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Vivek Gomber
Global IndianstoryFrom soldier in Singapore to actor in India: How Vivek Gomber found his calling in Bollywood
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From soldier in Singapore to actor in India: How Vivek Gomber found his calling in Bollywood

Written by: Global Indian

(October 20, 2021) “Is love enough, Sir?”, Tilotama Shome asks Vivek Gomber in the 2018 film Sir – a love story unlike any seen in Indian cinema. It’s this poignant story that made Gomber a household name in India and abroad. But it took him 16 years to become a recognizable face in the world of showbiz. The 41-year-old who began his journey with theater and television is now an actor and a producer to reckon with. If his films have made it to the international film festivals, his acting chops have been equally appreciated.

But Gomber had to face a string of rejections to reach the top. His journey from being a solider in Singapore to an actor in Bollywood is quite intriguing and inspiring.

Jaipur to Singapore

Born in Jaipur to a banker father and a judge mother, Gomber moved to Singapore at an early age with his dad who was transferred to the Garden City for his job. While his mom, who was a High Court judge in Rajasthan, stayed back in India. Gomber would often shuttle between the two countries based on his school schedule. Summer holidays took him back to Jaipur every year where he grew up on a healthy dose of Hindi films in the 80s as he didn’t have much to do in the otherwise small town. For the longest time, he kept oscillating between India and Singapore but films are what kept him enchanted throughout his childhood and teens. So much so, that he chose theater throughout his school and university years.

While Gomber dreamt of pursuing his passion of acting, his dad made him join the military in Singapore. “When my father got his Singapore citizenship, he made the decision to make me dependent. This means when you turn 18 – if you are male – you must either give up the addiction of permanent residence (and leave the country) or join the army for two-and-a-half years. It is one way of acquiring citizenship. So at 18, they pushed me into the military, which I didn’t think I would, but it happened,” he told ExBulletin in an interview.

Filmi dreams take him to Mumbai

However, Gomber made a pact with his parents that he would continue to perform in theater and get a formal education in this area. He kept his promise and enrolled himself for a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts from Emerson College in Boston. After wrapping up the course in 2004, he moved back to Singapore for a while before relocating to Mumbai. Here, he heard about a play at the Prithvi Theater and soon got himself a role. He soon took center stage in a handful of plays and even directed a few like The President Is Coming.

Those initial years, Gomber tried everything from television to plays and short films to stay afloat in the world of showbiz. While certain things worked in his favor, others didn’t. It was a struggle to fit into an industry where he had no godfather. “I fought with my parents to be an actor. Even when I was training, my teachers would say, ‘This is great, but understand that the world is not very kind outside’. But in your head, you think you are the best thing to happen since sliced bread. I came to Bombay thinking like that and it took me a long time to settle into the city and make peace with it. I hadn’t grown up here, so I had to understand the city to be able to portray characters living in the city,” he told Telegraph in an interview.

After few years of trying his hand at acting, Gomber took a hiatus and returned to Singapore to be with his ailing father. After his death, the actor returned to the Maximum City in 2011, this time determined to stay put. He got back to theater where he met actors like Neil Bhoopalam and Tillotama Shome. At the same time, he met Chaitanya Tamhane with whom he went on to do Court, a critically-acclaimed legal drama. Gomber not just acted in Court but even backed it as a producer. The film premiered at the 71st Venice International Film Festival and went on to win the National Film Award for Best Feature Film 2014. Despite the film’s global success, it didn’t translate into more work for Gomber.

Vivek Gomber

Vivek Gomber with Chaitanya Tamhane and Geetanjali Kulkarni for Court at Venice Film Festival.

International acclaim

“Court was lauded all over the world, it got a National Award, it won at major film festivals, it went to the Oscars… I both produced and acted in it, and I expected something to come out of it. But barring a few auditions, nothing happened, and that really hurt. But I got out of it, I went back to theater and then work started coming in,” he added.

It was in 2016 that this Global Indian met Rohena Gera who offered him a role in Sir, a film that was set to change the course of his career. The role of Ashwin, a rich Mumbai bachelor who falls in love with his maid, earned him accolades across the globe. The film premiered at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival and was later released in many European countries. “The film came to me at a time where nobody was really offering me much work. I was grateful to have work that year because I remember after Court, it kind of became tricky for me to book an acting assignment as I looked very different in the film,” he told Indian Express.

The film’s worldwide popularity helped Gomber bag a role in Mira Nair‘s A Suitable Boy, a screen adaptation of Vikram Seth’s novel. 2020 turned out to be an interesting year for Gomber as A Suitable Boy and Sir made their way to Netflix and eventually to millions of screens across the country. The same year, his next film The Disciple which had Oscar-winning filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron as an executive producer, became the first movie from India in 20 years to be a part of the main competition at the Venice Film Festival. The film won the best screenplay award at the festival and also picked up the prestigious FIPRESCI award given by international film critics.

A Suitable Boy

Shahana Goswami and Vivek Gomber in a still from A Suitable Boy.

Gomber, who began his journey with plays and television, has now become a known face at international film festivals and is slowly moving up the ladder in the world of showbiz.

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Zinnia,R2 Sector chs Ltd
Zinnia,R2 Sector chs Ltd
May 4, 2024 2:23 am

I loved him in his latest web series Lootere.. Jabardast hai ye..Love you Vivek..

