Tuesday, March 17, 2026
23.1 C
New Delhi

‘Only Amitabh Bachchan and I call’: Nana says most actors don’t talk without managers

'Only Amitabh Bachchan and I call': Nana Patekar reveals it's difficult to talk to actors directly, without managers

In recent times, many producers, directors, actors have opened up on actors have big entourages which leads to increasing the film’s budget. Not to mention, many directors and industry insiders have spoken about stars not being reachable. Now actor Nana Patekar along with director Prakash Jha have also spoken on this. The veteran actor will be seen in Prakash Jha’s next ‘Sankalp’ which also stars Sanjay Kapoor. Jha known for directing politically charged films such as ‘Jai Gangaajal’, ‘Satyagraha’ and ‘Raajneeti was asked why many of his recent projects have been released on streaming platforms instead of in theatres. In response, he explained that theatrical releases today heavily depend on big stars, but working with them has become increasingly complicated. Nana Patekar responded to him and said, “This is because earlier you could talk to a star directly, but now it is not possible. Today we have to go through multiple people to meet the star. To meet the star, you first have to meet 100 people. You have to give the star the script and then he/she will direct you whether you should make this film or not. Releasing it on OTT is easy compared to this.”Nana further remarked that the camaraderie that once existed between actors and directors seems to have faded with time. “Often, I ask Prakash if this actor called him, but then he tells me that the relationship between the actor and him is only limited to the film. Prakash tells me that only I and Amitabh Bachchan call him.” Patekar further said, “Kaam ke liye nahi phone karne ka. Bas aise hi puchne ke tu kaisa hai? Aaj subah maine Abhishek ko call kiya. Phone karke batayenge nahi ke yaad aa rahi hai toh pataa kaise chalega?” Jha went on to explain that the expanding network of managers and corporate structures around actors is a major reason for the rising entourage expenses. According to him, each layer adds to the overall cost. “All these layers who have been employed, the corporate, the management company, the creative company, managers, all these get a salary and which is why they have to show some work.”He added that these additional costs eventually fall on producers. Sharing an example, Jha said, “There is an actor these days who is accompanied by 27–28 people, a new actor in the industry, whose one film has worked, aspires to have this kind of a big entourage. Uska aspiration hi yehi hai ke mere kitne aadmi saath ayenge.”The discussion also touched upon the use of artificial intelligence in choosing film scripts. The interviewer mentioned an instance where an actor had reportedly put a script into ChatGPT and asked it to list reasons for and against doing the film. Reacting sharply to the anecdote, Nana put his funny, witty side to display and said, “Kyun tere kaan ke neeche do na lagaau? Iske dus reason bataa (We should ask AI about such people as to why we shouldn’t just slap them? Give 10 reasons?” Everyone burst into a laughter with this. Sanjay Kapoor who was also a part of the chat said that he prefers to directly co-ordinate with people, rather than always going through managers.

Go to Source

Hot this week

‘Excellent example of fabricating tales’: India hits out at Pakistan at UN over Islamophobia claims

India has hit out at Pakistan at the United Nations, accusing it of pushing “fabricated” Islamophobia claims while deflecting attention from its own record on minorities and regional actions. Read More

Was America Dragged Into Iran War By Israel? US NCTC Chief’s Exit Raises Alarming Questions

Joe Kent’s departure raises a haunting question that has defined previous West Asia conflicts: was this a failure of intelligence, or was the intelligence simply ignored? Read More

‘They Have Nothing Now’: Trump Says Iran War ‘Largely Over’, Nuclear Threat Eliminated

Trump described the conflict as a swift and decisive military campaign, claiming Iran’s navy was “wiped out almost immediately. Read More

Top US counterterrorism official resigns over Iran war, urging Trump to ‘reverse course’

National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent says Trump “started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby”. Read More

Israel says it killed Iranian security chief Ali Larijani in air strike

The deaths of Larijani and the head of the paramilitary Basij force have not been confirmed by Iranian authorities. Read More

Topics

‘Excellent example of fabricating tales’: India hits out at Pakistan at UN over Islamophobia claims

India has hit out at Pakistan at the United Nations, accusing it of pushing “fabricated” Islamophobia claims while deflecting attention from its own record on minorities and regional actions. Read More

Was America Dragged Into Iran War By Israel? US NCTC Chief’s Exit Raises Alarming Questions

Joe Kent’s departure raises a haunting question that has defined previous West Asia conflicts: was this a failure of intelligence, or was the intelligence simply ignored? Read More

‘They Have Nothing Now’: Trump Says Iran War ‘Largely Over’, Nuclear Threat Eliminated

Trump described the conflict as a swift and decisive military campaign, claiming Iran’s navy was “wiped out almost immediately. Read More

Top US counterterrorism official resigns over Iran war, urging Trump to ‘reverse course’

National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent says Trump “started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby”. Read More

Israel says it killed Iranian security chief Ali Larijani in air strike

The deaths of Larijani and the head of the paramilitary Basij force have not been confirmed by Iranian authorities. Read More

Pakistan air strike kills at least 100 at Kabul drug rehab centre

Some of the bodies were injured beyond recognition, forensic laboratory sources told the BBC. Read More

Chile’s president begins building border barrier less than week into term

José Antonio Kast visited the ditch – a few feet wide and deep – on Monday, calling it a “milestone”. Read More

Utah mother who wrote book about grief found guilty of poisoning husband

A jury found that Kouri Richins killed her husband in March 2022 by poisoning him with a fentanyl-laced drink. Read More

Related Articles