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Himesh Patel
Global IndianstoryEastEnders to Tenet: How Indian-British actor Himesh Patel took over Hollywood
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EastEnders to Tenet: How Indian-British actor Himesh Patel took over Hollywood

Written by: Global Indian

(September 28, 2021) Who would have thought that a boy from the small English village of Sawtry would get to work with Hollywood biggies like Danny Boyle and Christopher Nolan? But that’s Himesh Patel for you. A British-Indian actor who broke into the white industry, first with his TV stint and later with a glorious film debut. The 31-year-old, who has been smashing stereotypes with each of his appearances, has become a champion of inclusivity and diversity.

But getting to where he is has been a long journey for Patel. For someone who began working as a teenager in a British soap operas, this Global Indian took a leap of faith into filmdom and in no time has become a breakout star.

A teenager hero

Born in a typical Gujarati family in Cambridgeshire to postmasters, who owned a newspaper-and-magazine shop, Patel loved watching television as a kid and soon began impersonating his favorite TV and film characters. It was while attending Prince William School in Northamptonshire that he was cast in a school play at the age of 11. The play turned out to be a game changer for this kid as his teacher saw potential in a young Patel and asked his parents to sign him up to a local theatre group, the Key Youth Theatre in Peterborough. This love for acting and theatre helped him secure a seat at The Young Actors’ Company in Cambridge, where he took film classes too. Living in a small village, drama school was his weekly refuge from isolation. “My weekly haven, to go and have some fun and just learn all the different things that go into being an actor,” he told Gentleman’s Journal in an interview.

His talent was talked about far and wide, and at the age of 16, he received a call for an audition for the British soap opera EastEnders through an agency in The Young Actors’ Company. Patel was able to impress the casting director with his acting prowess, and soon won the part of Tamwar Masood and made his first appearance on Eastenders in 2007. In 2011, Patel won his first Inside Soap Awards with Meryl Fernandes for Best Wedding in EastEnders. The same year, he co-wrote episode one of series three with co-star Charlie G Hawkins. Such was the popularity of the show and his character that in 2013, he filmed an internet spin-off of EastEnders titled Tamwar Tales – The Life of an Assistant Market Inspector.

Eastender

Himesh Patel in a still from Eastender.

While Patel continued to cast his spell in the series for nine years, he simultaneously worked in short films to broaden his horizon. His 2014 short film Two Dosas won many awards at international film festivals including Best Short Comedy at the London Short Film Festival and Best Comedy at the Aspen Film Festival.

In 2016, Patel returned to the television with Channel 4 sitcom Damned and the next year brought with itself a new show titled Don Juan in Soho. The same year, his fans saw him in an episode of BBC comedy Climaxed.

The breakout role

It was while doing a play in New York Patel received a mail that was set to change the course of his life with his smashing film debut. But an oblivious Patel didn’t know it at that time. The mail was from his agent for a Danny Boyle film with a musical element asking him to tape a monologue from a play and a performance on a Coldplay song. Though performing in front of Boyle and Richard Curtis was scary, but Patel knew he had to give his best shot. In an interview with Curzon Blog, he said, ” It felt very daunting. It was scary when I knew I was going to meet Richard and Danny; it was probably the most high-profile audition I’d had at that point, so the stakes were high. But I didn’t want that to overwhelm me to the point where I didn’t enjoy it. It’s a privilege to get to walk into a room with those two so I just enjoyed it as much as I could and I think that did me well in a way because its what’s channeled through their music, that joy.”

A champion of diversity

His role of Jack Malik in Yesterday, a struggling singer-songwriter waiting for his big break, struck the right chord with the audience. His warmth and charm won over the people across the globe in a film that was about The Beatles. The film was not only a turning point for Patel but all South Asians in Hollywood as the film took a major step towards diversity and inclusion. “The fact that we can finally pass as regular Americans and play mainstream roles without highlighting our individual cultural or ethnic background is a strong step towards the right direction,’ he told HT Brunch.

Patel, who grew up at a time when inclusivity was also invisible in Hollywood, found it confusing to not see any Indian faces in mainstream pop culture. “My parents spent most of their childhood in India and came to the UK in their early 20s. I was born in the UK. You live in two worlds and you try to share one with the other. But it is never easy. It was a challenging and confusing time. I definitely faced the gap,’ he added. But things have started to change for the better for South Asians, and Patel himself in a true example of it.

