Abhinay Vaddi

Abhinay Vaddi is an Indian actor who works predominantly in Tamil-language films.

Abhinay Vaddi
OccupationFilm actor
Years active2010–present

Career

Abhinay made his film debut with the Telugu low-budget film Young India (2010) directed by Dasari Narayana Rao.[1] He was set to make his Tamil debut with Vilambaram, but the delay of the film meant that the biographical film Ramanujan, based on the mathematician of the same name, was his debut film in Tamil.[2][3][4] He received the role after an audition.[5] Abhinay was also selected for the role due to his physical resemblance to Ramanjuan.[6] Akin to Ramanujan, Abhinay is also good at math.[7] Each scene was shot first in Tamil and then in English, with changes made between the versions due to the different audience.[8] A critic from the Indian Express cited that "The highlight of the film is that it has a talented debutant playing Ramanujan to the hilt. You could see Ramanujan in Abhinay, literally, and his portrayal of the genius is nearly flawless".[9] Abhinay played a negative role in Chennai 600028 II and grew out his moustache and beard for the role.[10] He will play the lead role in Michaelagiya Naan.[11] The films is a thriller film and stars Vasundhara Kashyap and Malobika Banerjee.[12] Abhinay also plays a swimmer in Sugar starring Simran and Trisha.[13] He plays Simran's pair in the film, but shares more scenes with Trisha.[14]

Personal life

His grandfather is Gemini Ganesan and his grandmother is Savithri.[13] Abhinay is also an international table tennis player and enjoys cooking.[15][7]

Filmography

  • All films are in Tamil, unless otherwise noted.
Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released
Year Film Role Notes
2010Young IndiaAbhiTelugu film
2014RamanujanSrinivasa RamanujanBilingual film (English, Tamil)
2016Chennai 600028 IIGaneshan
2019VilambaramAshvin / Santhosh
TBAMichaelagiya Naan Michael
TBASugar TBA

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Result Ref.
2015 9th Vijay Awards Best Debut Actor Nominated
gollark: I've got a playback program which loads tapes from chests, reads their metadata, and randomly picks tracks to play, then loads the relevant tape, seeks a bit and plays to the end. It switches in a second or so so it's actually not that awful.
gollark: That would probably work. Opus is the best thing around now and the quality would be *okay* at 48kbps.
gollark: I mean, it would probably be significantly bigger if you just ran PCM audio through a general purpose compression algorithm.
gollark: Who knows.
gollark: https://wiki.vexatos.com/dfpwmIt's weird and I don't think anything else uses it.

References


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