On her 40th birthday today (June 24), let's give Mindy Kaling a shoutout and some belated props.
She doesn't get the press of Ava DuVernay or Shonda Rhimes, two African American producers, but in her own quiet path, Kaling has become a Hollywood powerhouse in presenting stories from the perspective of South Asians.
In her own journey, she has broken through many barriers to women and people of color in the entertainment industry and because of her high profile, she has been the target of criticism, even from from Asian Americans.
Perhaps its because she didn't develop her "street cred" by not being publicly confrontational in her career moves. Instead of shouting discrimination at every turn or detour, she chooses instead, to soften the bias against people of color -- either as the lone woman of color in a writers' room or as a powerful content producer -- with a twist of irony or self-deprecating humor.
Perhaps it is also of her own making. As she moved from her breakthrough rrole in The Office, to writing and producing The Mndy Project, the South Asian American artist has been criticized for appearing late to accept her own heritage as a part of her character and favoring white romantic interests on The Mindy Project.
In an interview promoting her latest movie, Late Night, she said it didn't reflect her own experience. Although in real life she was treated better than the characters she depicts in the movie, she nevertheless, felt the "terror" of her first writing job.
“But the terror I felt as a new writer and having to represent all women and all minorities in a writers’ room is really real," she told My Entertainment News.
“That is ripped straight from my own experience.”
Now that she's established herself and is no longer having to prove herself, Kaling is freer to express herself and continue the fight for inclusion by calling her own shots.
Kaling has a lot on her plate: launching her first Amazon Studios feature film, “Late Night”; an adaption of Four Weddings and a Funeral with a diverse cast;teaming up with Priyanka Chopra for a new Hulu series; writing a Netflix series loosely based on her own childhood; and the possibility of bringing to life a series or movie about an Indian American superhero.
and -- oh, by the way -- being a single mom.
Hulu’s Four Weddings and a Funeral, which will debut July 31 on the streaming network, has a diverse cast and presents a romance between characters from different cultures. Nathalie Emmanuel, Nikesh Patel, Rebecca Rittenhouse, John Paul Reynolds, Brandon Mychal Smith, Zoe Boyle, Sophia La Porta and Guz Khan star in the series.
“The leads are an African American woman and a British Pakistani man,” Kaling said. Ten hours will be different than two also, but will still feature the requisite weddings and funerals.
“There’s 10 episodes, four weddings, and one funeral in the course of the 10 episodes,” Kaling said.
Kaling is also teaming up with pal Priyanka Chopra for an all-new movie that combines everything we love about Crazy Rich Asians and My Big Fat Greek Wedding.
According to Deadline, the duo is set to star in an upcoming comedy about a lavish Indian wedding. Inspired by Chopra's own wedding to recording artist Nick Jonas, the romcom will take place in both America and India, so expect to see loads of culture clashes.
Marvel's Ms Marvel is an Indian American superhero. |
Perhaps her most intriguing project is one that hasn't fully materialized yet. She said in interview that she has had talks with Marvel to bring to life their comic book character Ms. Marvel, AKA Kamala Khan, an Indian American teendager, according to Deadline.
"I grew up this shy girl with absolutely no connections in Hollywood. To me, (her success) is really about being a fan," said Kaling. ... "The funny thing is no matter how successful I might be, I still wake up feeling like that person on the outside looking in."
"I grew up this shy girl with absolutely no connections in Hollywood. To me, (her success) is really about being a fan," said Kaling. ... "The funny thing is no matter how successful I might be, I still wake up feeling like that person on the outside looking in."
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