Himesh Patel

Himesh Patel with Robert Pattinson and John David Washington on sets of Tenet. (Image Courtesy: The Times)

The super success of Yesterday landed Patel a role in Christopher Nolan‘s sci-fi Tenet. Working with a stalwart like Nolan was a great learning experience for this British-Indian actor who was on his toes training under a visionary filmmaker. If Patel’s Tenet was minting money at the box office, his small tube appearance in The Luminaries got him a huge thumbs up from critics and fans alike. The 31-year-old, who fell in love with acting as a child, has carved a niche for himself in Hollywood.

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  • Aspen Film Festival
  • Cambridgeshire
  • Christopher Nolan
  • Danny Boyle
  • Eastenders
  • Himesh Patel
  • Inside Soap Award
  • London Short Film Festival
  • Tenet
  • The Young Actors' Company
  • Two Dosas
  • Yesterday

Published on 28, Sep 2021

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Mindy Kaling: The Indian American actor and producer who truly represents South Asians

(July 29, 9:10 am) Being the first woman of color to break into an all-white men writers team at American sitcom The Office wasn't an easy feat, but that's Mindy Kaling for you - bold, fearless, and unabashed. For someone who began her journey at 24, the writer, producer, actor, and director has come a long way with immensely successful shows and films to her credit. Thanks to Kaling, underrepresented minorities are finding a voice and visibility in US pop culture. So much so that the Indian American has become the poster girl for South Asian arts, culture, and even quirks, on every media platform available. The 42-year-old's inspirational journey hasn't been an easy one. An overlooked teenager finds solace in comedy Born as Vera Mindy Chokalingam in Massachusetts to a Tamil architect father and a Bengali doctor mother, Kaling's life in Buckingham Browne & Nichols School was quite a dampener because, in her words, she was an "average overlooked" student. With no "cool" friends to hang out with, she found solace in comedy shows on American TV. It was Comedy Central, Monty Python sketches, and Saturday Night Live reruns that piqued her interest in comedy. I was all smiles

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rican TV. It was Comedy Central, Monty Python sketches, and Saturday Night Live reruns that piqued her interest in comedy.

I was all smiles because I got to go to school and be myself. #62MillionGirls don't have that chance. Let's end that. pic.twitter.com/GyVi7XPoWZ

— Mindy Kaling (@mindykaling) September 27, 2015

But this wallflower truly blossomed at Dartmouth College. From writing plays and acting in college dramas to singing, Mindy spread her wings as she graduated with a degree in playwriting.

At 19, she got a summer internship at Late Night With Conan O'Brien. She reckons herself as the worst intern that the show had ever seen. "I treated my internship as a free ticket to watch my hero perform live on stage every day, and not as a way to help the show run smoothly by doing errands," she wrote in her memoir.

The play that got Kaling The Office

The internship might have been a facade but Kaling was sure comedy was her true calling. Soon she packed her bags and moved to Brooklyn. But it wasn't until 2002 that things started to move for Kaling when her comedy play Matt and Ben debuted at the New York International Fringe Festival. Such was the popularity of the play that in no time it was transferred to Off-Broadway venue in East Village. It was here that American screenwriter and producer Greg Daniels saw Kaling perform and offered her a writing gig for the first season of The Office.

Damn this is a #TBT pic.twitter.com/3xk6UL5lbr

— Mindy Kaling (@mindykaling) September 8, 2016

Kaling was all of 24 when she became the only woman and the only person of color to join eight other writers on the show which was nominated for an Emmy. Along with her writing credits, Kaling made her TV debut as a super sassy and fearless Kelly Kapoor in the hit American sitcom. Kaling fully represented her Indianness with all its quirks on one of the most popular sitcoms of all time. With the progression of the show, Kaling also became an executive producer and director, besides 24 episodes to her credit as writer.

When sexism rocked her boat

Early on in this very show, Kaling faced sexism. Shortly after The Office was nominated for Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series, the Television Academy told Kaling that she wouldn't be eligible for an Emmy like the rest of the staff because there were too many producers on the show.

In a conversation with Elle, she revealed,

"They made me, not any of the other producers, fill out a whole form and write an essay about all my contributions as a writer and a producer. I had to get letters from all the other male, white producers saying that I had contributed when my actual record stood for itself."

