At an age when most actors are still finding their footing Siddharth Nigam, 25, is reinventing himself, swapping the chocolate-boy image that first made him a household name for a darker character as in
Kaptaan. Shooting in Chandigarh for his next OTT series, in conversation with us, the actor, who has been in the industry at the age of 10, dismisses the idea of a
burnout. “I feel I have just begun,” he says, adding, “It is only now that I am getting to experiment with my talent and show my versatility. My
only goal is to show a difference in every project. I want people to say Sidharth is a versatile actor and a youth icon.” Referencing his recent show
Kaptaan,
where he played a grey character, he says, “People have loved seeing me in a very different avatar. That is what an actor needs.” Close on its heels came
another different genre in the show
Headshot, centred on the world of
esports and the quiet, solitary struggle of chasing a dream that the world has
not yet learned to take seriously. "The show shows that there are dreams you have to prove alone. And once you have achieved those, only then others
will understand what you were chasing. That can be extrapolated to real life too, I feel,” he says.
With the shooting of his next series underway and some other undisclosed projects in the pipeline, his focus is firmly on OTT and films. Going back to the platform that gave him a footing, he says, “Television gave me two blockbusters,
Aladdin - Naam Toh Suna Hoga and
Baal Veer, and a loyal audience. But the next chapter belongs to a bigger canvas.”
Among others, he feels a sports biopic would suit his personal ambitions. “Perhaps drawing on my gymnastics roots,” he says. Having started out young as a gymnast in this
gruelling entertainment industry, Siddharth attributes his resilience to gymnastics. “The discipline, the physical rigour and the mental toughness that the sport taught me, have helped me in hustle all along. Gymnastics is in my blood. Whenever I get the chance, I go back to it. I love doing gymnastics more than the gym."
However, working consistently, somewhere along the way, chose honesty over hustle. "Be kind, be honest to your work — that's it. And I never take the credit for my work. I give it to God, to the universe,"
he said.