The actor said like any individual Swara has the right to express herself.
"Swara has the right to express herself in what she felt in watching a film. It could be this film or any other one for that matter. It could be another woman or even a man who felt that the representation of a certain character was reductive," Tillotama told PTI on the sidelines of the day two of the ongoing Lakme Fashion Week Summer/Resort.
Swara had criticised director Sanjay Leela Bhansali for the "glorifying" the now-banned archaic jauhar practice in an open letter, for which she is receiving a lot of flak on the social media.
In her letter, Swara had said that she "felt being reduced to a vagina - only" after watching the period drama.
"I would really like to be in a place that celebrates masculinity, femininity and androgeny with grace. We need to expand our boundaries where we are not talking about what is it to be a man or a woman.
"We need to have a sense of inclusion and an expansive sense of self that is not so gendered," she said.
Shome walked the ramp as a showstopper for Kolkata-based Shantanu of label Maku.
She delivered a powerful monologue about how people let life pass by in the hurry of running ahead - to present the 'In Transit' collection made from Khadi Jamdani with indigo dyes.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
