HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentShoojit Sircar: "More than a biopic, 'Sardar Udham' is a film based on a historical event and a few true incidents"

Shoojit Sircar: "More than a biopic, 'Sardar Udham' is a film based on a historical event and a few true incidents"

Vicky Kaushal: "We have tried to internalise and to stay true to the emotions Udham Singh must have experienced."

October 16, 2021 / 13:22 IST
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Actor Vicky Kaushal in 'Sardar Udham', directed by Shoojit Sircar.
Actor Vicky Kaushal in 'Sardar Udham', directed by Shoojit Sircar.

Filmmaker Shoojit Sircar had admired Vicky Kaushal’s talent since the actor’s impressive performance in Masaan (2015). The Piku and Gulabo Sitabo director was high up on Kaushal’s wish list of directors he wanted to collaborate with, so naturally he jumped at the opportunity when he was offered the titular role in Sardar Udham, Sircar’s biopic on freedom fighter Udham Singh who shot at and assassinated Michael O’Dwyer who served as lieutenant governor of Punjab and supported the order to shoot at the protestors gathered at Jallianwala Bagh in 1919. On March 13, 1940, Singh assassinated O’Dwyer in London. This led to his arrest and death a few months later. Excerpts from an interview with Sircar and Kaushal on the making of Sardar Udham (streaming on Amazon Prime Video):

Shoojit, you had to recast the film (after Irrfan Khan fell ill) and zeroed in on Vicky Kaushal. What did it take for Vicky to get into the skin of Udham Singh?

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I really liked him in Masaan, especially his innocence in that film. And just a few weeks before confirming this film, Vicky and I spoke and he showed interest in collaborating with me. Then this happened, and so soon after that conversation. For him to understand Udham Singh, the foremost thing was his pure trust in me. He needed to come to the project without any baggage. I knew he could convey the innocence of a character. What I needed to assess was whether he could be on the same page as me in terms of my take on a freedom fighter. I have lived with this story for decades and for him to live with it so quickly was difficult. So that was the homework we did to bring him on to my page and get the same spirit. Thereafter, he quite beautifully embedded himself in the many ages of the character – from his 20s to 30s to 40s. His transformation over 20 years was beautiful.

Read more: Review | 'Sardar Udham' gives us one of the bleakest visions of hell in Hindi cinema. But the build-up is painfully slow