June 25, 2009

She Dares

She dares
- Paoli gears up for her first international film.

From being just another face on television to playing the seductive Madhabilata in Goutam Ghose’s Kalbela. From bagging a bold international project to launching her blog. Paoli Dam is on a roll. On the night of her blog, (paolidam.blogspot.com) launch, the dusky beauty spoke to t2 about Choli Ke Peeche, sharing screen space with her favourite actor Irrfan and more...

From bagging an international project to launching your blog. Are you the most happening actress of Tollywood?

Not really! I just felt like launching my blog. It’s common now. Everybody is doing it. My blogspot will have all information about my films and my releases. I will interact with my fans and will only post something personal if I think it would interest them.

How does it feel to be part of an international film so early in your career?

Great! I have always tried to do good work. I met Choli Ke Peeche director Italo Spinelli twice in Calcutta. He liked me and took my photographs too. Prior to that I had mailed them my pictures and that’s how the project happened.

You are supposed to go topless for the film. Wouldn’t it be risky for a Tollywood star?

No. See, I have read the script and I did not find anything objectionable. And it’s not that my character in the film roams around topless all the time! It’s not exactly what Raghu Rai’s painting titled Sensuous Baby is. That’s just a reference point. There is a breast-feeding scene. But I know that the scene will be shot aesthetically, as Blasco Giurardo of the Oscar winning Italian film Cinema Paradiso is the DoP of Choli Ke Peeche.

And I have said earlier too that I don’t have inhibitions doing bold scenes. I had a lovemaking scene in Kalbela. I am also doing a couple of bold scenes in Sharan Dutta’s Thana Theke Ashchhi. And honestly it’s an international film and will be made for the international market. The Indian audience wouldn’t get to see the bold scenes! (Laughs).

Both Nandana Sen and Shahana Goswami had rejected the role because of the topless scene...

Yes, Shahana, I heard, had date problems. I don’t know about Nandana. I guess they wanted a fresh face. That’s why they have preferred me.

How have your colleagues from the industry reacted to you being part of Choli Ke Peeche?

Bumbada (Prosenjit), Jisshu (Sengupta), Goutamda (Ghose) and others have congratulated me.

How excited are you to share screen space with Irrfan?

Irrfan is a very intense and sensitive actor. I am looking forward to working with him. I loved him in Life in a... Metro and Dil Kabaddi. Most of my portions will be shot in Purulia.

What are your forthcoming projects?

In the pipeline is a film each with Bappaditya Bandopadhyay, Goutam Ghose, Anjan Das and others.

Top

June 24, 2009

Lead roll
Paoli Dam
Paoli Dam
Bengali actor Paoli Dam is now slated to replace Nandana Sen as the lead of an Indo-Italian project.

An adaptation of Jnanpith Award winner Mahasweta Devi’s Choli Ke Peeche, the film is being directed by Italo Spinelli and produced by Vinod Kumar.

Playing it safe when asked if she was comfortable doing a nude scene, she said, “I’ve read the script but I won’t comment.” Now, where have we heard that before?
—Compiled by Jhilmil Motihar

Paoli in Spinelli's Film

Paoli all set to cast as tribal woman

By admin • Jun 11th, 2009 • Category: Actress, Features
Paoli Dam for choli ke peeche

Paoli Dam for choli ke peeche

Paoli Dam all set to cast as tribal woman in an international project. The producer of the film, Vinod Kumar, confirmed having Paoli for this Italo Spinelli’s adaptation of Mahasveta Devi’s Choli Ke Peche .Pauli’s performance in Goutam Ghose’s Kaalbela had impressed the makers but what finally turned the tide in Paoli’s favour is her dusky Indian looks.Choli Ke Peechhe is about a tribal woman (Paoli) who is shot topless by a photographer (Irrfan), triggering trouble for both.

The role had been offered to both Nandana Sen and Sahana Goswami, who reportedly passed up the project because they were shy of showing too much. But Paoli has no such objection doing bold scenes and she is exited about it. It’s an international film and international stars do such scenes often, so Paoli as an actor has no inhibitions with anything at all.

KAALBELA

Kaalbela

Pauli and Parambrata are excellent in Kaalbela

Pauli and Parambrata are excellent in Kaalbela

Goutam Ghose’s Kaalbela - it’s impossible not to dwell on Samaresh Majumdar’s original novel. While treating this formidable political tome, Ghose turns his movie into a prism.

Kaalbela is an eminently watchable film. Beautiful. Sad. Entirely credible. Through much of the understated violence there is the balladic refrain of flowing water. Of the symbolic use of the still buoy on the Ganges, unaffected by the turbulence all around. Here, on the Ganges, the two protagonists first express their love for each other. And it’s the same Ganges that at the end of the movie gets blooded by the setting sun. That can’t be a coincidence.

