Illustration: Akila Weerasinghe
Illustration: Akila Weerasinghe

Can’t catch that big break

Is gatekeeping and nepotism in Lollywood stunting aspiring actors?

Neha Maqsood is a Pakistani writer whose reportage and op-eds on race relations, global feminism, and Southasian culture has been published in Teen Vogue, Al Jazeera English, Foreign Policy, DAWN and other places. Her debut poetry book, ‘Vulnerability’ was awarded the 2020 Hellebore Poetry Scholarship Award and will be published by Hellebore Press in the summer of 2021. You can find her on www.nehamaqsood.com

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The untimely death of Indian actor Sushant Singh Rajput in June 2020 shook the Bollywood industry to its core. Artists and audience members alike began to question the exclusive and dynastic quality of the industry and the nepotistic ideals it seemingly propagated. However, when Lollywood – Pakistan's entertainment industry – expressed shock over what could have led a young and accomplished actor to take his own life, the hypocrisy seemed a bit too blatant.

Gatekeeping within Lollywood

Lollywood functions on similar, if not precisely the same, ideals as Bollywood. Whilst the Pakistani entertainment industry may come across as otherworldly and glamorous from the outside, it is very much defined by lobby systems and patronage schemes from within.

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