City
Epaper

Dibyendu Bhattacharya loves collecting souvenirs from film sets

By IANS | Updated: March 3, 2024 14:55 IST

Mumbai, March 3 Actor Dibyendu Bhattacharya, who is known for ‘Maqbool’, ‘Black Friday’, ‘Dev D.’, ‘Lootera’ and is ...

Open in App

Mumbai, March 3 Actor Dibyendu Bhattacharya, who is known for ‘Maqbool’, ‘Black Friday’, ‘Dev D.’, ‘Lootera’ and is currently receiving a lot of positive response for ‘Poacher’, has shared that he likes to collect souvenirs from the film set.

Over the years, Dibyendu has carved a niche for himself as he has emerged as a bankable actor who brings a certain assurance for the producers and storytellers.

The actor told YouTube channel Digital Commentary: “I always collect souvenirs from film sets. If I’m shooting for a film and my character smokes a pipe, I would request the makers humbly if I could keep that pipe as a souvenir, if my character uses a zippo lighter in a film or a series, I would request the producers to allow me to keep the lighter.”

He then narrated an incident when a female producer treated him badly.

Dibyendu said: “In one project, I kept a watch as a souvenir, it was a not a branded watch, it was bought by the production from Chor Bazaar. It was a very fancy watch but not very expensive. After two months, when I returned to the film for promotions and photoshoot, I couldn’t find the watch. This woman told me, ‘Accha bech diya usko (Oh you sold it)?”. Maine bola, “Is aurat ke saath toh main zindagi mein kabhi baat nahi karunga (I won’t talk to this woman ever).”

The actor earlier told IANS that he feels that it’s always very difficult to play smaller roles compared to the bigger ones. Furnishing the reason behind the same, he said that for smaller parts an actor has to get into the groove within a very limited span of time vis-a-vis an actor working on the bigger role, where they get more time to spend with the character and to understand its nuances.

The actor told IANS: “Smaller roles are very difficult to play compared to the bigger characters. For smaller roles, people have huge expectations from you, and it’s particularly tricky because you enter the unit which has been working on the narrative for so long, and you have to crack the creative energy and then get into the groove for one or two days.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalGujarat: BJP, Congress to face off in six-cornered Umreth bypoll

NationalMinor fire at Mumbai airport's Terminal 1 controlled, operations unaffected

NationalLok Sabha Speaker interacts with members of Rajasthani community in Goa

MumbaiMumbai Songwriter Duped of ₹3.25 Lakh on Pretext of Work with Singer Kailash Kher

Other SportsBillie Jean King Cup: Indonesia outplay India; Korea maintain perfect run, Thailand bounce back

Entertainment Realted Stories

EntertainmentKashika Kapoor undergoes physical transformation for 'Caste', gains 5-6 kgs

EntertainmentMatthew Perry death case: Jasveen Sangha sentenced to 15 years in prison

EntertainmentKaran Johar shares glimpse of Tokyo trip, appreciates silence and hygiene of the city

EntertainmentShah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan shower love, sending warm wishes to Anant Ambani on birthday

EntertainmentCannes 2026 lineup: Palme d'Or winners Cristian Mungiu, Hirokazu Kore-eda; Oscar winner Asghar Farhadi leads competition