Photography: Fayyaz Ahmed | Styling: Kevin @ Ilyas Salon | Coordination: Ghazanah @ Alchemists
I half expected to see the remorseless brat Wajih Taseer from the hit TV serial Cheekh, with ruffled hair, a heavy stubble and venom dripping from his eyes. But Bilal Abbas Khan surprises me as he enters the room. His eyes are shy, his expression innocent and he looks like a clean-shaven 20-year-old, with an air of uncertainty about him.
Cheekh star Bilal Abbas Khan is a blockbuster breakout and presently shaking up the drama industry. His acting debut in Saaya-i-Deewar Bhi Nahin may have gone unnoticed but he caught my eye when he played the submissive Qasim in O Rangreza. Following soon after was the patient Taimoor in Balaa, for which he won the Social Media Award for Best Actor, and also received a nomination for Best TV Actor at the Lux Style Awards.
But as Wajih Taseer in Cheekh, he really took us by storm. Three years after his debut in 2016, this 27-year-old Napa dropout is at the top of his game.
Icon met up with him recently in between shoots for his next project with Hum TV after O Rangreza. “I wanted to do something light after Cheekh and this is a light-hearted, character-driven story directed by Farooq Rind. I play the lead against Yumna Zaidi. I’m not playing the regular chocolate hero but, at the same time, it’s a character that I haven’t done so far. Yumna’s role is also equally complicated and it’s a cute, romantic and funny story.”
Bilal Abbas Khan’s turn as the villain in Cheekh has really made him a household name. So why did he almost not take on the role? And if he enjoys acting so much, why did he drop out of acting class?
Bilal Abbas was surprised at the feedback he got for the role of Wajih. “When Wajih was bad, they hated him but, in the last episode, when they found out why Wajih was the way he was, people told me they were in tears for him,” he says. “Previously, when I went out, I could hear hushed whispers of ‘Qasim!’, the character I played in O Rangreza, but now people know me as Wajih bhai!”
Ironically, initially, Bilal didn’t want to do a negative character so early on in his career. “I wasn’t sure whether I would be accepted by viewers in the role, as negative characters can backfire too,” he says. “Also, I don’t want to be stuck in just one genre, as I want to be an actor with range.
“Since a negative character doesn’t even suit my looks, my biggest challenge was to make it look credible. Until now, I had only been recognised for characters that walk away with the audience’s sympathy. But Badar Mehmood, the director of Cheekh, managed to convince me by telling me that I would have the margin to do it my way.”
What experiences did he draw upon to play Wajih? “I had no specific inspiration to do Wajih, but I do watch a lot of films and TV, and have been doing so for years,” he says and adds, “I’m probably a child who has never watched cartoons but has seen films since being born.”