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Priyanka Chopra’s Bollywood fans can finally cheer up – she will soon be back in action back home. In an exclusive interview in Toronto, the film star said she was excited about two Hindi films that she had already finalised for next year, promising to reveal more “as soon as I put pen to paper”. She rubbished rumours that she was planning to quit Bollywood. “Oh, that’s terrible!” she exclaimed, when asked.
Chopra was in Toronto as the guest of honour for the annual TIFF Soiree, the exclusive fundraising gala that’s held on the eve of the Toronto International Film Festival, which runs September 7-17 this year. She is the first Indian guest of honour at the Soiree, following global stars like Al Pacino, Natalie Portman and Michael Fassbender in previous years. “That's some seriously august company to be a part of,” she noted.
The invitation is recognition both of her own star wattage as well as a nod to the Indian film industry. “That’s the industry that taught me everything that I am, so I want to be able to represent them the best way I can,” she said.
This year, the Soiree is raising funds for the Share Her Journey initiative, which seeks to promote women in the film industry. A film from Chopra’s production house Purple Pebble Pictures, titled Pahuna: The Little Visitors, is also premiering at TIFF. The film, directed by Paakhi A Tyrewala, is set in Sikkim and tells the story of three Nepalese children who get separated from their parents while fleeing to India from the Maoist violence in their country.
She’s come a long way since then. A sitcom inspired by her “favourite actress” Madhuri Dixit’s life is in the very early stages of development with ABC. “It’s a fictional story completely,” Chopra said. “It’s a big Bollywood star from the ’90s who decides to give up everything for love and becomes a soccer mom in middle America.” She will also be seen in the Hollywood productions A Kid Like Jake alongside Jim Parsons, Claire Danes and Octavia Spencer, and Isn’t It Romantic, with Rebel Wilson, Adam Devine and Liam Hemsworth.
She’s taking the same approach to her career, refusing to be tied down to a single market or country. “The entertainment world is too small now,” she declared. “Forget just India or America. I want to work in Australia, I want to work in England, I want to work everywhere they want me to work.”
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