Her name was included in the final list, however, the show did not win an Emmy.

After being part of The Office for eight seasons, Kaling bid goodbye to the show. It was around the same time that the 42-year-old released her first memoir Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? A hilarious account of her highs and lows in life, the book soon made it to the New York Times best-selling list.

The rise of a pop-culture icon

While The Office opened doors of opportunities for Kaling, it was The Mindy Project that got her bigger recognition and fame. The 2012 show that ran for six seasons made Kaling the first woman of color to have her own network show. In no time, she broke the barriers of race and became an international pop culture icon. Such was the popularity that when the show moved from Fox TV in 2016 to Hulu's version, Kaling was pulling in an estimated $140,000 per episode.  Moreover, she earned the third spot on the Forbes list of the highest-paid actresses on TV in 2017.

A popular name on television, Mindy also dipped her toes in Hollywood with films like A Wrinkle in Time, Ocean's 8, and Late Night.

[caption id="attachment_6235" align="aligncenter" width="588"]Mindy Kaling in Oceans 8 Mindy Kaling and Sandra Bullock in a still from Ocean's 8[/caption]

Despite being in the entertainment industry for decades, Kaling felt like an outsider because of the constant reminders that she is different.

"We talk about how representation matters in Hollywood, so much that it almost loses its meaning. But it's actually real. Growing up, I realized that there was no one who looked like me on TV, so I often found myself drawing parallels to people who are like me on shows like the Cosby family or characters on white sitcoms. You cannot imagine how excited I was when Bend It Like Beckham came out. The idea that I could actually see people from my community onscreen blew my mind," she told IANS.

Though Kaling was representing Asians with her stories, the actor and producer revealed that her shows weren't ethnicity-driven.

Never Have I Ever

With her 2020 Netflix show Never Have I Ever,  Kaling broke barriers for Indians on the global stage. The popular series is one-of-its-kind that brought representation and diversity to the forefront, something that has always been a filler in most American sitcoms. Kaling has somehow shattered the glass ceiling by bringing South Asians alive on the screen like never before. Giving them a three-dimensional character has got her a huge thumbs up from fans and critics alike.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzVYRST0h3Q

While Kaling is basking in the success of Never Have I Ever, she is ready to give Velma Dinkley an Indian twist in HBO's Scooby-Doo spin-off. But this has got Kaling backlash from some fans who took objection to an "Indian" playing the part.

Responding to the backlash, Kaling said at Late Night with Seth Meyers,

"She's such a great character, she's so smart. And I just couldn't understand how people couldn't imagine a really smart, nerdy girl with terrible eyesight and who loved to solve mysteries could not be Indian. Like, there are Indian nerds. It shouldn't be a surprise to people."

Kaling has been a popular figure on American TV for a long time, but despite her fame, it has been a mixed bag for her.

"It really doesn't matter how much money I have. I'm treated badly with enough regularity that it keeps me humble," she told Elle.

Editor's Take

For the longest time, Hollywood and American shows saw South Asian characters as caricaturish. Their unidimensional roles could be cringy and stereotypical at times. But it was Mindy Kaling that changed the game when she took the reins of The Office in her hands many years ago. Ever since the producer, actor, writer, and director has been making every effort to truly represent South Asians at their authentic best. The fact that she feels like an outsider even after all these years shows how migrants have to always put in extra effort irrespective of their vocation or the degree of success they have achieved.

RELATED READ: How Oscar winner Guneet Monga tackled ageism and early failures

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White Castle to White House: How Kal Penn made America fall in love with him

(August 24, 2021) Who could have possibly thought that an Indian-American actor would not only campaign for Barack Obama but also earn a position in his administration? But that's Kal Penn for you. A Hollywood actor who decided to work for the people of America because he believed in the cause and purpose. It wasn't just his stunning performances on the big screen that amazed people across the globe, but his decision to serve the people of America too came as a welcoming surprise to many. The 44-year-old, who began his career in films and TV in America, has come a long way. Here's the story of this Global Indian who put a South Asian in the White House. [caption id="attachment_8154" align="aligncenter" width="525"] Kal Penn at the White House[/caption] Love for theatre translated into films Born as Kalpen Suresh Modi in New Jersey to Gujarati Indian immigrant parents, Penn was closer to his roots as he visited Gujarat every year during his school vacations. It was here that he heard the stories of his grandparents marching with Mahatma Gandhi during the Indian Independence movement. Imagining his own grandparents playing a pivotal role in the most crucial chapter of history got Penn

