Words matter. These are the best Sudha Chandran Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Gujarat is very close to me. I won my first best actor award for my Gujarati film ‘Kadla Ni Jod.’
I like taking up exceptional characters.
I don’t see any difference in Hindi and Telugu television.
Being a dancer myself, I can understand the travails of youngsters performing in ‘Magadheera.’
I have a dance academy in Mumbai that my husband takes care of.
I was fed up with doing vampish negative roles, dolled-up with heavy makeup all the time.
I plead the almighty that I leave this world with ghungroos on my feet.
I feel loved and grateful for all the love people have given me over the years.
Dance is my passion and something that comes naturally to me.
Dance is my life and I am happy to keep my passion alive.
I remember my father used to beg for a loan to buy a house. He had to beg the banks for a loan.
I have never done homework and have always left the details to the director. This holds true from my first film ‘Naache Mayuri’ to ‘Naagin.’
I have worked with National award-winning artiste Upendra Limaye in a film and he is a fantastic actor.
If my journey encourages and inspires people to never give up trying to do what they really want to do, I will be truly satisfied.
Once I got the Jaipor leg, it took me 3 years of physiotherapy to recover and feel normal again.
I’m totally a supernatural freak in real life.
My effort in the whole thing was the basic determination, the burning desire in me to prove to this world that a physically handicapped girl is in no way inferior.
My role as Chitra is synonymous to my character in real life. If Chitra is crying or shouting or reacting in a certain way then Sudha would have reacted in the same manner.
I am keen on doing a comedy in a full-fledged positive role.
More than any of my achievements, I feel it’s a real honor that children are learning about me, that I’m a source of inspiration.
I began learning how to dance when I was 3 and a half years old.
Crime is a subject that needs to be looked at in-depth since the percentage is on the rise.
So even when I am not around for many, many generations, I will continue to motivate a lot of people… Wherever my soul would be, it will give me a lot of satisfaction that people will be talking about me and following me in their life.
When I did ‘Kaisa Yeh Ishq Hai,’ I wanted to challenge myself by doing a Haryanvi role.
I started with light hearted comedies and good stories with real-life treatment; then TV went glossy, especially with the K-series.
We can’t be dependent on the police all the time. We can’t turn a blind eye to the crime taking place in the country because we are personally not affected.
Frankly, I would never like to write an autobiography because my life is an open book.
TV is what made me a star. It rescued me when I had no work and gave me recognition.
The content in TV has become more mature and relatable.
I shifted my attention to South because I felt I was being overexposed in the TV medium and my characters were also getting repetitive.
My character of Ammaji in ‘Solhah Singaarr’ is that of strict matriarch who adheres to her values.
The negative characters made me very popular but were getting too monotonous.
Initially my makeup for the character of Ramola Sikand in TV serial ‘Kahin Kisi Roz’ raised eyebrows of many who were of the opinion that my looks were too gaudy. But soon I was appreciated by the viewers as well as the industry.
I am required to shoot for ‘Jaiyam’ only for five days in a month. Being able to speak Tamil fluently, I complete 25 episodes each time I visit Chennai.
I was determined to return to Bombay on two legs and not on crutches and dance again.
When people commend me on my success, I know I didn’t just get it. I actually earned it.
I am very excited about doing ‘Shastri Sisters.’
I am happy that I have landed ‘Shastri Sisters’ because I was always wanted to be a part of Colors family.
Throughout my acting career by far, I have chosen roles that are not only challenging but unique at the same time.
Today, there’s a lot of competition in the industry and so one must be open to do all kinds of roles.
Priyadarshan asked me during the shooting of ‘Maalamaal Weekly’ ‘where are you from, Kerala or Tamil Nadu?’ I told him ‘I am a Malayali just like you.’
I have never been typecast.
If people don’t want to cast you, they give you this stupid excuse that it’s because you don’t fit into a certain image.
The artificial leg was like an alien body, fitted to mine. Both had to respond to each other.
I had a horrifying experience but what the world fails to understand is that the handicapped need no sympathy, they need to be encouraged in whatever they do.
I am a Malayali. My ancestors are from Tamil Nadu, but they settled in Irinjalakuda.
People would be surprised to see the real Sudha. I am gawky and not well dressed in my real life.
As an actor you should be able to store and recollect your experiences and work on them as an actor as and when required.
I would love to act in more Malayalam films.
I would go to school, then go for my dance training and be back home only by 9:30 P. M… and that’s what my early life was about.
TV is changing for good. I’m glad that the leveling is happening when we are blending the fiction with real-life treatment.
Along with my will power, it was my parents who stood by me like a pillar of strength in my most challenging phase of life.
My bedroom is my favorite chill out zone, where after a hectic day, I sign off to land in my dreams.
In my 10th exams, I stood first with 80 percent but instead of picking science for my further studies, I chose arts… just so that I could continue to dance.
If we talk about character actors they are always in demand. Actress like Aruna Irani will always be needed in a script.
I have worked with other production houses, but Balaji feels like homecoming.
Failure has always made me a very strong person.
When I started my TV career, I was totally jobless.
With ‘Crime Alert’s first season, the channel gave me the opportunity and also pushed me to become a producer. That was something new that I explored.
I don’t know if being stereotyped is good or bad. But, that is the trend industry follows.
Picking up new languages is fairly easy since it’s my passion.
I agree that not everyone knows who I am. I am not that famous.
People already had labelled me a ‘one-film wonder’ and that’s when TV came to my rescue.
Chennai seems to be the base for the South Indian film industry in general.
My life itself is a message and I know it has changed a lot of lives.
The BJP has a positive outlook towards the country and that is my philosophy towards life.
I was not doing really nice work on television because I was busy doing assignments down South.
Playing the role of the 70-year-old woman is quite an experience.
Never ignore someone with a disability, as we don’t realize how much they can inspire.
There were a lot of things that my parents could not do or afford. And when they put all that dreams into me and when I could not fulfill them, I felt very disappointed. And that was the only reason I wanted to dance with an artificial leg.