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Saturday, December 27, 2025  
06 Rajab 1447  

Saba Qamar enjoys her quiet reign

Saba Qamar opens up on emotional labour and storytelling that refuses comfort
File photo
File photo

There are rare moments in an actor’s career when several narratives converge at once — and all of them succeed.

Saba Qamar is in that moment. With three emotionally charged dramas airing simultaneously — Pamaal, Case No. 9 and Muamma — she dominates prime time with the quiet authority of someone who has nothing left to prove.

The comparison to cinematic history is tempting: like Rajesh Khanna in 1969, when two of his films ran parallel silver jubilees, Saba currently occupies multiple creative spaces at once.

But unlike the frenzy that often accompanies such success, she remains firmly grounded, focused only on the work.

After more than two decades in the industry, Saba is often labelled a “serious” actor, defined by intense roles in projects such as Cheekh, Baaghi and Kamli.

What is often forgotten is her comic timing — among the best in the industry — now overshadowed by the emotional weight of her recent choices.

Asked whether living inside such heavy characters takes a toll, she answers without hesitation. Yes, it does.

“These roles affect my mental health,” she says. “You don’t just switch off a character. At least, I can’t. Every role leaves something behind — emotions, lessons, awareness.”

For Saba, a character is not abandoned when a project ends.

“Like real-life experiences, they shape you. You finish the character, but you carry what it taught you.”

That depth of engagement begins the moment she reads a script.

She doesn’t see it as dialogue on paper, but as a living being.

“I try to sense the soul of the character — what she’s hiding, what she’s carrying. I let her sit with me until she reveals herself.”

Working within a conservative cultural framework, she acknowledges that creative expression often comes under scrutiny — even in its most innocent forms.

“Sometimes a moment meant purely for storytelling becomes a cultural debate,” she says.

Still, she refuses to see this as a creative dead end. “Limitations push you to be more subtle, more inventive.”

Years of experience have also sharpened her instincts.

She can now distinguish genuine appreciation from empty praise — and values honesty over flattery.

Fellow actor Aamina Sheikh once described her as “headstrong” and incapable of sugarcoating — a reputation Saba owns.

Ego, she says, has no place on set. “If a director wants another take, I’ll give a hundred. I’m here to serve the story, not myself.”

On the difference between talent and success, she is clear-eyed. “Talent is only the beginning. Discipline, resilience, timing, luck — all of it matters. Talent may bring recognition, but success decides longevity.”

Despite shifting audience tastes, she believes genuine fandom still exists. “Real fans stay with you even when you’re not visible. They grow with you.”

Through Pamaal, Saba has reignited conversations around marriage, particularly toxic relationships masked as sacrifice or protection.

“Marriage isn’t overrated — it’s misunderstood,” she says. “It’s treated like an achievement when it should be about partnership and growth.”

For women trapped in controlling relationships, her message is direct: “Awareness is the first step. Strength is not silent endurance. Strength is recognising the truth and acting wisely.”

She also believes Pakistani television has yet to fully explore one uncomfortable truth — falling out of love.

“We show love beginning, but rarely what happens when it changes or fades. That’s real life. And it deserves to be told.”


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Mental health

saba qamar

tv actress

Qaba Qamar's movies

drama roles

Saba Qamar's plays

Saba Qamar enjoys her quiet reign