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rong> in New Jersey to Gujarati Indian immigrant parents, Penn was closer to his roots as he visited Gujarat every year during his school vacations. It was here that he heard the stories of his grandparents marching with Mahatma Gandhi during the Indian Independence movement. Imagining his own grandparents playing a pivotal role in the most crucial chapter of history got Penn interested in politics at a young age. Apart from politics, it was music and theatre that had a huge influence on his early life. During his school days, he played baritone saxophone in the jazz band and was an active member in theatre productions. This love extended to college where he majored in theatre from the Fine and Performing Arts Academy, and he soon graduated from UCLA with a double major in sociology and film.

Acting was Penn's first love and he wanted to explore it as a career beyond his training in theatre. But he wondered if Kalpen Suresh Modi on his resume would get him any calls as his friends warned him that only anglicized names appeal more to a white-dominated industry. "Almost as a joke to prove friends wrong, and half as an attempt to see if what I was told would work, I put Kal Penn on my resume and photos," he said in an interview.  Interestingly, his audition callbacks rose significantly, and he continued using Kal Penn for professional purposes.

The initial struggle with typecasting

It was in 1998 that he made his feature film debut with a short film Express: Aisle to Glory. But at that time Hollywood was playing heavily on cultural stereotypes and Penn found minimal exposure with films like American Desi, Cosmopolitan and Love Don't Cost A Thing. The scripts never got fancier beyond the roles of a computer geek or a foreign student or a terrorist during the initial days at work.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Kal Penn (@kalpenn)

In a conversation with Hindustan Times, he said,

"Being an actor is tough no matter what your ethnic background, but adding race to the game makes things hundreds of times harder. Starting out for me was particularly difficult. There wasn't and still isn't relatively, much support for the arts in the South Asian American community. In the workplace, it's tough to get seen for roles that aren't written with a specific "look" in mind, so there are times when one makes a decision to take a role based on the need to build a resume rather than an artistic outlet."

The breakthrough role that made Penn popular

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Kal Penn (@kalpenn)

But it was the 2004 film Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle that catapulted Penn to fame. His breakthrough performance made him a household name. This popularity translated into more roles on American TV as well as in films. Mira Nair, too, was impressed with his performance and cast him in the role of Gogol Ganguli in the screen adaptation of Jhumpa Lahiri's Namesake. Penn moved away from his regular roles and pulled off a character that was deep and complex.

"The film itself was the most artistically rewarding experience of my life. The experience I had working on The Namesake showed me that it was possible to tell a refine, compelling story that is universal as it is personal," he told the Hindustan Times.

From White Castle to the White House

With shows like 24 and House in his kitty, Penn was happy playing the roles that were getting him diversify as an actor. But the 2007 writer's strike came as a blow to the industry which almost paralyzed much of Hollywood. Penn found a unique opportunity in this as he packed his bags and moved to Des Moines to help the Barack Obama camp get ready for the Iowa caucus in January 2008. It was Obama's 2004 speech at the Democratic convention that vaulted him to the national stage, and Penn believed him to be a rising politico who was changing the status quo.

So when the chance came to be a part of the campaign, Penn grabbed it with both hands. "The thing that drew me to his campaign was that he wasn't taking lobbyist money; he actually opposed the Iraq war early on; he had a plan for a lot of things that a lot of other folks just seemed resigned to doing," Penn told the Los Angeles Times.

After the writer's strike was called off, Penn returned to work but he did make time for Obama's presidential campaign in 2007 and 2008. It was in early 2009 that Penn took a year long break from his career in Hollywood and took up the position of Associate Director of the White House Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs. In his new role, Penn served as a liaison with the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities. In June 2010, keeping up with his agreement, Penn returned to his acting career and after completing A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas in November 2010, he resumed his work in the Obama administration.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Kal Penn (@kalpenn)

After his re-election, Obama appointed Penn to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. A year later, he served as the Master of Ceremonies for the White House Student Film Festival. It was in 2017 that he and other members of the committee resigned in response to President Donald Trump's remarks on the Unite the Right rally.

