00:00Supreme Court
00:01Supreme Court
00:01Supreme Court
00:15Music
00:16Love
00:18Violence
00:19It's a spy thriller
00:21Fictional
00:25Jimi is a global citizen
00:27at a jazz club
00:29the only thing he understands
00:32is music, food
00:33and jazz city
00:36which is a club
00:37and the name of the show is also
00:40jazz city
00:40and he is the owner and the manager
00:43and the face of jazz city
00:45that club
00:52I would say
00:54in a simpler way
00:55Ibhave bolchi
00:57Ibhave bolchi
01:01Ibhave bolchi
01:03Ibhave bolchi
01:04Ibhave bolchi
01:05jazz city
01:05best part
01:08you see
01:10intense
01:12subject
01:14storytelling
01:16usually
01:16but jazz city
01:20I guess is one of the
01:22story that I've ever heard
01:24intense
01:26through entertainment
01:28you guys
01:29audience will not be bored
01:31there are a lot of layers
01:33and wheat and sarcasm
01:34actors and characters
01:36and the actor character
01:37and as you can see
01:39as you can see
01:41as you can see
01:41as you can see
01:44as you can see
01:48as I can see
01:49as you can see
01:55as you can see
01:55the actor maker
02:01has a lot of layers
02:04as you can see
02:06as I can see
02:07as a member of the
02:08community
02:08and the actor maker
02:14So, the research starts with that and ends with that.
02:20As an audience is very disturbed.
02:27When I saw the content, I saw a lot of the content.
02:32Even if I saw this as an audience is very disturbed.
02:37If I saw this as an audience, I saw this as an audience.
02:43Take your own time, but do the vast research.
02:47If I saw this as an actor or writer, it's not a machine.
02:58The way I said it is so vast.
03:01It is equivalent in terms of duration.
03:03I said it is the average of 60 minutes.
03:08I think that the average of 60 minutes is the time duration.
03:15The first time duration is the most important duration.
03:19The writing is the most important.
03:22The first time duration is the most important.
03:31So, it's like that.
03:32Show me the...
03:35Thank you so much for your kind words and thank you for believing in me.
03:40Thank you for believing in me when I didn't believe in myself.
03:44When I didn't believe that I could play Sheila with connection.
03:47Of course, one of the best ever producers I've worked with.
03:52Ordinarily, thank you.
03:53Thank you for believing in me.
03:56Thank you Sony Liv for trusting me with such a huge platform as yours.
04:03And of course, a huge thanks to all my co-actors and every technician who is sitting here right now
04:09in front of me for helping me bring Sheila to life.
04:13Thank you so much.
04:14Thank you Cherry Picks.
04:15Thank you so much.
04:17Now, coming back to your question.
04:18As we all know that Jas City is basically a fictional story.
04:23It's a fictional story which happens to be set against the historical timeframe, historical background of 1970s or 1971 Calcutta.
04:35And we all are quite aware of the social political flux that was happening at that time.
04:39But essentially it talks about Jimmy and these characters.
04:43It's about these characters who live in Jas City, who breathe in Jas City.
04:48Right?
04:50Coming back to your question.
04:51My character's name is Sheila Bose.
04:54If I have to keep it very brief because I don't know when my director is just going to, you
04:59know, keep their eye and slightly wishy-ho-chish.
05:03Sheila actually happens to be the moral conscience of Chastity Visho.
05:08Sheila, which Shomita had, when he was explaining Sheila to me, had very aptly described her as the calm epicentre
05:18of a storm.
05:20She is a woman who is standing at the crossroads of love, conscience and history all together.
05:27And she's stubbornly, she's stubbornly compassionate. She's helpful.
05:32She's without a doubt.
05:33She's reflective.
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