The acting, in spite of Kaalbela being made for television, is surprisingly natural and understated. Shantilal as Subhasda, Soumitra as Animesh’s tetchy yet lovable grandfather, Santu as the father, Anandi as Nila, Rudranil as the poet with shades of Shakti Chattopadhyay in the rendering , they are all good. But Parambrata and Pauli, as Animesh and Madhabilata, are brilliant. In two scenes, particularly , Pauli wrenches your heart.

Topless

TOPLESS!

Paoli Dam is going topless.

After screening a bevy of Indian beauties, Italian director Italo Spinelli has chosen the dusky Paoli to play a tribal woman — in his forthcoming film Choli Ke Peechhe, based on a short story by Mahasweta Devi.

“I have gone through the script in detail. There are a few bold scenes , but as an actor I have no inhibitions with anything at all. Besides, it’s an international film and international stars do such scenes often,” said Paoli, who has been finalised, though she hasn’t signed the contract yet.

“I am really excited! It’s my first international project and I have always dreamt of being a part of an international project,” smiled the girl from Golf Club Road.

To be shot in Calcutta and Purulia from August, the film in English stars Irrfan Khan, Samrat Chakrabarti, Seema Rahmani, Tilottama Shome and Dibyendu

Choli Ke Peechhe is about a tribal woman (Paoli) who is shot by a photographer (Irrfan), triggering trouble for both.

Picture by Pabitra Das; Make-up: Aniruddha Chakladar; Styling: Sandy

Playing it right

Playing it right

Actress Paoli Dam made her mark in Kalbela and she has a jampacked schedule in the coming months, says Promita Mukherjee
Paoli Dam
Paoli Dam has a jampacked schedule in the coming months.

Paoli Dam’s phone has been ringing off the hook ever since the day Kalbela was released. Her performance as Madhabilata has brought her squarely into the limelight and directors and audience and critics alike have started taking notice of this dusky alumnus of Loreto, Bowbazar. “Everybody needs a platform — Kalbela gave me the platform. I had to prove myself,” says Paoli.

We’ll be seeing a lot of Paoli in the coming months as four of her movies — including Rituparno Ghosh’s Shob Choritra Kalponik — are about to be released. Apart from Ghosh’s movie, there’s Mallickbari where she plays a girl who suffers from an inferiority complex because of her looks. Also, there’s Box No. 1313 in which she’s cast opposite Parambrata Chatterjee and the Swapan Saha-directed Jamairaja where she romances Prosenjit.

Her diary’s also jampacked for the next few months. She’s shooting for Anup Sengupta’s Bangla Bachao, again with Prosenjit, Hurumtal (opposite Jishhu Sengupta), Alive, a crime thriller in which she plays a CID officer with Victor Banerjee and Sabyasachi Chakraborty and the late Tapan Sinha’s Teen Murti, now being directed by Raja Sen.

“I’m doing all kinds of films and all kinds of characters. I don’t want to get typecast,” insists Paoli. “My characters should convey something,” she adds.

Even though she’s being billed as the next big thing in Tollywood, Paoli comes across as an intelligent girl-next-door. She’s smartly dressed in summer staple whites and she chats about everything from the weather to the fact that she doesn’t read much. Movies and music are her interests, she says. “I’m not much of a book person,” she confides, apologetically.

Paoli insists that she had never really wanted to be an actress. Academics were her first choice and even in her early days in the television industry, this Science College student could often be spotted revising chemical formulae on the sets. “I wanted to do research. I’m here just because of my mother who wanted me to become an actress. But now acting has become a passion,” says Paoli.

Though the spotlight has turned on her after Kalbela, this isn’t her first big screen role. But, her first movie, Teen Yaari Katha, hasn’t been released yet. The petite 20-something has also done bit roles in hit movies like I Love You, Agni Pariksha and Tulkalam.

Director Buddhadeb Dasgupta, who directed Paoli in some of his tele-serials, is all praise for her. “She acts from her intellect and intuition. These things don’t happen together all the time. She’s surprising and unique,” he says.

Kalbela happened to Paoli out of the blue when she got a call from Gautam Ghose’s production manager asking her to meet the director. “I thought he was joking and even asked him whether he meant director Gautam Ghose,” she laughs.

In the event, she didn’t have to do a screen test. “Gautamda took some of my photographs. There was also a make-up test,” she says. Then there was a script reading session and Paoli was given the thumbs-up.

Paoli says that she didn’t make special preparations for her performance. “I think Madhabilata is someone who’s there inside every girl. That helped me a lot. The rest of the credit goes to Gautamda. Also the atmosphere on the set inspired me,” she asserts.

