This decision is rare in an industry where female leads over a certain age are often relegated to "supportive spouse" roles or "glamorous cameos" in item songs. Instead, she is chasing roles that explore isolation, ambition, and platonic complexity.
But in a recent, introspective turn of events, the actress has reportedly begun to systematically "remove" traditional relationships and romantic storylines—not just from her filmography, but from the narrative of her public life. Sexy shriya saran top removed and kissed hard target
While Shriya has been married to Russian tennis player Andrei Koscheev since 2018 and is a mother, industry insiders and recent interviews suggest a conscious pivot: a move away from being defined by on-screen chemistry and off-screen gossip. In a candid conversation at a recent film festival, Shriya hinted at a professional detox. "I spent the first fifteen years of my career being the 'other half' of a hero’s journey," she said. "The role was always reactive—defined by a breakup, a longing, or a sacrifice." This decision is rare in an industry where
In an industry obsessed with pairings and breakups, Shriya Saran has finally decided to go solo. And for the first time in her career, that feels like the most powerful role of all. While Shriya has been married to Russian tennis
Since 2020, her project selection has reflected this shift. While she starred in the family drama Drishyam 2 , her character, Nandini, was far from the stereotypical romantic lead. She was a mother, a wife caught in a web of moral ambiguity, but the narrative did not hinge on a new romantic track. Similarly, in the OTT space, she has gravitated toward thrillers and ensemble casts where romance is a footnote, not the headline. The "removal" isn't literal; it is ideological. Shriya has reportedly instructed her team to reject any script where her primary arc involves "falling in love, being pined for, or healing a man’s heart."
"Romantic storylines are a crutch," a source close to the actress told us. "Shriya felt that directors would insert a 'love angle' simply to give her character screen time, even if it added nothing to the plot. She asked them to remove it. If the film collapses without a kiss or a duet in Switzerland, she doesn't want to be part of it." On the personal front, Shriya has also become famously guarded. Early in her career, her name was linked with several high-profile co-stars. Today, she rarely discusses her husband or marriage in interviews, actively steering conversations toward her craft and her daughter.