Giving back

In 2017, Penn won the MasterChef Celebrity Showdown and donated the $25,000 cash prize to UNRWA, a United Nations relief and human development agency that supports Palestinian refugees.

The same year, following a racist comment from a user on his Twitter feed, Penn crowd-funded a fundraiser for the refugees of the Syrian Civil War and raised $813533 at a time when Donald Trump had banned immigration to the US from Syria, Yemen and Sudan.

From being an outsider with no godfather to becoming a household name in Hollywood, Penn is one of those South Asians who are representing diversity on a global scale. The 44-year-old is one of those rare Indians who made a stellar appearance on the big screen as well as in politics.

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Anjum Anand: The British Indian cook and writer who’s been introducing the world to healthy Indian food 

(November 10, 2021) Anjum Anand’s love affair with food and flavours began rather early on. Her father taught her to enjoy food and her mother taught her to cook. When the family lived in Switzerland, they would often cross over to France to sample trout cooked a certain way because her father would have heard of it. Their adventures often culminated in amazing eating experiences.   Yet, despite this obvious love for food, a culinary career was not Anjum’s first choice. Regardless, the pull towards all things gastronomical was inevitable and today, this Global Indian is the author of over seven cookbooks, and has several successful TV shows to her credit, including a couple for the BBC. Called the Indian Nigella Lawson, she also helms a successful business called The Spice Tailor which offers a range of curry sauces, naans, and chutneys. Rather popular, her brand has also received the several awards; the most recent one being the Canadian Grand Prix Award earlier this year for their dal.   [embed]https://twitter.com/Anjum_Anand/status/1119984581111894017?s=20[/embed] Indian connect  Anjum’s father Prem was born in the Pakistan side of British India 12 years before Partition. He was one of 14 siblings and his family fled to Delhi in 1947 where they began from scratch. He moved to London where he worked with a pharmaceutical company when

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[embed]https://twitter.com/Anjum_Anand/status/1119984581111894017?s=20[/embed]

Indian connect 

Anjum’s father Prem was born in the Pakistan side of British India 12 years before Partition. He was one of 14 siblings and his family fled to Delhi in 1947 where they began from scratch. He moved to London where he worked with a pharmaceutical company when he 20 and worked hard to build a new life for himself in a new country. It was here that Anjum was born and raised, though Anjum did also live and study in Geneva, Paris, and Madrid. When the family lived in Switzerland, they would often drive over to France on the weekends to try new food. She graduated from the European Business School London with a degree in European Business Administration before launching and running a business importing flat-pack furniture from Eastern Europe.  

However, the job didn’t satisfy Anjum, who’d always had a passion for all things food. In an interview with Deccan Herald she said, “I would go to the office every day, but when I came home, I found myself depleted. I started cooking in the evenings and I soon realised that I really loved those moments in the kitchen. Soon, I started calling my friends home on weekends for meals, and they enjoyed the food so much that they asked me to open a restaurant.” 

Global Indian Anjum Anand

New beginnings 

This sparked the beginning of a new journey and Anjum began working in cafes and restaurants to get exposure to working in kitchens to educate herself about the food industry. As she began learning more and more about all things food, she also realised that what she truly wanted to do was educate people on the healthy Indian food alternatives. A large part of this stemmed from her own struggles with weight as a teenager.  

Anjum also believes that Indian food often gets the rap for being unhealthy. However, in reality offers a plethora of flavours while being healthy too. This she says, can be easily done by reducing oil and increasing spices like ginger, curry leaves and mustard. In an interview with Stephanie Dickison, she said that people assume Indian food is unhealthy. “It isn’t but needs to be understood and also put in context. What you eat at the average Indian restaurant isn’t how we eat at home. We never add nut pastes or cream to our curries; our curries are often thinner, tangier and fresher than you might think. Also, a typical Indian plate would feature a vegetable dish, a protein and a carbohydrate. It is rare to have much more than a crunchy salad and or a raita with it. Indian food is replete with healthy ingredients, spices, garlic, ginger, onions, tomatoes, vegetables and lentils and only a little meat or fish. It is, in fact, a really good way to eat.” 

