Bollywood has always welcomed South Indian actresses with an open arm, but rarely accommodates its male stars.From as early as the 1960s, actresses such as Vyjayanthimala, Hema Malini, Rekha, Sridevi, Jayaprada and recently Asin have successfully migrated to Mumbai. At the same time, almost all top south Indian superstars of the 1980s such as Kamal Haasan, Rajinikanth and Chiranjeevi had met with some degree of success, but could never establish themselves in Bollywood. Malayalam superstars mamotty and Mohanlal too failed to make an impact. Neither could the new generation actors like Tamil superstar Suriya (Rakthacharitra- 2010), Telugu star Siddharth (Rang De Basanti- 2006), upcoming Telugu hero Rana Daggubati (Dum Maaro Dum- 2011), and Sudeep (Makkhi) find their feet in Hindi cinema. And the latest to join the list, early this month, was Malayalam actor Prithviraj who made his Hindi film debut opposite Rani Mukerjee in Aiyya which turned out to be a disaster. The only south Indian actor who has been able to draw a fine line between his Hindi and Tamil film career is Madhavan (Rang De Basanti, 3 Idiots & Tanu Weds Manu). .He was able to successfully do Hindi films due to his mastery over the language.One of the reason south Indian heroes not being acceptable is their skin-colour and their inability to speak in Hindi in the familiar accent. Says a top south Indian cameraman who has worked in a lot of Hindi films: "Let us face it - our Dravidian heroes are known more for their acting abilities than the accepted looks in Bollywood. If you have to be accepted as a mass star by Hindi audiences, you have to look like them. On the other hand, the southern girls who have made it big have fair complexion and can pass of as North Indians." . With the disasturous debut of Prithviraj, one has to wait and see the fate of Ram Charan and Dhaunsh.Says a popular Tamil journalist: "Our south Indian heroes think that they will get a pan Indian audience if they do Hindi films, which will help them to increase their salary. But in reality those who tried to enter Bollywood have fallen between two stools. They were not accepted by north Indian audiences and the Tamil version of the film got rejected by their fans. Why is it that there are no buyers for Kamal Haasan's forthcoming Vishwaroop, in which he had brought in Hindi actors in supporting roles?
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