Barun Sobti's next show The Great Indian Dysfunctional Family With AltBalaji

Tuesday 1 September 2015

Barun Sobti: The new-age heartthrob.. GulfNews aug 2015





  • Indian actor Barun Sobti.Image Credit: Atiq ur Rehm
The Indian actor has found a whole new fanbase in the Arab world, thanks to his dubbed show

Three years ago, the 31-year-old was at the height of his popularity with his TV romance Iss Pyaar Ko Kya Naam Doon? (What shall I call this love?), when he suddenly decided to quit just one year into the series. As word got out, it led to an unprecedented reaction from fans that was never before seen in the country.
The uproar continued when rumours began circulating that broadcaster Star Plus was planning to continue the show with another hero. Some fans even threatened to commit suicide, forcing producers to permanently shelve the show.
Many blamed Sobti for the show shutting down. Some even blamed him for the production crew losing their jobs.
“I know I did the right thing. I had to do what I had to do,” Sobti recalls.
“I had signed the contract for a year and I’d always planned that after a year, I was going to do other things, like travel and stuff. Also I’d just gotten married and I really wanted to be with my wife. I had my priorities.”
The most difficult thing was sticking to his guns after he found out the show itself was coming to an end.
“I didn’t want to end it. I never knew it was going to end,” he says. “We were doing an event in the UK, me and Sanaya [Irani, his co-star]. I had already put in my papers then and it was the day before the last episode was to air that they told me they were going to end the show.
“I am an emotional person. I was going to leave earlier but the producers told me the ball’s just got rolling, and that people were just starting to make money and that I should hang on for a little while. So I did. But I knew I was going to leave eventually. I don’t have any regrets [about my decision] but it would have been cool had the show continued.”
Interestingly, three years later, Sobti is reliving the series all over again, with a Middle Eastern twist to the tale.
Following the premiere of the Arabic dubbed version of the show, called Min Annazrah Thani (From Second Glance), on the pan-Arab channel MBC Bollywood earlier this year, Sobti’s become a household name in the region. The show is topping viewership charts in Egypt, Algeria and the Gulf say channel bosses.
Sobti was in Dubai earlier this week (August 23) to meet fans and attend a special screening of an episode of the show at The Dubai Mall.
"It never ceases to surprise me. But I guess it’s because our cultures are very similar so people connect to it,” he says. “But then I heard it’s also really popular in Russia. I’d be really surprised if someone told me they’re watching it in China too.”
He’s getting used to his new fanbase and being mobbed at the Dubai International Airport by Arabic-speaking fans.
“They don’t talk much. They just want pictures and they giggle a lot. It’s really sweet,” he says, laughing.
In the show, Sobti plays Arnav, an assertive businessman who is smitten by the traditional-minded Khushi, played by Irani.
“I had a ball shooting this show,” he recalls. “It was always a 12-hour party for all of us. The whole crew, they were all a bunch of crazies and I’m still great friends with all of my people on the show.”
Yet, despite its success and new lease of life, he refuses to take any credit for it.
“I know what people want me to say. They want me to say it’s me and Sanaya and our chemistry and all that. Which is true, but there are a million other dynamics.
“Yes, we might be a goodlooking couple and we’re good at enacting the romance. But at the same time, we couldn’t do the director’s job, could we? We couldn’t do the job of the writers, producer or anybody for that matter. Everyone knew very well what they were doing. And they were all amazing at it.”
While his feature film debut, Main Aur Mr Riight (Me and Mr Right), which released last year, disappeared without a trace at the box office, Sobti says he’s looking forward to the next phase of releases, which he says were a result of “sensible decisions”.
“There’s a film that I’ve done for John Abraham’s production company and UTV called Satra Ko Shaadi Hai with an amazing star cast. Hopefully, that will come out next year. Then there is Tu Hai Mera Sunday, with another amazing group of actors. That’s also coming out next year. And I’m starting work on another one next month. There’s also a show we’re working on. So let’s see.”
And no, he’s not saying no to TV despite his history.
“I don’t want to miss out on the good stuff. As long as the character is good, and the show is good, the medium does not matter to me. There are a few makers that I have an enormous trust in and that I know will do an amazing job,” he says, adding that it’s a great time to be an actor in India.
“A lot of amazing films are happening, a lot amazing TV shows are happening, and people are not afraid to pick actors instead of stars,” he says. “Good work is available. It’s also a very good time to be a non-industry person and come in.”
He set out to be an actor and that mandate hasn’t changed, says Sobti. And while fan adulation is welcome, he’d rather be known for his body of work.
“The kind of choices I’m making right now, they are not very commercial choices, like Satra Ko Shaadi Hai. It’s a real wedding film minus all the bling. Then there’s Tu Hai Mera Sunday, which is a people story with new-age actors where we had a freehand from the director to [go off script]. And I’m also doing a cricket-based film called 22 Yards.
“I came here to act. My conscience won’t allow me to do films I thought were bad but were going to make money.”
He’s not sure where he’d be five years from now, but he’s happy to be who he is right now.
“Whatever I have in my storage right now is stuff that I am very proud of,” he says. “So yes, I am happy with still being the same Barun Sobti five years from now.”

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