A character is 2D, and then after I come in it becomes a 3D; it becomes alive.
I don't want to be a stereotype; I want a character that's aspirational.
Every character that I play, even if it's a homemaker, there is an inherent, innate strength in her - you can find strength in every facet of a female personality. It doesn't just come from the physical strength of a woman.
Strength of character is already written. What we bring, as an actor, is an almost 3D-ness to it.
I don't ever want to do the same character twice. Variety excites me.
I want the audience to be surprised by my character all the time. I want them to keep guessing about my roles, so I am doing more of such films and when a new director comes with such subjects I jump for that.