Naseer: I get very angry when I see incompetence and laziness around

Here's the latest update from the world of Bollywood. We bet you wouldn't want to miss this. Read on for details... The senior actor, however, adds that he has mellowed down over the years

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Naseer: I get very angry when I see incompetence and laziness around

Naseeruddin Shah and Kalki Koechlin-starrer Waiting has won acclaim at various film festivals. Ahead of the film’s release in India tomorrow, SpotboyE caught up with the two actors for a quick chat. Excerpts:



What made you two say ‘Yes’ to this film?
Naseer: I do fewer films maybe because I get only few films which drive me to say ‘Yes’. I don’t need to read the script more than once to take a decision if I am doing a particular film or not. When I read the script of Waiting, I thought I should do it because the situation touched my heart and I felt it had been written with a lot of honesty.

Kalki: The thing I liked most about this film was that despite it being a serious topic of grief and loss, it has many light moments of hope. 



Naseer, what’s your character in the film?
I play a retired professor whose wife is admitted to a hospital, which has one of his students as a doctor. My wife is in coma and I am trying to cope up with the situation. Suddenly, I meet a young girl (Kalki) who is in a similar situation; her husband is struggling for life. Post that, Kalki and I become each other’s support.



Kalki, what was your first reaction when you heard that you were going to work with Naseer?
I was very excited and happy. I was more nervous during my first film with him, That Girl In Yellow Boots than this time. Maybe this time, I was more informed about him or I was more prepared as an actor (smiles).

Is it true that he got angry on the sets once in a while?
Gussa aata tha par mere saath kabhi nahin. We got along pretty well.

Naseeer, everyone is scared of you. Why? I want you to tell the world through SpotboyE why you are so short-tempered.
Good na? Let everybody feel that I am short-tempered. I really don’t mind. 

That doesn’t answer my question.
(Smiles) That is my genetic make-up, so it surfaces sometimes. I try to consciously check it when I find it rising. But sometimes, it manages to take over me. However, I think, now I am able to control my temper much more than I could earlier. 

What are the main reasons for your outbursts?
I get very angry when I see incompetence and laziness around. My temper rises when I see no thought process, no planning.



You both are National Award winners. It is now felt that National awards have become Bollywood-centric...
Naseer: I don’t feel anything about it. I don’t have any thoughts on this subject.
Kalki: I feel very happy that I have won a National Award (for Margarita With A Straw). 

Naseer, you worked in Waiting with a relatively new director...
This is Anu Menon’s second film. I haven’t seen her first one, but apparently it was quite different from this. I feel Anu is not just a very good writer but also a very caring person and most importantly, she has the courage to amend the film where she feels it needs repair. She is not like other filmmakers I have met, who were completely stuck on the script they have written and refused to budge from their position--- and I have met many such. I found Anu pretty open to the ideas Kalki and I gave. I wasn’t there when Kalki’s individual scenes were shot but I could see how much is contributed by Kalki in those scenes. I have to say that I admire her courage for being flexible where it required to be. 



Kalki, you recently made a statement that people are going to stop questioning your ‘Desiness’ after your National Award, what was that?
They still do, once in a while. They still ask me if I know about the Indian values or if I like spicy food. So I have to explain my backstory that I was born and bought up here. If this is not home, then I don’t know what is.



Naseer, you have won 3 National awards for Sparsh, Paar and Iqbal. Which is one is the dearest to you?
I guess it would be Sparsh as it was the first one. An award was the last thing on my mind because Sparsh wasn’t getting released for quite a while after it was made. I was very heartbroken that this film might never see the light of day. It took us 2 years to release it after it was completed and that too in a very small way, thanks to Boney Kapoor. 
I was in a PG accommodation when Anil Kapoor came over and told me that I have won a National Award. I was elated; I was even getting Rs 10,000 with it and I needed that money (smiles).


Image Source: 
facebook/WaitingFilmOfficial, Hdwallpapers & Indiablog