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Media & EntertainmentFriday, June 26, 2026

The quiet exits: why Indian cinema’s stars step away from the spotlight

From a poultry empire in Mumbai to the empty seats for a Kannada debut, the choices of actors reveal an industry wrestling with its own shadows.

On a Monday afternoon in Bengaluru, the queues outside a multiplex were for a Telugu action comedy starring Samantha Ruth Prabhu, not for the Kannada crime drama playing to a smattering of viewers in a smaller screen. Mango Pachcha, the debut of a local star-nephew, had earned respectful reviews but little else; the same day, Peddi, a Telugu vehicle for Ram Charan, was racing towards blockbuster status. The contrast was not lost on an industry that has spent years wondering where its next generation of stars will come from.

The question of who stays and who leaves has many answers, and they are rarely simple. Perizaad Zorabian, a Mumbai-born actress who once shared the frame with Amitabh Bachchan in Ek Ajnabee, walked away from Bollywood not because the roles dried up, but because her father asked her to choose between the film set and the family poultry business. She chose films at first, then, at 33, married a businessman and gradually stepped back, turning down offers from Subhash Ghai and Nikkhil Advani. Today she runs Zorabian Chicken, a Rs 120 crore enterprise. Her departure was a quiet one, driven by family and a long-held dream of entrepreneurship that predated her accidental entry into acting via a Fair & Lovely commercial.

Other exits were shaped by darker forces. Kamal Haasan, who became a pan-Indian star in the 1980s with Hindi hits like Ek Duuje Ke Liye and Sadma, retreated from Bollywood at his peak. Years later, he explained that the industry’s working culture—actors juggling five or six films at once—clashed with his craft, but the decisive factor was the pervasive presence of the underworld and black money. “I did not want to be there—neither to fight them nor to bow my head,” he said. He returned to Tamil cinema, where he built an enduring legacy. For some who stay, the discomfort is more ambient. Tamannaah Bhatia, a star across Tamil, Telugu and Hindi films, recently described how actresses in the southern industries are often subjected to an unnerving, fixed gaze, a residue of patriarchal social structures where male-female interaction remains limited. She stressed that the industry had given her recognition, but that such experiences needed to be spoken about openly.

The hesitation can begin even before the first shot is filmed. Jirayut, a Thai-born celebrity in Indonesia, admitted he nearly turned down the lead role in the horror comedy Cek Khodam because he lacked confidence in his acting. It was his mother’s simple wish—“I want to see your face on the big screen”—that pushed him to accept. His story, like those of the Kannada newcomers struggling to fill seats, points to a deeper fragility: audiences in many Indian markets have grown wary of local content after years of mediocre offerings. Director Tharun Sudhir likened it to the folktale of Tenali Raman and the cat: fed hot milk once, the cat never trusted milk again. Kannada viewers, he argued, had been burned too often.

In a Mumbai office, a former actress who once searched for her kidnapped child on screen with Bachchan now oversees poultry supply chains. In Bengaluru, a debutant’s crime drama plays to near-empty halls while a Telugu star’s action comedy sells out next door. The camera stops for many reasons—some chosen, some imposed—and the silence it leaves behind is filled with the ordinary sounds of other lives.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

33%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSoutheast Asian press
Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismOutrageDetachment

The main thread of local Indian news highlights social tensions: honor killings, assaults on police, and infrastructure issues. The death of a renowned Tamil filmmaker is treated as a cultural loss, but quickly juxtaposed with accounts of distress and conflict. The focus is on injustices and systemic dysfunctions.

Southeast Asian press
AlarmTriumphPragmatism

News from Southeast Asia alternates natural disasters and sports victories, creating a mix of urgency and celebration. Disasters are presented in alarmed but factual tones, while sports triumphs are told as collective redemptions. Economy and finance appear as manageable challenges with pragmatism.

