Not just my achievement, whole country feels pride: Anasuya Sengupta on Cannes win

Anasuya Sengupta at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 17, 2024 in Cannes, France.

Anasuya Sengupta at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 17, 2024 in Cannes, France.
| Photo Credit: GETTY IMAGES

The best actress win in Cannes doesn’t feel like a personal trophy with the whole country feeling a sense of pride in her accomplishment, says Anasuya Sengupta, struggling to find words to describe what it feels like to be the first Indian to win acting honours in the film gala.

The 37-year-old woman from Kolkata bagged the best actress trophy under the Un Certain Regard segment for Bulgarian director Konstantin Bojanov’s Hindi language movie The Shameless.

“I still don’t have the right word for it. Maybe like the following Friday, I will know the exact word… Everyone feels a sense of pride in my moment of pride and it just elevates that. So it’s really not a personal achievement for me… To do it with an entire country, it feels great,” Sengupta told PTI in an interview.

It was a special year for India at Cannes. And Sengupta wasn’t the only reason for it.

Filmmaker Payal Kapadia’s All We Imagine As Light became the first film in 30 years to be nominated in the main competition and the first ever from India to win the Grand Prix Award at Cannes. Besides, FTII student Chidananda S Naik’s Sunflowers Were the First Ones to Know won the first prize in the La Cinef competition, making it a triple feat for India.

“We were a group of 15-20 people, maybe less. But it felt like we were representing a bigger feeling because that bigger feeling is there in our country. There’s a sense of everybody feeling happiness in my happiness. “I am more proud of Payal’s win than I am of mine. And I know she and her entire team feel the same way about me and my team… For the rest of the world to see us there together, in support of each other, doing good work, getting recognised, I feel even more happy for that,” Sengupta added.

Her co-stars from The Shameless — Tanmay Dhanania and Omara Shetty — started celebrating the moment her name was announced, she said. In a haze, she made her way to the stage.

“What Vicky Krieps (jury member) said before announcing the award touched me a lot. She said, ‘this year we decided to give it to someone who showed up, went down to hell and gave her skin every day for the film The Shameless. And that meant a lot coming from artists that I have so much respect for.”

The Shameless, which premiered at Cannes on May 17, explores the distressing world of exploitation. Sengupta plays the central character of Renuka, who escapes from a Delhi brothel after stabbing a policeman to death and takes refuge in a community of sex workers in northern India, where she meets Devika (Omara), a young girl condemned to a life of prostitution.

The queer drama is adapted from a story in author William Dalrymple’s 2009 book Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India. What also resonated was Sengupta’s acceptance speech dedicating the award “to the queer community and other marginalised communities” for bravely fighting for their rights all around the world.

ALSO READ:‘The Shameless’ stars Omara Shetty and Anasuya Sengupta on representing India at Cannes 2024

Stressing on the importance of the “equal gaze” on every human being, she said what breaks her heart is that this needed to be “articulated separately”.

“And I actually have a lot of hope, a lot of love in my heart that I’m not the only one who feels that way. When you say it out there, you see that it resonates with people.”

Sengupta said she has always pushed herself to explore her artistic sensibilities. A graduate in English Literature from Jadavpur University, the actor said she had been interested in performing arts since childhood.

“I had a great set of parents who completely pushed me towards the arts quite a bit. I used to draw as a kid. When you grow up in a Bengali family, you really get pushed to the extracurricular quite a bit. And by the time I went to Jadavpur University, where I studied, I had started doing theatre a little bit.” As part of a theatre troupe called Tin Can, Sengupta got her first film role in the Bengali movie Madly Bangalee. She moved to Mumbai after that.

While she searched for good characters to play, she worked first as an assistant director and later headed the production design department for films and shows such as Ray, Masaba Masaba and Chippa.

“I started wanting to do and try something even more different, another art form. That’s when I started illustrating. I decided to leave Bombay and moved to Goa. I thought, art, and let’s see where it takes me now.” It was around that time Konstantin contacted her on Facebook and asked her to play the lead role in The Shameless. She read the script in one sitting, and immediately fell in love with Renuka, the lead character who she wanted to stand up for.

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