Nawazuddin Siddiqui faced a tough road to fame long before the spotlight found him. Now famous for his strong acting, his early days in Mumbai were full of doubt, hard work, and struggles to survive. Before his big break in ‘Gangs of Wasseypur’, life was very different from what it is today. He came to the city with little money, worked as a watchman, and kept doing theatre to improve his skills while waiting for movie roles.
Nawazuddin Siddiqui on fading confidence amid rejections
During an April 2026 session on Radio Nasha, the actor got real about the heavy emotional impact of his struggling days. Looking back at how endless failures chipped away at his drive, he admitted, “In the beginning, you have a lot of confidence and passion. But gradually, after facing repeated struggles, your confidence starts to fade. You begin to doubt yourself, whether what you learned was wrong, which is why you’re not getting work.“
Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s decade of bad luck
He recounted a long stretch where chances always felt tantalizingly close yet out of grasp, vanishing at the final hurdle. “I have seen that mental state where I started doubting myself, felt unfit. It feels like bad luck has struck you – like every opportunity slips away just when you’re about to get it. For almost 10 years, I felt like I was manhus (unlucky). Whenever a big opportunity came, it would suddenly slip away.“
Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s sudden job losses and hidden tears
Siddiqui shared painful memories of celebrating potential gigs that were abruptly yanked away. “I would even tell my brother and friends that I had got work in a film. But when the shooting dates arrived, I would be fired – sometimes without even being informed. There were many times when I felt like crying in the middle of the road. And I did cry – while also looking around to make sure no one was watching.”Those years brought nonstop financial hardship. Reflecting on scraping by day-to-day, he confessed, “I survived on Parle-G biscuits. Whenever I eat Parle-G even today, it takes me back to Delhi – breakfast, lunch, dinner, it was all Parle-G. Even now, if I eat it, it makes me feel like I have nothing. The taste still brings a lot of pain.”
Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s rise to stardom
Even amid the tough times, Siddiqui never quit on acting, breaking through first with ‘Black Friday’ and then rocketing to stardom via ‘Gangs of Wasseypur’. He’s since wowed audiences in movies including ‘The Lunchbox’, ‘Kick’, ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’, ‘Raman Raghav 2.0’, ‘Raees’, ‘Mom’, and ‘Manto’. His TV creds include the acclaimed ‘Sacred Games’ and the international series ‘McMafia’.