Global Indian Anjum Anand

The learning curve 

With this in mind, she went on to become a food columnist, consultant chef and also brought out her first book Indian Every Day: Light Healthy Indian Food. She also starred in the BBC series Indian Food Made Easy and was a regular guest on UKTV’s Great Food Live. Her family-friendly and healthy spin on traditional food shot her to popularity and her latest book I Love India is a guide to create authentic and vibrant Indian dishes at home.  

Anjum has been constantly inspired by the variety and originality of Indian flavours and cuisines. A frequent visitor to the subcontinent, she spends substantial time at her family homes in Delhi and Kolkata. For those who mistake curry to be the essence of Indian food, she says that the diversity can be rather surprising. From street food to kebabs, fresh chutneys to a host of local flavours that each region offers, there is a lot to discover and learn about food from the subcontinent, according to this writer.  

Global Indian Anjum Anand

In 2011 she launched The Spice Tailor which is now sold across supermarkets in the UK, Australia, and Canada. The brand offers a range of sauces and dals that use fresh ingredients, are slow cooked, and are devoid of preservatives or additives.  

A big champion of choosing food that nourishes the body, Anjum believes in Ayurveda and her book Eat Right For Your Body Type also draws from its principles. Her tryst with the ancient Indian science began when she consulted an Ayurvedic doctor for her indigestion and lack of energy. “The doctor figured me out in five minutes and put me on a course of herbal medicine and helped me to understand how the body works,” she said.  

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtsbEM3VUeY[/embed]

Giving Back 

She routinely does her bit to give back to society and one of the causes she lends her support to is Fight for Sight, UK’s main eye research charity. She encourages the public to sign up to the charity’s fundraising initiative Feast your Eyes, which nudges people to challenge their senses through a blindfolded breakfast, lights-out lunch, pitch black picnic, challenging cheese and wine or dinner in the dark.

 

 

  • Follow Anjum Anand on LinkedIn and Twitter. 

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Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni: The Indian American author who brings to life the complexities of being a woman 

(October 30, 2021) Once upon a time there were five brothers who were the epitome of obedience. One fine day when one of them—the most dashing of the lot—brought home a beautiful wife, Kunti their mother commanded that they share whatever he’d brought home. The story of how Draupadi landed herself five husbands is a rather famous one. Paeans have been sung about the Pandavas’ obedience, but what of Draupadi? Was she happy to have unwittingly landed herself five husbands? What of her secret attraction to a man who could have made her a better partner, but she’d spurned due to misplaced pride and a quick tongue?   [embed]https://twitter.com/cdivakaruni/status/1450933687961505795?s=20[/embed] These are questions that have probably risen in many a mind, but were finally given shape by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni. Her version of the Mahabharata, (Palace of Illusions) from a woman’s point of view, offered readers a new perspective on the mythology. The Indian American author, who has authored over 15 books, has turned the spotlight on women in each of her works. Be it exploring the travails of immigrants in Mistress of Spices and Arranged Marriage, the coming-of-age story in Oleander Girl, or giving her own spin to mythology and history with

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ht on women in each of her works. Be it exploring the travails of immigrants in Mistress of Spices and Arranged Marriage, the coming-of-age story in Oleander Girl, or giving her own spin to mythology and history with Palace of Illusions, The Forest of Enchantments, and The Last Queen; every book has had its centre a woman with a heart of gold and nerves of steel. In a world where most mythologies have celebrated the male figure and have suppressed women’s voices, Chitra has brought forth the subtleties and complexities of being a woman. Her books turn social constructs on their heads and lend a voice to the forgotten women. 

It all began in Calcutta  

The inspiration for her works, she has said, was her mother, a strong-willed woman who raised Chitra and her younger brothers almost single-handedly in the face of great hardship. “My mother was a teacher and believed in the value of learning. She always wanted to become a writer, but she never got the opportunity to explore that facet of hers. Perhaps, I am fulfilling her dream,” she said in an interview with Travel + Leisure. Incidentally, Chitra herself is a teacher; she is the Betty and Gene McDavid Professor of Writing at the University of Houston Creative Writing Program. 

Global Indian Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

Born in Calcutta in 1956, Chitra completed her BA from University of Calcutta in 1976. That same year she moved to the US to do her Masters at Wright State University and eventually did her PhD from the University of California, Berkley in 1985. While at college, she held various odd jobs to help get her through; from babysitting, working at an Indian boutique, to slicing bread and washing science lab instruments.  

