"It is unfortunate because generally people think that actors are earning too much money and they're doing too little for the country. There is that kind of jealousy in the common public. So, when they get a chance to troll an actor for whatever he or she's saying, they do it," Shahane told PTI.
The director says as actors pay their taxes, they have a right to speak out just like the celebrities in Hollywood.
"If Hollywood can do that or Thailand or South Korea can do that, then why can't we? Why actors here are not considered important enough to say things?"
The 51-year-old star, who is at the 10th edition of the NFDC Film Bazaar to pitch her story "Tribhanga", says there is a need for more women storytellers as Indian films often don't capture the patriarchy affecting urban women.
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The actress says there should be more individual acceptance for women in the industry and they should be given equal focus just like their male co-actors.
"According to me projects by women, for women and of women should be made. We should deal with women as individuals without them being somebody's wife, sister or mother. Hindi women-oriented films do chronicle such stories but men still play an important role in it, which should not happen."
Talking about her project Shahane says, "In my film, men are appendages, they just come and go. The idea for 'Tribhanga' came from the Odissi dance pose, which is asymmetrical yet so magical. There is something magical about imperfection. Through this, I want to show the strong presence of women, who are totally independent.