said.

"I see a definitive shift and also the way the stories are being treated. I would not have imagined the love, respect and recognition that Thappad gave me because it was an underwritten part, it was not the one of the more prominent parts in terms of writing," she added.

IMAGE: Dia Mirza with Fatima Sana Shaikh, Ratna Pathak Shah and Sanjana Sanghi in Dhak Dhak. Photograph: Kind courtesy Dia Mirza/Instagram

Up next for the actor is the upcoming sociopolitical drama Bheed, which reunites her with Thappad Director Anubhav Sinha, and Taapsee Pannu's production Dhak Dhak, a road trip film alongside Ratna Pathak Shah, Fatima Sana Shaikh and Sanjana Sanghi.

"I am glad we connected and we did Thappad together. I am grateful to be a part of Bheed. It is a kind of story that needs to be told. It is pertinent, poignant. It is a privilege to be part of this story," says Dia, who has also worked with Sinha on Dus and Cash.

About Dhak Dhak, she said she always had the desire to ride a bike and her wish came true through the movie.

"We have four women from different age groups, different milieu of society on a journey together. It opens up space for so much conversation."

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