Riding a camel was a challenge.


Language does not matter to audience if content is good. It is the director's belief which is translated on screen and roles are written according to his imagination.

'Satya' was a groundbreaking film that opened people's eyes. People like Ram Gopal Varma and Shekhar Kapur introduced such films in the industry as never seen before, and it wasn't easy if you went to a producer with an arthouse film back in the '90s. They'd laugh you out of the room.

Long back, I did a television show 'Gharwali Uparwali,' and it was appreciated for its light-hearted humor.

In 'Burrraah,' I play a teacher whose aim is to reform a bunch of rowdy boys. My character is very interesting and I chose this film for a Punjabi debut because of its story, script, screenplay and director, Sagar Sharma. I love the way he narrates a story.

If someone praises me for my acting, all I say is thanks and in case of criticism, I do apologize.

I like to write on anything that is intriguing, unheard of - something that is offbeat.

I believe a good actor does not have an accent of his own.

TV works at such amazing deadlines and the audiences you're catering to is a very different audience than the one that watches films as the attention span is less.