The Indian modelling industry can’t afford me: Ujjwala Raut

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

Why don’t we see supermodel Ujjwala Raut on the ramps more often? Simply because the Indian fashion industry can’t seem to be able to afford her.

Ujjwala Raut has sashayed down the ramp for international luxury brands like Yves Saint-Laurent, Roberto Cavalli, Dolce & Gabbana and Oscar de la Renta but is hardly seen on the Indian ramp. The Indian supermodel candidly admits money is the reason.

“They (Indian modelling industry) can’t afford me; that’s why I am rarely seen on the Indian ramps. Also, my involvement with ad shoots and magazine covers takes maximum time,” says Raut.
The leggy model shot to fame when she won a national beauty contest in 1996. She was just 17. The almond-eyed girl was pushed by her elder sister to join this glamorous field. “I used to be an average looking girl; so I had never thought of modelling as a career option. It was my elder sister who inspired me to get into this field. She was completely fascinated by Madhu Sapre and instructed me to follow her and that’s how my journey started,” Raut recollects.

Raut has appeared on the cover of fashion magazines like Vogue, Harpers Bazaar and Marie Claire and was once the face of Yves Saint Laurent. She has also walked the ramp in Milan, Paris and New York fashion weeks.

Unfortunately, India hasn’t been able to produce any supermodel after the likes of Madhu Sapre, Milind Soman and Raut. And she blames Bollywood for it.

“The main reason why there is no supermodel left in the Indian modelling industry is the presence of Bollywood, which has become an obvious career option for most models,” she says.
“I never tried Bollywood because it requires a lot of attention and time which I won’t be able to give keeping in mind my other projects. In future I will definitely think about the same but no plans as of now,” she adds.

Raut, whose father is a cop and mother a homemaker, believes that the Indian modelling industry has increased manifold but there are miles to go before one is satisfied. “There is no doubt that the Indian modelling industry is growing but it’s still new, while in the West it is very old. In the West, there’s much more competition because you are competing with girls from different parts of the world, whereas in India there are just a few girls from outside, rest all are just Indians,” she ends.