Hira Mani is a famous Pakistani television and film actor admired for her excellent acting skills. Her notable dramas include Do Bol, Kashf, Sun Yara, Mere Paas Tum Ho, Sunn Mere Dil, and others. She was recently praised for her role as Shabab in the drama series Dayan. Dayan was a hit drama that grabbed both high ratings and YouTube views. Currently, fans are loving her emotional performance in Shar Pasand. She is also busy shooting for her upcoming dramas and films.
Recently, Hira Mani appeared on Maliha Rehman’s YouTube show, where she openly spoke about the trolling and success of Dayan.
Talking about the criticism surrounding the drama, Hira Mani said, “See, Dayan has been a hit drama because of its grandeur and larger-than-life sequences. Of course, some scripts are cliched, predictable and follow the same old patterns. For example, if you look at Bilal Abbas and Dur-e-Fishan’s drama, does it really happen in real life that a man moves into a girl’s house as house help? Despite the criticism and people calling Dayan an illogical drama, audiences remained hooked till the last episode, and that’s why it became successful. People watched it completely; otherwise, there are many big projects that viewers leave midway. Emotions and romance are my forte. I love playing emotional characters. I cried in both Dayan and Sunn Mere Dil. It’s God-gifted.”
Speaking about trolling and criticism, she further said, “I don’t take trolling seriously. I share my memes and feel happy about them because criticism and memes mean people are talking about you, and that means you are important. There are people who are not discussed at all, and that can be traumatic when no one notices you. This happens in everyone’s life. I have been through a phase when nobody talked about me, but now the industry is good to me.”
She added, “I don’t feel bad about flashbacks and slow-motion scenes in dramas. I only feel bad when people don’t talk about your project. There should be discussion around a drama; otherwise, thousands of dramas air on television and go unnoticed. People don’t watch everything. It’s a blessing when dramas create noise, are discussed, and critiqued. People know you. Otherwise, I could have been a normal woman cooking in the kitchen for my kids. I thank Allah for all the success.”