There is a duality in the way male and female stars are treated in the industry which expects women to constantly prove their worth, says Yami Gautam.The actor, who made her debut with Shoojit Sircar’s Vicky Donor and most recently featured in the blockbuster Uri-The Surgical Strike, said despite her performance being praised, she could not escape being stereotyped, something that did not happen to her male co-stars.“My first film had a performance-oriented role and people did notice that. But (there’s) stereotype because it was not a conventional role from an actress’ point of view. That’s where an actress and an actor differ.“‘Oh, she has looked a certain way so only certain type of roles were coming my way. I realised that it’s very important to keep working on yourself and reinventing yourself in some way or the other to get diverse roles,” Yami said in a group interview here.The 30-year-old star said she found it absurd that she had to project her “strong girl” role in Uri.“Kaabil had a very sensitive performance, even in Uri, yes, it was about Army and about that entire operation but… I feel very weird when you have to project that I play a strong girl. Why? It doesn’t happen with any actor, they don’t have to say ‘I am playing a strong guy’.“You really have to work hard and people like me have to put in a lot of effort to keep proving themselves which can be tiring.