The 29-year-old influencer, actor and entrepreneur is all set to make her 2023 Cannes Film Festival debut today. In a conversation with Forbes India she talks about the creator economy, hedging her bets and her look for the red carpet
Fashion blogger turned influencer Dolly Singh, who is now also an actor and entrepreneur, has been working on attending the Cannes festival for a while now. “For a content creator, it is a huge opportunity. It was one of those things that we really wanted to do as a team, and my team worked very hard for it,” she says in a telephonic conversation with Forbes India, a day before leaving for the French Riviera.
Apart from films, Cannes is known to also be an annual celebration of fashion, with top actors, directors and more recently influencers, walking the red carpet, and Singh is also all set to make her debut at the festival’s red carpet later today and attend official movie screenings at the iconic Grand Lumiere Theatre. Without revealing too much about her look, she says, “It is something [Indian] traditional, paying homage to a few Bollywood looks, which I’m not going to name.”
Singh started off as a fashion blogger with her blog Spill the Sass and later worked at iDiva as a junior writer and stylist where she started working in front of the camera. Eventually, in 2015 she decided to take up content creation full time and grew popular with her ‘Raju ki Mummy’ videos. Today, the 29-year-old influencer—who was also one of Forbes India's Top 100 Digital Stars 2022—is also exploring opportunities outside of content creation with acting and entrepreneurial stints. She starred in the Netflix series Bhaag Beanie Bhaag and Modern Love Mumbai. Singh speaks to Forbes India about the challenges of working in the creator economy, exploring new avenues and her upcoming movie. Edited excerpts:
Q. How has your process of creating content evolved over the years?
I think when I started I had too much inspiration. Now I feel like I have to look for it because whatever I had learnt in life or observations I made have been used up. But jokes apart, initially, there was no process. For instance, when we were at iDiva, there were no scripts. We would just ramble in front of the camera about a set topic. We only started writing scripts when we got brands on board. So even when I started off as a content creator independently, it was pretty much on the go. I didn’t have much written down. I would record whatever came to me, and then edit it later.