I am very clear that when I work with a director what he or she says is the last word.
I am like a kid. I tell my family and friends I’m like a kid.
Live, laugh, love, every day to it’s fullest, for who knows, tomorrow, may not be.
The enigma of cinema is gone because of the focus on business. As soon as you attach numbers to a film, you limit it. Films are meant to be an escape from reality.
Though my wife thinks I’m mad, I know I’ll drop my daughter to the parties she’s invited to. I’ll want her friends to say, “Wow what a handsome father you have!” When she’s with her boyfriend in the backseat of our car, I’ll be at the wheel, driving her around.
Like beauty, stardom too is skin-deep.
I am not confident unless I am playing someone else.
I thank God for happiness and sadness. If you are never sad, you will never know how good happiness is.
I am happy making the films I make and I would like the West to be impressed with what we do from India.
I am not someone who believes to doing a film just because it is off beat.
When I asked Imran Khan for an autograph he picked up his bat to hit me.
More than an actor, I am a performer. I’m a great believer.
I am not insecure enough to count the bouquets I receive on my birthday, I don’t assess my popularity by the number of magazine covers I am on, I don’t get worried if my song is on the seventh position on countdown charts.
I learnt very early in life that whenever there is a choice between peace of mind and piece of ass, go for the former.
It’s OK to be confused. Confusion is the route to all the clarity in the world.
I can fight with all actors, I can face them and win, but I cannot fight aliens.
I talk to Allah, I pray to him.
I trust two people, myself and the other is not you, its God.
I’m running in a race and people are on the other track, I’m running with myself.
There is no religion of terrorism.