Actor Tillotama Shome says she has largely played characters on the margins of the society but with her latest film "Sir", a tender love story set in the backdrop of class divide, she was confronted her biases.
The film, directed by Rohena Gera and also starring Vivek Gomber, premiered at Cannes in 2018, is an close look at the unbreachable class divide within Indian homes through the love story between a live-in maid and her employer.
"I thought I was a good person (but) when I read the script, I realised I too have these prejudices. Can I imagine falling in love with a man who works in my house? Why not? Why am I that person because I have grown up in a society where that is not even thinkable, I have not questioned it," Tillotama told PTI in an interview here.
As an actor, she sometimes thinks whether cinema can bring about a positive change.
"If you are in a good mood, you think films can change and if you are in a bad mood, you think it can't change, but this film changed something in me. Internally, I recognised that I am not as nice as I am. There is a long way to go," Tillotama said.
The actor, who has starred in some of the most acclaimed films in Hindi cinema such as "Monsoon Wedding", "Shanghai", "Qissa: The Tale of a Lonely Ghost" and "A Death In The Gunj", said people are more differential and respectful to celebrities and the rich, while ignoring those who work in their own kitchens.
"Treating everyone equally is perhaps the lowest common denominator that we should all have. We talk about it but most of us don't have it. That just shows how we have just accepted this dirt that exist within us."
"We take it for granted. We are so spoilt and privileged. We don't understand what is going on in our country is like invisible slavery that there are people, who are working so much for so little."
"I held on it throughout the whole film as that for me was the 'sur' (tone) of the character. At no point, she loses her sense of optimism, pride or dignity."