Tuesday, April 16, 2024
ADVT 
Newsmakers

Introducing Rohit Saraf

By Jorge Ignacio Castillo, 27 Jan, 2021 11:33 PM
  • Introducing Rohit Saraf

"Every time I’ve chosen a project, it’s because I’ve felt it could teach me something, or open an area in my body, in my heart or my mind that hasn’t been explored yet."


Actor Rohit Saraf has come of age on screen. Born into a Hindu-Nepali family in 1996, Saraf started his performing career as a dancer, but at 16 he was picked for a recurring role in the teen drama Best Friends Forever? His father was the initial propeller in his pursuit of a career in entertainment, so when he died, an 11-year-old Saraf decided to push forward to honor him.


Saraf first made an impression as the duplicitous cousin of a Norwegian-raised teen forcefully relocated to Pakistan in What Will People Say. The indie film premiered at TIFF in 2017 to rave reviews.

 

Rohit’s follow-up move was a high-profile one: The Sky Is Pink, the film adaptation of Aisha Chaudhary’s journey battling pulmonary fibrosis. The actor was tasked with portraying Aisha’s brother and share the screen with Priyanka Chopra (in her final Bollywood performance to date) and Farhan Akhtar. “I may not have been as connected to (What Will People Say) as I was to The Sky Is Pink. The character of Ishaan Chaudhary was very emotional, as I am”, Rohit acknowledges.


The actor’s connection to The Sky Is Pink goes deeper than that: “There was a very similar time in my life when my sister had a stroke. She was pregnant at the time. I understood how helpless the character felt because that’s how I felt. Many times I felt I was reliving moments I already experienced, including when my father passed. I got closure that I didn’t realize I needed in my life.”


The actor’s first lead role has propelled him to new heights. The Netflix show Mismatched has transcended Indian borders to become a global hit and has helped Rohit become a household name. Based on the YA novel “When Dimple Met Rishi”, the series focuses on two young adults with radically different ideas of love that come together over six episodes filled with misunderstandings, class warfare and generation gap-drama. “Rishi is a hopeless romantic, and so am I.”


Not only Mismatched was 2020’s most popular scripted show on the streaming service in India, it did remarkably well around the world, particularly in countries with a large South Asian community. Add Ludo (a caper directed by Anurag Basu featuring Rohit) and The Sky Is Pink and you have a banner year for the young performer.


Your output has either been a critical success or a popular hit. To what degree do you plan your career?


I’ll be honest and say I’m a very intuitive person. You always want to do bigger and better work. Having said that, there isn’t a particular formula in my head. If I fall for a script or a character, that’s when I want to do it. Every time I’ve chosen a project, it’s because I’ve felt it could teach me something, or open an area in my body, in my heart or my mind that hasn’t been explored yet.


Do you still get nervous working with actors of the caliber of Priyanka Chopra?


It’s nerve-wracking, but only in the beginning. After you break the ice, once we get to know each other, it becomes normal. I’ve had the best time shooting with these people. Consider Priyanka, she’s not only an actor, she’s a producer, a director, a songwriter. There’s so much you can learn just by being around her. Priyanka and Farhan (Akhtar) can come up with jokes at the drop of a hat.


From this conversation I gather The Sky Is Pink was a seminal moment for you. What was the biggest lesson you got from it?


People’s perspective on death need to change. I understand that loss is painful, but it’s inevitable. Instead of mourning someone’s life, we must learn to celebrate it. The Sky Is Pink completely changed my perspective on death.

Is there any kind of movie or TV show you wouldn’t do?


I never say never to anything, but there’s a genre I’m not particularly fond of: Horror. But I like to keep my options open. The Sky Is Pink and Mismatched are all available on Netflix. What Will People Say is available on Prime Video.

Photos: RohitSaraf/Instagram

MORE Newsmakers ARTICLES

DARPAN's Newsmaker of 2016: Sahib Thind

DARPAN's Newsmaker of 2016: Sahib Thind
For almost a quarter century, Sahib Thind, founder of Professor Mohan Singh Memorial Foundation, has led the drive for a formal Parliamentary apology for the tragic affair. 

DARPAN's Newsmaker of 2016: Sahib Thind

Darpan's Newsmaker of 2016: Ratana Stephens

Darpan's Newsmaker of 2016: Ratana Stephens
Ratana Stephens started Nature’s Path Foods in 1984 with her husband Arran with very little capital, out of the back of their restaurant. 

Darpan's Newsmaker of 2016: Ratana Stephens

DARPAN Magazine's Newmakers 2016

DARPAN Magazine's Newmakers 2016
2016 was a great year for the South Asian community. It was filled with promising initiatives taken up by most of our members and great achievements/honours received by many. It was only ideal to start 2017 by remembering these personalities and applauding them for making the community proud. This is how the idea of DARPAN’s 2016 Newsmakers came into being.

DARPAN Magazine's Newmakers 2016

Ghulam Sughra Solangi: Child Bride to Woman of Courage

Ghulam Sughra Solangi: Child Bride to Woman of Courage
There is nothing unusual about what Ghulam Sughra Solangi experienced during the foundational years of her life- child marriage, early pregnancies and divorce are events that females and families hear or experience in Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. 

Ghulam Sughra Solangi: Child Bride to Woman of Courage

Bob Singh Dhillon receives Business Man of the Year at The Sikh Awards 2016

Bob Singh Dhillon receives Business Man of the Year at The Sikh Awards 2016
Seventh Annual Sikh Awards Returns Held to Honor Global Sikh Excellence 

Bob Singh Dhillon receives Business Man of the Year at The Sikh Awards 2016

DARPAN’s 10 with Bardish Chagger

DARPAN’s 10 with Bardish Chagger
It reminds me why my grandfather chose Canada. When a young girl approaches me and says, “Maybe I’ll be Canada’s first woman elected Prime Minister,” I say – yes, you could be!

DARPAN’s 10 with Bardish Chagger