"Michelle McNally did graduate despite her handicap. The
sheer fact that if you have the passion, nothing is impossible
in life. That is what my character in 'Black' and the film taught
me and that is what I would like to portray to the hundreds
and millions of my fans who watch the movie".
The festival, which opened with "Black" and "Dil
Bole Hadippa" in Sydney, is screening a retrospective of
Rani's distinctive films alongside recent Bollywood hits, some
regional cinema gems and documentaries.
For Rani, every role is a dream role, but the role that debutant
director Anurag Singh gave her in "Dil Bole Hadippa"
was "wonderful".
"It is wonderful being a man and to feel like a man and
get attracted to beautiful women. It was a dream role because
I could never imagine in my life that I would cross dress as
a man. I also got to experiment with cricket, a sport I had
never played in my life. I trained for eight months and fell
in love with the game. And, of course, being a man and tying
your hair up in a turban was the most relaxing part!"
Being a Bengali, was it difficult for her to play the role
of a Sardar?
"Punjabis and Bengalis make a great combination; even
marriages between them are lovely," said Rani, relating
an interesting episode about how she was exchanged with a Punjabi
baby at the hospital and her mother had to fight to get her
back.
"I still have to crack the code whether I am a Sardar
or Bengali," she said.
Rani also revealed that if she weren't an actress, she would
have been "a housewife with my sari tucked in my waist,
making chapattis for my husband, raising two kids probably in
Allahabad or Kolkata or somewhere where my parents would have
married me off!"
So is she ready to direct films after a career spanning 17
years as an actress?
Rani was forthcoming: "I would like to do a lot of things
in life, but you never get to do everything that you want to
do. When an actor probably completes 10 years, you are often
asked would you like to direct or write?
"I didn't want to become an actress, but I became one
and so I have this thing in my head that 'Never say never'.
It is not something I have planned, but if I do get an opportunity
and have this energy rush in my body to take up the responsibility
of a director some day, I would definitely love to direct."
Asked if she dreams about winning an Oscar, the multi-award
winning actress said: "I would dream about everything and
as an actor our greed never stops for awards, recognition, fame,
and love and warmth from people; so it is a never ending process
for an actor."
The actress, who chooses her roles with care and takes what
inspires and excites her, is looking forward to "No one
killed Jessica", a film based on the murder of Delhi model
Jessica Lall in which she plays the journalist.
"It is a very different film that I am doing after a long
time. It is a very different and powerful role; so I don't know
how my fans are going to react to it, but I am looking forward
to it because it is an interesting movie based on a true life
story."