R Madhavan has revealed that he took a four-year break from acting because he had grown deeply dissatisfied with the kind of work he was doing at the time. The actor stepped away from films in 2011 and returned only in 2016 with Saala Khadoos — a comeback that marked a clear shift from his earlier romantic roles to intense, author-backed performances.In a recent interview, Madhavan explained that the sabbatical was necessary for both creative and personal clarity, and that the break ultimately shaped what he now calls the second phase of his career.
Speaking to Unfiltered Entertainment, Madhavan said the turning point came during an overseas shoot. “Vikram Vedha happened to me after a sabbatical. Before Saala Khadoos, I had to take a break because I was very disillusioned with the kind of work I was doing. I was shooting in Switzerland with orange pants and green shirt for a Tamil song.”It was an unexpected moment on that set that forced him to look inward. “I was in the middle of the road and I saw this Swiss farmer, sitting there, looking at us with complete disdain. Sipping a cup of tea and thinking of what we were doing. I looked at him and thought you come to Chennai and I’ll show you who I am.”
‘I am literally dancing to other people’s tunes’
What initially offended him soon became a moment of clarity. Madhavan admitted he realised how little of himself he was bringing into his work. “I was really offended, but then it struck me suddenly. I am literally dancing to other people’s tunes. I am a public speaker, I know how to handle a gun, fly remote planes, ride horses, I do so many things. I am showing none of it in my movies.”He added that his only focus back then was stardom. “The only thing I was trying to do was to woo the audience, which will make me a superstar. I realised the mistake I was doing.”
‘You are going for work like you want to come back from it’
Madhavan also recalled how his wife, Sarita Birje, sensed his growing disconnect. Speaking about some of the roles he had taken up, he said, “Even the characters that I was playing… like a hungry guy who is uneducated from a village and trying his best to make his career in cricket. I mean, from no angle do Arvind Swamy look like we are either uneducated or starved for food. Those are all the wrong things to do.”One conversation at home proved decisive. “One day, my wife asked me, ‘What’s wrong with you’. She said that you are going for work like you want to come back from it. That actually made a lot of sense,” Madhavan said, referring to the Telugu remake of Thani Oruvan as an example of roles that felt logically inconsistent to him.
‘That insight for four years is probably what I’m eating off right now’
During his four-year break, the actor consciously distanced himself from films and even advertising work. “So, I took a break. I wanted to understand where the country was going. I even stopped doing ad films, grew a beard, travelled a lot around Chennai, and other places in India. I talked to rickshaw guys, what really matters to them, what’s the real cost of stuff that bothers them.”Reflecting on that phase, he added, “That insight for four years is probably what I’m eating off right now.”
‘I started looking for new directors’
When he returned to acting, Madhavan said he had a far clearer sense of what he wanted to do. “When I came back, I realised that my filmmakers, the ones who were making movies with me, were not as forward thinking as me. Their ability to tell a story was still to impress their mentors. I started looking for new directors,” he concluded.That clarity led to a striking reinvention — from romantic leads to layered performances in films like Vikram Vedha, Shaitaan, Kesari 2, De De Pyaar De 2 and Dhurandhar.
Padma Shri honour
In 2026, R Madhavan was awarded the Padma Shri, India’s fourth-highest civilian honour, in recognition of his over 25-year career and contributions to Indian cinema across Tamil, Hindi and Telugu languages. Announced on Republic Day 2026, the actor called the recognition “beyond my wildest dreams,” expressing deep humility and gratitude. Go to Source