Writing to heal 

All this while though, Chitra was homesick and felt like an alien in a new country. Life as an immigrant is never easy and back in the 70s with no internet connectivity and exorbitantly priced phone calls, there was little that she could do to stay in touch with her family back home in Calcutta. The only way for her to thus deal with her loneliness was through her writing. She began maintaining a diary where she’d put down all her thoughts. In an interview with Friday Magazine, she said, “Living an immigrant’s life was an extremely powerful and transformative experience for me and I wanted to explore that through writing." 

Global Indian Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

But it was news of her grandfather’s death that really set her off. Since she couldn’t go back home, she channeled her grief into writing a poem about him. Soon more poems followed before she decided to switch to prose as she felt it was a better medium.  

Writing turned out to be cathartic for this Global Indian as she began to come to terms with her new life and her distance from home. She enrolled at a community college to further hone her writing skills where a teacher who was impressed by her work, urged her to get in touch with a literary agent. The agent recognised Chitra’s talent and helped her publish her first book Arranged Marriage, a collection of short stories on immigrant women from India who were caught between two worlds. The book was a huge success and earned Chitra the American Book Award, a PEN Josephine Miles award, and a Bay Area Book Reviewers’ Award.  

Global Indian Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

Lending voice to women 

Soon other books like The Mistress of Spices, Sister of My Heart, and Unknown Errors of our Lives followed. Her work on the lives of immigrant women gave voice to the millions of Indian women struggling to straddle both worlds. However, the author was ready to explore other subjects and the first image that came to her mind was of her grandfather and his treasure trove of stories based on Indian epics and mythologies that had once filled her childhood.  

Growing up in Calcutta, Chitra would spend many holidays with her grandfather who would spend most evenings narrating stories from the Ramayana and Mahabharata to Chitra and her cousins. “He was a great storyteller and I grew up listening to some wonderful and complex tales. However, as I grew older, I was not satisfied with what I’d learned about the major women characters from these stories. Most of these epics were all about the men and their valour; what of the women? I often wondered what a Draupadi or a Sita felt as these great wars were fought; what did their tragedies feel like? I wanted to bring them alive,” she said.  

Global Indian Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

That’s how Palace of Illusions and The Forest of Enchantments came about. They retold the Mahabharata and Ramayana from the point of view of Draupadi and Sita. They portrayed both women as strong, complex characters that were otherwise just invisible stories. Some of her works have also been adapted to the big screen: Mistress of Spices starred Aishwarya Rai and Palace of Illusions is also soon to be made into a film.

A passionate advocate for women’s rights, Chitra has ensured that she captures forgotten voices and stories in her books. Already busy with her next novel that is set around India’s independence, the author says that it will be a sort of follow up to The Last Queen, which was about Maharani Jindan whose kingdom was snatched away by the British. 

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIKE8SRjIQc[/embed]

Giving Back 

Apart from juggling a full-time job as a professor and her work as an author, Chitra also ensures that she does her bit to give back to society. She is the president of MAITRI, a helpline for South Asian women, particularly victims of abuse and domestic violence. She is also involved with Pratham, a non-profit that seeks to improve literacy among disadvantaged Indian children.  

For a woman who struggled to adapt to life as an immigrant in a new country to now lending a voice to forgotten and marginalised, Chitra has come a long way and has been doing her bit to further the complexities and beauty of Indian culture. 

 

  • Follow Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni on Twitter.

Reading Time: 10 mins

Story
Tollywood to Hollywood: Meet Avantika Vandanapu, the first South Asian to lead a Disney channel film

(August 28, 2021) Who could have possibly thought that in between the perfectly whitewashed Disney channel films like High School Musical, Camp Rock and Descendants, one would find Spin? But it's 2021, and Hollywood seems to finally be warming up to South Asian representation on the big screen in its most authentic form. And amid this is the first South Asian lead for a Disney Channel film - Avantika Vandanapu. The Indian-American, who began her career in Tollywood, is now making heads turn with her Hollywood debut. Such has been the response to her act in Spin that she has found herself on Variety's 2021 Power of Young Hollywood List. Here's the story of the girl who gave the world it's first South Asian lead in a Disney film.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika) Dancing dream that took her to Mumbai Born in San Francisco to an accountant mother and a software engineer father, Vandanapu was trained in Kuchipudi, Kathak, Ballet, Jazz, Contemporary and Bollywood since the age of 5. It was dance that really made Vandanapu feel at home. Such was the passion for dancing that a 9-year-old Vandanapu applied for

