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In an industry where visibility often determines survival, saying “no” can feel professionally dangerous. Yet for Paresh Pahuja, refusing certain roles has become necessary for something larger than career strategy — emotional survival as an artist.During a conversation with us in Pune, Pahuja admitted that rejecting projects has absolutely cost him opportunities over the years. But for him, acting is not merely employment; it is about temporarily inhabiting another life. “It has cost me,” he says candidly. “But I had to respect those choices because being an artist is also a very selfish thing in some ways.”The actor explains that every role demands months, sometimes years, of emotional investment.
Which is precisely why excitement matters more to him than predictability. “If I’m playing a fighter pilot or a sniper, I get to live that journey for months,” he says. “So if I’m committing that much time, it can’t only be about money.”Pahuja believes repetition eventually kills artistic curiosity. And despite the uncertainty that comes with rejecting projects, he would rather wait than fall into creative autopilot. “Life is too short to just follow a pattern,” he says.



English (US) ·