Paoli started out in television back in 2003. Her first serial was Jibon Niye Khela for ETV Bangla. She subsequently starred in popular mega-serials like Tarpor Chand Uthlo, Sonar Harin, Tithir Atithi and Jaya. “I’ve learnt a lot from television. It has groomed me,” she acknowledges.

Tithir Atithi, in which she played a negative character, was a major turning point in her career. “People started noticing me after that and my work started getting appreciated,” she says. She continued to do mega-serials and movies simultaneously till 2007 after which she decided to take the plunge.

Growing up in a joint family in Bowbazar in central Kolkata, Paoli was a regular at Shishu Rangan and started doing theatre at a very early age. Later, she also took dance lessons from Thankamani Kutti. “I loved doing theatre and didn’t even mind missing out on parties to do it,” she says.

Was it difficult getting a toehold in the industry? Paoli insists she didn’t have to struggle very much. “I was accepted wherever I went. And I was lucky to get good and supportive directors and co-actors,” she says.

She’s shifted from Bowbazar to Tollygunge now but misses Bowbazar. “We lived in a joint family and had a lot of fun,” she says nostalgically. She also misses being able to eat whatever she feels like. “I’d never say no to even two or three pieces of fish. But now I have to watch what I am eating and it’s a torture,” she rues.

What’s a normal day like for her? When she’s not shooting, Paoli prefers to stay at home and rest, watch films and listen to music. World movies are a favourite. She’s also quite a fitness freak nowadays, thanks to another sultry Bengali beauty named Bipasha Basu. “I used to watch her during the shooting of Shob Charitra Kalponik and how she never missed out on her daily exercise routine,” says Paoli, who now trains at the Karma gym with a personal trainer.

Paoli is also keen to learn more about her trade. She says she needs to shape up more, study, watch good films and talk to directors to pick up the finer nuances of her profession. “But the best tool for learning is watching films,” she says.

She has a keen interest in how films are made and she would like to go behind the camera and become a director someday. For now though, Paoli Dam is happy putting on the greasepaint and dancing around trees.


FILMOGRAPHY

KAALBELA -
Director - Gautam Ghosh, Story - Samaresh Majumder
Co stars - Soumitra Chatterjee, Parambrata Chatterjee, Rudranil Ghosh, Santu Mukhopadhyay, Anandi Ghosh.

SOB CHARITRA KALPONIK -
Director - Rituparno Ghosh
Co stars - Bipasha Basu, Prosenjit Chatterjee, Jishu Sengupta, Sohag Sen

HOCHHE TA KI -
Director - Basu Chatterjee
Co stars - Prosenjit Chatterjee, Arunima Ghosh, Rajatabh Datta, Ramaprasad Banik.

JAMAI RAJA -
Director - Swapan Saha. Producer- Ashoke Dhanuka
Co Stars - Prosenjit Chatterjee, Anu Chowdhury.

TEEN MURTI -
Director - Raja Sen , Story- Tapan Sinha
Co Stars - Manoj Mitra, Dipankar Dey, Ranjit Mullik, Joy.

AMAR PRATIGYA -
Director - Swapan Saha
Co stars - Priyanshu Chatterjee, Priyanka Trivedi, Rajatava Dutta, Subhasish Mukherjee.

BANGLA BACHAO -
Director - Anup Sengupta.
Co stars - Prosenjit Chatterjee, Dipankar Dey, Subhasish Mukherjee.

THANA THEKE ASHCHI -
Director - Saron Datta
Co Stars - Sabyasachi Chakraborty, Parambrata Chatterjee,Rudranil Ghosh, Dulal Lahiri, Alokananda Roy.

BOX No. 1313
Director - Aniruddha Bhattacharya.
Co stars - Parambrata Chatterjee,Monami Ghosh, June Maliah, Sudeshna Roy, Biswajit Chakraborty.

MULLIK BARI
Director - Anirban Chakraborty
Co stars - Kanchan Mallik, Rishi Kaushik. Swarnakamal. Ritwik, Rimjhim Mitra, Aparajita Ghosh Das, Biswanath.

I LOVE YOU
Producer - Shree Venkatesh Films, Screenplay - N.K. Salil, Director - Ravi Kinagi
Co stars - Dev, Payel Sarkar, Tapash Pal.

AGNI PARIKSHA-
Director - Ravi Kinagi
Co stars - Prosenjit Chatterjee, Priyanka Trivedi.

TULKALAM -
Director - Haranath Chakraborty.
Co stars - Mithun Chakraborty, Rachana Banerjee, Amitabh Bhattacharya

TEEN YAARI KATHA -
Director - Avijit Guha, Sudeshna Roy
Co Stars - Parambrata Chatterjee, Rudranil Ghosh, Sujan Mukhopadhyay, Saswata Chatterjee, June Maliah, Rimjhim Mitra, Gargi Roy Chowdhury.