Sumit Kaul Masters The Act Of Gliding Through Ages On Screen!

Sumit Kaul Masters The Act Of Gliding Through Ages On Screen!
Television's light eyed actor Sumit Kaul has his pockets full. Part of some of the hit shows on television, Sumit managed to look almost unrecognizable in the critically acclaimed film Mulk.

It has been a busy year for the Ashoka Samrat actor who bagged a supernatural television show Nazar that went on air around the same time of his film Mulk's release. The actor will now be seen in Imitiaz Ali's Laila Majnu. 

Sumit Kaul had a tryst with Bollywood albeit in smaller roles earlier with films like Rockstar, Munnabhai & also threw a negative shade with a comic relief in Vishal Bharadwaj's Haider, he will be seen as the main antagonist in his next. 
In all 3 projects released/ announced in a span of a month, Sumit is seen in contrasting avatars & also plays across all ages. 

Apparently the actor is on a strict regimen to get a leaner body as his television show requires him to do some action scenes. Sumit shares, "I started my career from theater & acting is my religion. I pay more attention to how my character is supposed to perform & look on screen, what role comes later. It's wonderful for an actor, I play a father to a 20 something in my TV show & I'm romancing a 20 year old in my next film. These are more of opportunities than challenges. It's important to convince people with your body language & your looks. It's definitely an effort but it's always a learning process."
In times when some of the finest actors have bailed out of projects as they didn't want to play father to teenage children, Sumit has done the opposite, "You never say never as long as you can foresee the future opportunities coming your way. I don't have any reservations. If I can play a father to a teenage kid & also romance a 20 year old in a simultaneous project without making the audiences uncomfortable, I guess I have done my job well. Some of the Bollywood superstars have done it, I don't see any reason why I can't play across ages. I have to be true to my acting."