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View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika)

Dancing dream that took her to Mumbai

Born in San Francisco to an accountant mother and a software engineer father, Vandanapu was trained in Kuchipudi, Kathak, Ballet, Jazz, Contemporary and Bollywood since the age of 5. It was dance that really made Vandanapu feel at home. Such was the passion for dancing that a 9-year-old Vandanapu applied for Zee TV dance reality show Dance India Dance Lil Masters and came to Mumbai after her selection. The adventure of having a first-hand experience of the world of Hindi TV and film in Mumbai, Vandanapu fell in love with the industry. It was then she made up her mind that she would pursue acting as a profession.

Her wish was granted when a Telugu director saw her on the show and cast her in a film. It was with Mahesh Babu's 2016 film Brahmotsavam that Vandanapu made her Tollywood debut as a child artist. She instantly shot to fame and ended up working in Manamantha, Premam, Balakrishnudu and Agnyathavaasi.

Bullied for skin tone

After trying her hands in acting in India, Vandanapu wanted to up her game and improve her craft. This drive to better her art brought her back to the US where she trained intensively in acting and dancing. From taking drama classes at school to going for open-call auditions, Vandanapu was ready to make it big in Hollywood.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika)

But things weren't easy for this teenager as she found herself being mocked at for her skin tone.

In a conversation with Mid-Day, she opened up on facing racism in America. She said,

"I have dealt with the occasional comments like, 'Go back to your country!' But I know people in the mid-west have it worse. It’s also that lingering feeling of being left out, and that you don’t have the same opportunities as others because of your skin colour. The Caucasian community assumes that as an Indian, you don't relate to the American experience."

However, Vandanapu wasn't ready to bow down to racial discrimination, and kept following her passion. The first opportunity that came knocking on her door was Disney Channel's Spin in 2017, which turned out to be Vandanapu's first audition for a Hollywood film. However, the makers wanted to work a little more on the script and develop the characters fully before starting the project. So for three years Spin was put on hold. But in between, Vandanapu's auditions got her a role in Mira, Royal Detective, an Indian-American-Canadian animated mystery series and an American comedy-drama series Diary of A Future President.

Smashing stereotypes with her Hollywood debut

In 2020, Vandanapu found herself yet again at the audition of Spin, Disney's first film with a South-Asian lead. For the longest time, Disney films have been whitewashed but with South Asian representation trickling on the big screen in a big way, Spin came with an authentic take on Indian American experience.

The 16-year-old has scripted history by becoming the first South Asian lead for a Disney Channel film. But it's still surreal for her because Vandanapu. "What teenager does not dream of being on Disney channel? I have always thought about it. But it was tough for me as a young Indian girl to think one day I would be on that screen. But as we see representation coming to Hollywood, it was like, 'Oh may be this is something I could finally get to do’. And then Spin was here, and it was just so unreal. It was a crazy experience, and I have to constantly pinch myself to be able to live out my dream like this," she told PinkVilla.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCGzsmO03xw

Spin has smashed the glass ceiling in more than one way. The Manjari Makijany-directed film has not just given Disney a South Asian lead but the film also shattered the age-old stereotypes that plague the Indian diaspora. "We have lacked representation for so long. With Never Have I Ever and Spin, I am glad we can see ourselves on screen. It’s so hard being an Indian in the US; to see people going through similar struggles like ours can be empowering," she added.

Vandanapu has become an overnight star in America and India. The Indian American has not only caught the fancy of the people across the globe with her role in Spin, but she has also featured on Variety's 2021 Power of Young Hollywood List.

After making her Hollywood debut with Spin, Vandanapu has now signed her second flick Senior Year that's produced by Rebel Wilson, Todd Garner and Chris Bender.

At 16, Vandanapu has become a global name, thanks to Spin. The girl, who fell in love with acting in India many years ago, has put South Asians on the global stage. Her story is an inspiration for any teenager who plans to make it big.

Reading Time: 5 mins

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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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