26 April,2023 08:03 AM IST | Mumbai | Priyanka Sharma
Rahul Roy
It's difficult to imagine Rahul Roy playing a womaniser. Blame it perhaps on the audience's memory of him essaying the role of a lover boy, belting out melancholic melodies in Aashiqui (1990). The actor too was apprehensive when director Kanu Behl offered him the tricky role in Agra. "It wasn't easy to say yes. I didn't know how to do this role. All the credit goes to Kanu and his team, who got this performance out of me," says Roy, who was last seen in a song in Cabaret (2019).
In 2020, the actor suffered a brain stroke while filming LAC - Live The Battle, in Kargil. A year later, he was emotionally and physically ready to pursue acting again. To Roy, Agra is important not only because it brought him back on a film set, but also for liberating him as an actor after a three-decade-plus career. "I've always played a hero in my movies. This is the first time I played a character. It changed my perspective. Being a hero is not important, being convincing as a character is."
Also Read: Aayush Sharma responds to trolls who mock his wife Arpita Khan for her looks
ALSO READ
13 years of Delhi Belly: Aamir Khan productions go down memory lane
Manisha Koirala meets 'Indian' co-star Kamal Haasan
Raashii Khanna reveals Talakhon Mein Ek is one of her toughest films
Kriti Sanon on impact of her film 'Mimi': 'Discovered a little more about myself
AR Rahman's documentary Headhunting to Beatboxing to have world premiere at IFFM
Agra, which explores sexual dynamics within a family, will be screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the Cannes Film Festival. In the movie, Roy plays Daddy, a failed businessman and womaniser, who is desperate to build a bigger house for his family. "Kanu has made a fantastic film. I feel honoured that it will be showcased at Cannes," he says.