Indian Candians are making a beeline for Bollywood.
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Till a few years ago, it was an entity that was ignored at best and ridiculed at worst. For Canadian youngsters of Indian origin, the Bollywood cauldron with its bubbling masala mix of story, song and dance routine was their parents' nostalgic link with their distant country. But not any more. FRor many Indian Canadian youth, the Indian film industry holds the potential of a career.
One can work around the language issue, says aspiring actress Tricia Bhim, "by writing your dialogues in English and get the accent right." What is important, opines Dr Ruby Dhalla, "is to have a passion for acting and the determination to pursue this passion." It is this passion for the "magical world" of films that has made Dr Dhalla put her medical career on hold. Her debut Hindi film Kyon Kisliye, shot entirely in Canada, is slated for an international release soon. Dhalla's foray into the glam world began with the Miss India Canada contest in 1993 where she bagged the first runner up title. Ruby Bhatia won the crown that year. While Bhatia headed to India for a career in films, Dhalla went to the university to pursue a degree in science and capped it with one in medicine. However, even as she was busy studying human anatomy, she continued her affair with modeling and emceeing. "Often I would run into people from the Hindi film industry, who would say that I should get into films," she says.
After giving it a serious thought (and a couple of years), she finally went to Mumbai in 1999 armed only with passion and determination. She stayed there for six months during which she met filmmakers, compered shows for Provogue and took up modeling assignments. But even as Bollywood beckoned, she decided to return to Canada not only because "I was missing my family," but also because she wanted to make a place for herself in the North American mainstream i.e. Hollywood. And it was in the middle of her busy practice at her chiropractic clinic that the offer to star in a lead role in the Hindi film Kyon Kisliye came her way. So, she took off for three months from the clinic. The sabbatical however is a long one now as Dhalla has decided to take up acting as fulltime career. And while she would love to do Bollywood films, she has her eyes set on Hollywood. Ruby Dhalla anchored to Canada while pursuing her dream, but three Indo-Canadians who had also embarked on a Bollywood journey have stayed on. Ruby Bhatia, Vekeana Dhillon and Vikram Dhillon decided to pursue their career path in India and while Ruby has become a successful television star, Vikram and Vekeana too got a break in television, and nurse their ambitions of getting on the big screen.
He played the role of Devdas in a stage musical titled Tribute to Devdas (itself a tribute to Sanjay Leela Bhansali's film Devdas) and says he is "passionate" about acting but would rather wait for a meaty role instead of taking up any "itsy-bitsy" role offered by directors who come to Canada to shoot Hindi films. Though pursuing a fulltime job, Dhillon says he would chuck it all up if he gets a good offer. "My dream is that one day I will get noticed." Tricia Bhim, who paired up with Dhillon as Paro in the musical says she does not speak Hindi at all and had not given a serious thought to acting as a career, but the role of Paro has changed all that. This young model says, "I will always pursue acting and if I get an opportunity I will take it."
Perhaps one of the first organizations to foresee this trend and capitalize on it is the South Asian Modeling Agency set up by a couple Mala and Ray Singh. They run an acting school too under SAMA's aegis and almost all the leading models, who have landed some parts in the Bollywood films shot in Canada have been associated with SAMA in one way or another. Tricia was crowned Miss SAMA, Radha and Ruby have also worked closely with SAMA. Says Mala, "We are creating a data bank here which creates a pool for directors and producers so that they bring only the main cast and use local talent. We saw the trend way back in 1997 and set up the first ever acting and modeling agency to train an elite group of people to cater to these needs." Many films shot in Canada have featured SAMA models in supportive roles. Nearly 2000 models are registered with SAMA and Mala says that many are interested in getting onto the Bollywood bandwagon.
Agreeing with Mala, Bee Ramdhin (Radha Ramdhin's mother) says, "If a child is eager to pursue a profession having supportive parents helps them excel and will make their education more stronger." A view echoed by Tricia and Ruby who say that it was their mothers who encouraged them walk this glam path. Looks like Tom Hanks' and Julia Roberts of the world, will have to share space with Shahrukhs and Preity Zintas as role models for many Indian Canadian youth. |
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