Shekhar Suman on Bigg Boss: I have never considered and will never do it in this life (Exclusive)
Veteran actor and host Shekhar Suman returned to his conversation space with Shekhar Tonite, a show he says is rooted in “depth over noise” and “honesty over deceit, deception and duplicity.”
“The thought is simple: depth over noise, sanity over mindlessness. Raw sentiments over assembled emotions. Today audiences scroll fast, but they stop for honesty,” says Suman, adding, “Shekhar Tonite isn’t about gotchas or viral clips. It’s about connecting with your audience in the most honest way. It’s about sitting down with a person when the cameras aren’t performing, and letting a real conversation breathe. No agenda, no shouting, no 30-second hot takes. Just two people and the patience to actually listen. I think that’s become rare and rare things are interesting again.”
The actor believes modern talk shows slowly lost their authenticity. “I think we confused conversation with controversy. For years, chat shows became about rapid-fire, rumours, silly idiotic games and who can say the most outrageous thing. That’s not conversation, that’s performance. That’s crass sensationalism,” he says, adding, "Audiences are smart. They know when something is manufactured. The charm went away because the honesty did. For a format to sustain, the host has to be real, the questions have to matter, and the guest has to feel safe enough to be themselves. That’s hard. But that’s the only way it lasts."
While politics may be one lens on the show, Suman says he wants to spotlight people whose journeys carry emotional depth and resilience. “Politics is only one lens. India is built by storytellers, athletes, scientists, artists. I’d love to sit with A. R. Rahman about silence, with Neeraj Chopra about pressure, with Deepika Padukone about mental health, with Soumya Swaminathan about science and trust. Any person who’s carried a big dream on their shoulders and stayed human through it. That’s a Shekhar Tonite guest. I want to go where the real stories live," he shares.
Opening up about his acting choices after Heeramandi, Suman says he has consciously resisted the pressure to stay constantly visible. "For me, saying no is how you protect your yes. I’ve never wanted to be visible for the sake of it. If the script doesn’t move me, if I can’t see the human being inside the character, then I won’t do it — even if it’s big, even if it’s safe. Acting is sacred work. You’re borrowing someone else’s life for a few months. I want to be sure I can do justice to that. So I wait. And when it’s right, I give it everything," he confesses.
Reflecting on the response after Heeramandi, he adds, “Heeramandi was special. Sanjay Leela Bhansali is a visionary, and Nawab was a role that asked for surrender. After that, yes, offers came. But again, it comes back to choice. I didn’t want to repeat myself or jump into the next thing just because momentum was there. I’m an actor first, not a factory. Sometimes the right project takes time to find you. And sometimes you have to step back to step in correctly. I trust the audience will wait if the work is honest.”
Suman also dismissed rumours linking him to Bigg Boss. “Those are just speculations. I don’t know how and why they surfaced,” he says. “I have deep respect for reality TV, it’s hard, it’s raw, and it takes courage. But it’s not my language. I’m an actor, a conversationalist, not a contestant. My job is to listen, to draw people out, not to compete for screen time inside a house. Bigg Boss is good at what it does. It’s just not what I do. I’d rather create a space where people choose to be vulnerable, not where they’re forced to be. I never ever considered it. Nor will I ever. Not in this life. Not in any other. I shall maintain my dignity and sanguinity," he ends.
While politics may be one lens on the show, Suman says he wants to spotlight people whose journeys carry emotional depth and resilience. “Politics is only one lens. India is built by storytellers, athletes, scientists, artists. I’d love to sit with A. R. Rahman about silence, with Neeraj Chopra about pressure, with Deepika Padukone about mental health, with Soumya Swaminathan about science and trust. Any person who’s carried a big dream on their shoulders and stayed human through it. That’s a Shekhar Tonite guest. I want to go where the real stories live," he shares.
Opening up about his acting choices after Heeramandi, Suman says he has consciously resisted the pressure to stay constantly visible. "For me, saying no is how you protect your yes. I’ve never wanted to be visible for the sake of it. If the script doesn’t move me, if I can’t see the human being inside the character, then I won’t do it — even if it’s big, even if it’s safe. Acting is sacred work. You’re borrowing someone else’s life for a few months. I want to be sure I can do justice to that. So I wait. And when it’s right, I give it everything," he confesses.
Reflecting on the response after Heeramandi, he adds, “Heeramandi was special. Sanjay Leela Bhansali is a visionary, and Nawab was a role that asked for surrender. After that, yes, offers came. But again, it comes back to choice. I didn’t want to repeat myself or jump into the next thing just because momentum was there. I’m an actor first, not a factory. Sometimes the right project takes time to find you. And sometimes you have to step back to step in correctly. I trust the audience will wait if the work is honest.”
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