Thappad: Taapsee Pannu Introduces Her Character Based On The Legendary Writer Amrita Pritam; Announces Release Date

A while back, Taapsee Pannu introduced her character from Anubhav Sinha’s Thappad. The actress will essay the role of first prominent female Punjabi Indian novelist, essayist and poet, Amrita Pritam

13287 Reads |  

Thappad: Taapsee Pannu Introduces Her Character Based On The Legendary Writer Amrita Pritam; Announces Release Date

Taapsee Pannu is slaying it and how. After basking in the success of multi-starrer Mission Mangal, the actress will now be seen in Thappad, for which the actress is reuniting with Mulk director Anubhav Sinha. Taapsee starrer Thappad went on floors few days back and they also announced the release date of the film. A while back, the Game Over actress surprised her fans with yet another character from her film. Taking to social media, Taapsee shared a behind-the-scenes picture from Thappad’s set.

Sharing her look from the film, Taapsee wrote in caption, “When a man denies the power of women, he is denying his own subconscious” - Amrita Pritam Moving from one Amrita to the other..... Main tenu pher milangi.... in theatres from 6th of March 2020” In Thappad, Taapsee will portray the role of first prominent female Punjabi Indian novelist, essayist and poet, Amrita Pritam. She was also the leading 20th-century poet of the Punjabi language.

Two days back, when Taapsee reunited with Anubhav on the sets of Thappad, she made sure to treat her fans what her first day looked like. Sharing the picture featuring the actor-director duo, Taapsee captioned it, “Cheers to the new beginning with some good food! This one is a subject way too close to my heart. I’ve been wanting to do this since years. It becomes exciting when it happens with the ‘Man of The Moment’ @anubhavsinha  8th March 2020 will surely be the day to watch out for !”

Earlier, talking about her character, Taapsee had to a section of media. "I play a married woman and the movie will showcase several woes that she goes through. It's not a troubled marriage per se; the film instead offers a woman's point of view in a marriage." She further said that she's happy that filmmakers are increasingly looking at subjects through a woman's gaze. "People are ready for new content. So, I hope that we are willing to give woman's perspective a chance. If you talk numbers, the ratio of men walking into a theatre versus women is lopsided, which affects collections. If women start claiming better stories, there's hope.”


Images Source: instagram/taapsee

Advertisement
  • Trending