We know Naveen Waqar is selective about her projects, but did we know she turned down a chance to work with Big B?
The Humsafar star, who rose to fame after playing the vicious vamp against Mahira and Fawad Khan, went on to work in hit TV dramas like Annie Ki Aayegi Baraat and Alvida and made her film debut in 2013 with the Aamina Sheikh-starrer Josh.
In conversation with Images, the 31-year old opens up about her personal life, cinema and what awaits her next.
Images: Tell us a bit about what you do when you're not working.
Naveen Waqar: I'm a total homebody. I love spending time with my family. Sundays, for example, are strictly family days. It’s all about my parents, brother and baby cousins and we spend the day together, playing games or taking them out.
In my spare time, I read a lot, catch up on music and movies I've missed out on, paint or write. I only do one project at a time, so that I balance my professional and personal life and focus on one thing at a time.
Images: How important do you think it is to have a partner in one's life?
Naveen: It's more important to have the right person as a partner, especially when a woman is a public figure. She needs someone who doesn’t feel overshadowed by her success and is comfortable in his own skin and above all, respects her.
Unfortunately, women are taught that their aim in life is to grow up and get married. I believe in letting them educate themselves so they can be self-reliant and independent. Relationships are important, but they shouldn’t be the only aspiration. There should always be a balance.
Images: Local cinema has been growing in leaps and bounds. Are you planning to make your silver screen debut anytime soon?
Naveen: It all depends on the right kind of role and script. I'm in no hurry. I want to take my time and if and when the right role comes along, I will say yes.
I'd love to do action roles. Action, psychological thrillers or intense drama, suspense are my kind of genres. Something that would challenge me, mentally and physically. Excite me enough to want to lose myself in the story. If given the choice, I'd rather prefer a role where I kick someone’s butt than dance and romance, but then again if done right, the latter can be fun too.
I was offered a role from across the border last year in November to work alongside Amitabh Bachchan and Nawazuddin Siddiqui. But I wasn't sure if it was the right time for me, and I was also shooting for Saya e Deewar Bhi Nahi, so saying no was the right choice at the time. It was very tempting but Pakistani cinema is reinventing itself and I want to be a part of that reinvention. I want to do a film that would be remembered as one that helped Pakistani cinema grow.