Grooming & Photograpy: Ather Shahzad
In an industry rife with egos, why is he so keen on declaring that he is not a natural? “There’s nothing wrong with being a method actor,” he points out. “So many great actors confess that they plan ahead of enacting their roles. Life doesn’t wait around for the unprepared. I turn up to my work completely prepared, not allowing the chance for loopholes to come my way.
“This has been my attitude towards my work from the very onset of my career,” he continues. “I first decided that I wanted to act back in 2012, on the sets of a commercial being directed by Asim Raza, where I was supposed to present a cup of tea to Mahira Khan. I did everything that I could possibly do wrong and it took an hour for my scene to be filmed. The humiliation that I felt ended up being a trigger. I decided that I would never again not be able to deliver.
“I was an introvert and it’s taken me a while to work on eye contact, body language and how to speak the right way. I even had a lisp that I had to overcome!”
Seven years down the line, his efforts have paid off. Emmad has a good repertoire of TV drama roles to his credit and, while he admits that in the early days he did take on some roles that ‘weren’t politically correct’, he has lately been making his mark with some intense, convincing performances. It can be said that an actor has proven his mettle when people start referring to him by his screen name and, back in 2016, random people would address Emmad as ‘Malik Mansoor’, the vile political psychopath that he played in the drama Saya-i-Dewaar Bhi Nahin. Nowadays, though, his popularity has reached a new high with his role in the drama Cheekh. Emmad, at present, is also known as ‘Shayaan’, the scrupulous, compassionate hero in the drama.
“I think that people have liked Shayaan because he is a far cry from the dictatorial husbands that tend to dominate our dramas,” Emmad observes. “I put in a lot of thought into defining the character, figuring out what makes him tick and how I can make him as realistic as possible. It is a role that I had been apprehensive about taking on because he only appears after the 10th episode. But, then I figured, sometimes the 12th man manages to win the match.”
There’s nothing wrong with being a method actor,” he points out. “So many great actors confess that they plan ahead of enacting their roles. Life doesn’t wait around for the unprepared.”
He uses sports terminologies very frequently and when I observe this out loud, he agrees. “I suppose I do. I think that it’s just because most of the lessons that I have learnt in my life have been on the sports field.”