The 29-year-old actor, who made her Bollywood debut opposite Shah Rukh Khan in "Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi", says she realised after a while that she could no longer identify with such characters.
"I remember there was a time in my life when I did a lot of these extrovert kind of roles. But there was this phase when I got really... Maybe because I was changing as a person, I realised I could not relate to these things anymore," Anushka told PTI in an interview.
"There were people around me, who had perhaps known me for a while like friends, industry people and journalists, they felt that there was something wrong with me. That suddenly I was different. But that's the natural progression that you go through."
The actor, who has emerged as one of the top female stars in Bollywood within a short span of time, has teamed up with Shah Rukh for the third time with "Jab Harry Met Sejal", a romance drama by director Imtiaz Ali.
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"Imtiaz and Shah Rukh have also said that Sejal, according to them, is similar to me but a lot of times we associate a screen image that an actor has to his or her own personality. How we diversify these roles is very simple - the girl is either bubbly or she is serious.
"But this extrovert persona carries a lot of other personalities. I think Sejal and I are quite dissimilar," she says.
"His female characters are seeking freedom, whether they are aware of it or not. It is something that most Indian girls will be able to relate to. This is why his stories are so popular, especially amongst the youth and people who are at the fulcrum of that change. It happened to me when I saw 'Jab We Met' because I was at that stage in my life."
Anushka says while there is a lot of discussion on women's rights and equality, she belongs to the generation, which is still rooted that is also seeking independence.
The actor says while some people might feel Ali's characters are not feminists, they do not realise that these women are coming out of the strong holds of their families.
She says Ali understands this duality and the conflict arising out of it.
"I have come from a regular middle-class background and I have experienced these things and I have been at that juncture in life where what I knew of the world or how the world was perceived for me, started to shift because of my personal progression. That happens a lot with Indian women.
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