I play a diva in 'Shab': Raveena Tandon
Raveena, will be making a comeback to films after a gap of three years
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2015-01-23 16:47 GMT
Mumbai: She has been away from Bollywood for quite sometime but for actress Raveena Tandon it was not a tough call to play a negative role in Onir's upcoming romantic
film Shab. Raveena, 41, who is making a comeback to films after a gap of three years, said she wanted a challenging role to make her return to Bollywood.
"I really wanted to do something challenging and fun. I opted for Shab because Onir is a dear friend and the character which I am playing in the film is something which I didn't do earlier."
"It's a role of a diva but has shades of grey in it and in the film I walk through a very thin line between positive and negative. Onir gave me the other role first but I wanted this role because I have not played such a character before. I was more excited to play the negative part," Raveena said in an interview.
'Shab', a Delhi set drama, is a love triangle and stars Prosenjit Chatterjee's wife Arpita and Ashish Bisht, both are making their Bollywood debut. Sanjay Suri and designer Wendell Rodricks are making guest appearance in the film.
Raveena said she was always the first choice for Shab, which Onir wrote almost 14 years ago when he was assisting Kalpana Lajmi in Daman. The 2001 film starred Raveena and Suri. She won a national award for playing a tortured wife in the film.
"Onir directed us in Daman because Kalpana fell ill for a long time during the shooting of the film. Onir discussed the idea during that time with me and wanted to start up the project in a year or two. I got pregnant in 2004 and film went to the back burner," she said. Raveena, who has two children with husband Anil Thadani and two adopted kids, has done only a handful of films since her marriage.
Her last film Shobhana 7 Nights, which was considered as her comeback to Bollywood after pregnancy, is yet to have a box-office release. "Shobhana 7 Nights was a festival film. I won best actress award in Chicago film festival. It was a great learning experience for me. I don't think the film is meant for box-office," she said.