Broaden your view

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1 outlet|1 language|3 min read
Friday, June 26, 2026

The quiet exits: why Indian cinema’s stars step away from the spotlight

From a poultry empire in Mumbai to the empty seats for a Kannada debut, the choices of actors reveal an industry wrestling with its own shadows.

On a Monday afternoon in Bengaluru, the queues outside a multiplex were for a Telugu action comedy starring Samantha Ruth Prabhu, not for the Kannada crime drama playing to a smattering of viewers in a smaller screen. Mango Pachcha, the debut of a local star-nephew, had earned respectful reviews but little else; the same day, Peddi, a Telugu vehicle for Ram Charan, was racing towards blockbuster status. The contrast was not lost on an industry that has spent years wondering where its next generation of stars will come from.

The question of who stays and who leaves has many answers, and they are rarely simple. Perizaad Zorabian, a Mumbai-born actress who once shared the frame with Amitabh Bachchan in Ek Ajnabee, walked away from Bollywood not because the roles dried up, but because her father asked her to choose between the film set and the family poultry business. She chose films at first, then, at 33, married a businessman and gradually stepped back, turning down offers from Subhash Ghai and Nikkhil Advani. Today she runs Zorabian Chicken, a Rs 120 crore enterprise. Her departure was a quiet one, driven by family and a long-held dream of entrepreneurship that predated her accidental entry into acting via a Fair & Lovely commercial.

Other exits were shaped by darker forces. Kamal Haasan, who became a pan-Indian star in the 1980s with Hindi hits like Ek Duuje Ke Liye and Sadma, retreated from Bollywood at his peak. Years later, he explained that the industry’s working culture—actors juggling five or six films at once—clashed with his craft, but the decisive factor was the pervasive presence of the underworld and black money. “I did not want to be there—neither to fight them nor to bow my head,” he said. He returned to Tamil cinema, where he built an enduring legacy. For some who stay, the discomfort is more ambient. Tamannaah Bhatia, a star across Tamil, Telugu and Hindi films, recently described how actresses in the southern industries are often subjected to an unnerving, fixed gaze, a residue of patriarchal social structures where male-female interaction remains limited. She stressed that the industry had given her recognition, but that such experiences needed to be spoken about openly.

The hesitation can begin even before the first shot is filmed. Jirayut, a Thai-born celebrity in Indonesia, admitted he nearly turned down the lead role in the horror comedy Cek Khodam because he lacked confidence in his acting. It was his mother’s simple wish—“I want to see your face on the big screen”—that pushed him to accept. His story, like those of the Kannada newcomers struggling to fill seats, points to a deeper fragility: audiences in many Indian markets have grown wary of local content after years of mediocre offerings. Director Tharun Sudhir likened it to the folktale of Tenali Raman and the cat: fed hot milk once, the cat never trusted milk again. Kannada viewers, he argued, had been burned too often.

In a Mumbai office, a former actress who once searched for her kidnapped child on screen with Bachchan now oversees poultry supply chains. In Bengaluru, a debutant’s crime drama plays to near-empty halls while a Telugu star’s action comedy sells out next door. The camera stops for many reasons—some chosen, some imposed—and the silence it leaves behind is filled with the ordinary sounds of other lives.

Source divergence

Media & Entertainment · 1 outlet · 1 language

33%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSoutheast Asian press
Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismOutrageDetachment

The main thread of local Indian news highlights social tensions: honor killings, assaults on police, and infrastructure issues. The death of a renowned Tamil filmmaker is treated as a cultural loss, but quickly juxtaposed with accounts of distress and conflict. The focus is on injustices and systemic dysfunctions.

Southeast Asian press
AlarmTriumphPragmatism

News from Southeast Asia alternates natural disasters and sports victories, creating a mix of urgency and celebration. Disasters are presented in alarmed but factual tones, while sports triumphs are told as collective redemptions. Economy and finance appear as manageable challenges with pragmatism.

This story appeared in

1 outlet · 1 language

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