Nadia Khan is leaving her morning show persona far behind with this new TV serial - Kaisi Aurat Ho Tum
Nadia Khan is leaving her morning show persona far behind with this new TV serial - Kaisi Aurat Ho Tum
In Kesi Aurat Ho Tum, Nadia Khan plays a role she couldn't have 17 years ago, she says
In Kesi Aurat Ho Tum, Nadia Khan plays a role she couldn't have 17 years ago, she says
Here's
some good news for the fans of our good ol' Nadia Khan!
The
actor, who was most known for her animated and bubbly on-screen persona as a
morning show host, is starring in another TV drama called Kaisi Aurat Ho Tum.
Nadia
plays the protagonist in this Fahim Burney drama. The story is about Maham, a
working woman who financially supports her husband Moiz (played by Faisal
Rehman). Moiz is emotionally abusive and exploits her love for personal gains.
Her
character isn't going to be anything like the Nadia we're used to seeing, the
actor tells Images.
"I
am making a return to TV after a break of over 17 years. I've matured a lot
during this time," she says.
"You're
not going to see the same old morning show wali Nadia," the actress, whose
morning show on GEO TV used to be one of the highest-grossing entertainers.
Explaining
the complexity of her character, Nadia says, "Maham loves her husband so
much that she is unable to see how conniving he is and how he is exploiting
her."
The
serial doesn't feature physical abuse per se, the actress says. "It is
more focused on how the husband manipulates the woman emotionally, making her
do bizarre things," Nadia elaborates, saying that she lacked the maturity
to relate to such characters 17 years ago.
"Fahim
Burney has directed the play himself; usually he has a team of directors
working for him. This was a play I just could not turn down," she adds.
Additionally,
she wanted to do something different so the image Nadia has in people's minds
is reshaped, and she gets a chance to be "taken seriously".
"It's
called image-breaking. When you're making a comeback, it is important to do
something that you haven't done before, it adds value to your work," Nadia
said.
Looking
back, Nadia says now is a great time for dramas in Pakistan.
"Throughout
the 1990s going into 2005, we were stuck with Star Plus and most Pakistani
dramas were trying to replicate their content," Nadia says. Nowadays,
dramas have good stories, good scripts, good direction and are technically
sound, she adds.
About
films, Nadia outright says she will not do a film "just for the heck of
it".
"Doing
films right now is risky. It is still very premature," she adds.
"I
don't think people in Pakistan know how to make films. Good films are made with
knowledge, not money," the actor says.
"Pakistani
films get flopped and a lot of people end up making a fool out of
themselves."
Nadia
says she'll sign a film when she finds a good project whose performance at the
box office won't harm her acting profile.
About
morning shows, Nadia said she appreciates what hosts are trying to do within
their capacity but overall, in her opinion, they lack content.
"They
have to force the audience to laugh. That's just ridiculous," the actor
added.
"We
can provide women a worldview in those two hours, two crucial hours, but we've
cut them off from the modern world. We're taking women backwards," she
says.
"Pakistani
culture hasn't changed much either ... people need to change and progress with
time," says the actor, who travels to and fro between UAE and Pakistani
for personal reasons.
"Instead,
I think nowadays there are more restriction than there were during my
childhood," Nadia says. "The culture has grown more
suffocating."
But
the actor feels hopeful about the upcoming generation, saying there are people
who are trying to do things that are against cultural norms.
Speaking
of the next Pakistani generation, Nadia has been focusing on her official
YouTube channel called OutStyle, where she blogs about fashion, beauty, health
and fitness. The channel has around 70,000 subscribers, and is growing by leaps
and bounds, Nadia says.
And
though business ventures on YouTube are not very common in Pakistan, Nadia
feels hopeful.
"YouTube
is massive everywhere in the world. In the next four or five years, I think
we'll see it grow in Pakistan too."
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