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  • 71st Venice International Film Festival
  • A Suitable Boy
  • Alfonso Cuaron
  • Bollywood
  • Boston
  • Cannes Film Festival
  • Chaitanya Tamhane
  • Court
  • Emerson College
  • National Film Award for Best Feature Film
  • Neil Bhoopalam
  • Prithvi Theater
  • Rohena Gera
  • Singapore
  • Sir
  • The Disciple
  • Tilotama Shome
  • Vivek Gomber

Published on 20, Oct 2021

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbCRtrrMvSw

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font-weight: 400;">Exotic, and then followed it up by inking her first Hollywood TV series as the lead actor in the NBC drama, Quantico – the first for an Indian, ever. 

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Digital Diva  

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ivals.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUIR7C-shtI

Assam to Delhi to London

His story began in the district of Goalpara in Assam in 1963 where he was born to a teacher father and a homemaker mother. Being the youngest of the seven children, Adil Hussain called himself the clown of the family who loved imitating people. His love for acting began at a tender age after he saw standup comedians perform during Bihu year after year; he would run back home and invite his friends to watch him do the same.

Raised in an era when television hadn't yet become a household feature, Adil Hussain would spend most of his time taking up the centre stage either as a mimic or an actor. His years in school were filled with stage performances, and he loved every bit of it. Time stood still for this then young Hussain when he performed in a play for the first time in 1971. This was followed by a full-length play and at 13 he decided to take a plunge into theater and this love affair continued even when he enrolled in B Borooah College in Guwahati to study philosophy.

 

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After finishing his college, he tried his hand at theater, television, radio plays, street plays and tele films. But dissatisfied with his work, he realised that he needed to learn the craft and decided to enroll in Delhi's National School of Drama in 1990. However, his father wasn't too pleased with his decision as he wanted him to become a professor. But Hussain already had his heart set on acting. The days at the drama school turned out to be a game changer for Hussain who calls it a place where he was 'reborn'. "Before that I wasn't an actor but just a performer. Meeting stalwarts like Arjun Raina, Robin Das, Khalid Tyabji, Nibha Joshi, Naseeruddin Shah, Barry John and Anamika Haksar opened up my imagination," he told Business Standard.

It was in the capital that Adil Hussain began his stage career while receiving training from theatre stalwarts like Khalid Tyabji and Dilip Shankar. The years at NSD led him to the UK where he studied theater at the Drama Studio London on a Charles Wallace India Trust Scholarship. "My questions were very different from what the UK was offering me. They were training me to pertain to the market whereas I was looking for deeply philosophical nuances," he told The Pioneer. So after the completion of his course, he returned home where he continued to train himself in theater for the next few years. His big moment came when he received acclaim in Othello: A Play in Black and White, which was awarded the Edinburgh Fringe First award. While he was doing great on stage, he was still sceptical about joining Bollywood as he feared being stereotyped.

A star is born

After years of hesitation, Hussain dipped his toes into the world of movies with a Bengali film Iti Srikanta. Soon he made his Bollywood debut with Vishal Bhardwaj's Kaminey, and in no time, he made appearances in a handful of Bollywood films. But 2012 was a turning point in Hussain's life as he stepped into international cinema with Mira Nair's The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Ang Lee's Oscar-winning film Life of Pi. While many popular Indian faces have made it big in Hollywood, Hussain belongs to the league of those handful of actors from India who made it big internationally before winning hearts in their homeland. It was his sheer talent that caught the attention of Nair and Lee, and this was the beginning of a beautiful journey for this Global Indian.

[caption id="attachment_14297" align="aligncenter" width="669"]Adil Hussain Adil Hussain and Sridevi in a still from English Vinglish.[/caption]

International acclaim

If the world was talking about this powerhouse of talent, back home, he was being lauded for his performance opposite Sridevi in English Vinglish. These films opened a barrage of opportunities for Hussain, who till then was tip-toeing in the world of cinema. If he worked in a Bollywood film like Lootera, he also joined hands with Bosnian filmmaker Danis Tanovic for Tigers and later got himself a role in a French comedy Crash Test Aglae and a Norwegian film What Will People Say, which was Norway’s entry to the Oscars in 2018.

The National Award-winning actor has given cinema some of his best performances in the last one decade. Moving away from the periphery of supporting roles, Adil Hussain has established himself as a solid actor worthy of a main role. It's his audacity to pick roles that matter and that's what has made him click with the audience in India and abroad. "My aim is to be a little daring and different in every film of mine and that is why I limit myself. If there is some script which allows me to play roles really close to the lives I see around me like the complexity of life, the details, the depths, the superficiality, artificiality, the masks of life etc., I definitely say yes to play that role. So, when it makes sense to me I choose to play that character," he told Public Telegraph.

This is the reason that Adil Hussain agreed to play a scientist in the third season of the much-talked about show Star Trek: Discovery, and won over the global audience with his stellar performance. "I’ve never ever experienced anything before in my career like Star Trek. Working in it was like a being in a world without boundaries where caste, race, nationality and gender did not matter," he told Khaleej Times. The same year, Hussain added another feather to his cap when he was honoured with the Outstanding Achievement award at the prestigious Bagri Foundation London Indian Film Festival 2020 for his contribution to global cinema.

 

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The 58-year-old actor, who began his journey from the makeshift stage of Assam's Goalpara has now reached global heights, thanks to his hard work, determination and talent. Adil Hussain is an inspiration for anyone who wishes to make it big in the world of cinema, and is proof that one can change their destiny any time.

 

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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