HomeEntertainmentMoviesExclusive: Meet Anasuya Sengupta, first Indian to win Best Actress at Cannes’ Un Certain Regard, for her queer thriller ‘The Shameless’

Exclusive: Meet Anasuya Sengupta, first Indian to win Best Actress at Cannes’ Un Certain Regard, for her queer thriller ‘The Shameless’

Cannes 2024: Kolkata-bred Anasuya Sengupta, awarded best performance for Bulgarian director Konstantin Bojanov’s film, was the production designer on 'Masaba Masaba', 'RAY', 'Brahman Naman', and returns to acting after 15 years since 'Madly Bangalee'

June 02, 2024 / 00:19 IST
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'The Shameless' actor Anasuya Sengupta, first Indian to win Best Actress award in Cannes. (Photo: Stephanie Cornfield)
'The Shameless' actor Anasuya Sengupta, first Indian to win Best Actress award in Cannes. (Photo: Stephanie Cornfield)

One of the most peculiar things about this film is that it’s a Hindi movie made by a Bulgarian director who doesn’t know Hindi, says Anasuya Sengupta, one of the leads in Konstantin Bojanov’s film The Shameless, which premiered at the 77th Cannes Film Festival, in the Un Certain Regard category, alongside British Indian Sandhya Suri-directed Shahana Goswami-starrer Santosh, among others. Sengupta has created history by becoming the first Indian actor to win Cannes' Un Certain Regard Best Performance award. Prior to this, Baby Naaz had received Special Mention (child actress) for her work in Boot Polish by Prakash Aurora in 1955.

Steering Shameless is a host of power-packed actors, including Mita Vashisht, Auroshika Dey, Tanmay Dhanania and Rohit Kokate, and helmed by Anasuya Sengupta and Omara Shetty as two accidental lovers, Devika and Renuka, respectively, both condemned to a living hell of sex work in a set that was built from scratch in Nepal, because production costs in India was too high. Anasuya’s feisty, unchanging Renuka is a stark contrast to Omara’s timid, diffident, vulnerable, resilient Devika, who’s seeking change. If Renuka has not breathed freely in a world outside of brothels, Devika hasn’t seen the sunlight outside her inferno-like home, which nudges at an era of Devadasis and the culture of prostitution. While both are doomed to the same fate and profession, there is power dynamics between the devadasis and street sex workers.

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ALSO READ: Cannes 2024: Why Bulgarian director Konstantin Bojanov made an Indian film 'The Shameless', which premiered in Un Certain Regard