Amitabh Bachchan has described his single scene in The Great Gatsby as a "gesture" to director Baz Luhrmann.
The actor has refused any payment for the role of shady businessman Meyer Wolfsheim, who helps Jay Gatsby accumulate his mysterious fortune.
Bachchan wrote on his blog: "Baz Luhrmann, during his private visit to India last year, had dropped by my office to meet me and presented me with some paintings of a prominent painter that was accompanying him.
"He called last month and wondered if I would do this small role in his film and I agreed. It is a gesture. I have refused any remuneration on this too."
Bachchan, who will appear with Carey Mulligan and Leonardo DiCaprio in the adaptation, cautioned against seeing the role as a breakthrough for Indian actors.
He said: "We must remember a most basic fact. We are the Indian film industry and they Hollywood from America. There shall always be a prominence to American actors in Hollywood, just as there is a prominence of Indian actors in Indian films.
"A Shah Rukh, Salman or Aamir may well be an unknown face in one of the towns in Midwest USA, but so would a Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise in Yevatmal or Giridih."
24 star Anil Kapoor recently said that appearing in Hollywood films has given his acting career a new lease of life.
The actor has refused any payment for the role of shady businessman Meyer Wolfsheim, who helps Jay Gatsby accumulate his mysterious fortune.
Bachchan wrote on his blog: "Baz Luhrmann, during his private visit to India last year, had dropped by my office to meet me and presented me with some paintings of a prominent painter that was accompanying him.
"He called last month and wondered if I would do this small role in his film and I agreed. It is a gesture. I have refused any remuneration on this too."
Bachchan, who will appear with Carey Mulligan and Leonardo DiCaprio in the adaptation, cautioned against seeing the role as a breakthrough for Indian actors.
He said: "We must remember a most basic fact. We are the Indian film industry and they Hollywood from America. There shall always be a prominence to American actors in Hollywood, just as there is a prominence of Indian actors in Indian films.
"A Shah Rukh, Salman or Aamir may well be an unknown face in one of the towns in Midwest USA, but so would a Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise in Yevatmal or Giridih."
24 star Anil Kapoor recently said that appearing in Hollywood films has given his acting career a new lease of life.