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Kriti Sanon is the kind of woman who reminds us that destiny bows down only to persistence. An engineering student turned model who waltzed into Bollywood with Tiger Shroff in Heropanti, she did not just arrive, she announced herself. Since then she has spun magic in films like Bareilly Ki Barfi and Luka Chuppi, before dazzling the nation with Mimi, a performance that secured her the National Award for Best Actress. But beneath the glamour lies grit, and Kriti has been candid about how much tougher the climb is when you do not come with a filmy surname.
In conversation with CNN News18, she laid it bare. There are no shortcuts, no fairy godmothers, and definitely no silver platters. Outsiders, she said, have to wrestle with constant rejection and unsolicited commentary on everything from their height to their body type. Everyone will gleefully list your flaws, but few will whisper that you can, in fact, make it. In those moments, she believes, only one voice matters: your own.
Kriti preaches the holy trinity of Bollywood survival: patience, passion, and persistence. The years spent waiting for that perfect role are not wasted, she insists, they are an incubation period where one polishes their craft, builds resilience, and prepares to shine brighter when the spotlight finally swings their way. To her, delayed success is not denial, it is destiny biding its time.
She continues to prove her philosophy with each performance. After playing a double role in Do Patti, Kriti is ready to share screen space with Dhanush in Anand L Rai’s Tere Ishk Mein. Outsider she may be, but her journey reads less like a struggle and more like a masterclass in turning doubt into applause.
**This news was published on Times of India on 22nd August, 2025.
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