Thursday 28 June 2012

Breaking the Mold: Namrata Singh Gujral


Namrata Singh Gujral
Beautiful, smart, talented, and successful - and in Hollywood, of all places. Too good to be true, right?

Wrong.  These words describe Namrata Singh Gujral, an actress based in Hollywood who not only has her Screen Actors Guild card but also runs her own production company called American Pride Films.  The company's newest feature - Americanizing Shelley - is a film Namrata co-wrote partly because she saw that there were no movies that were commercial but still addressed the issues that Sikh-Americans face today.

When asked whether she has experienced any typecasting in her career, she confessed that when she first started in the industry, she was asked to go on twelve auditions, each one for a role of a wife following her husband around.  She was actually required to cry at her auditions because that was an important aspect of the melodramatic roles.

Needless to say, it became boring  pretty quickly: it was clear that there was no dearth for roles for the stereotypical Indian wife.

It's not that Namrata didn't want emotional roles.  She just wished that roles for South Asian women were of the same caliber as the roles offered to other actresses.  Namrata found the solution in casting a wider net for good roles.  Consequently, she has played Latin-American and even Persian women.

Namrata has achieved great success considering the short time that she has been in the industry.  Not only has she acted in "House of Sand and Fog" starring Oscar winner Ben Kingsley, but she has also had a recurring role as a nurse on the popular soap opera "Passions".  She has also been in a Bollywood film called Kaante.

"In Bollywood," Namrata says, "it's a lot easier to get roles."

Bollywood makes many movies but making it in Hollywood is much more difficult and more of an accomplishment.  "The reason," she continues, "could be because most Bollywood actors lack formal training and have trouble connecting with the audience."  Though she was offered roles in Bollywood,  Namrata decided that she would rather work in Hollywood.

She was showcased recently as part of the "Sikhs in Hollywood" panel at the Gala preceding the recent Spinning Wheel Film Festival held in Anaheim, California. It was at the festival, Namrata points out, that she had a chance to meet likeminded individuals - people who knew that you didn't have to preach to an audience in order to teach them something.  Namrata says she was blown away by the quality of the films she saw that day.

"Whether they were long or short, they were polished and it was clear that a great deal of thought and effort had gone into them", she adds.

Namrata is qualified to make that judgment because she studied film at university and graduated with a 4.0 - the highest mark one can get. She knows what makes a film good or bad and applies these judgments to any roles that come her way.  Besides her academic accomplishments, she has become somewhat of an icon in the Sikh-American and Indian communities.  She has been invited to speak on panels on being a Sikh and Indian working in Hollywood.

In 2005 Namrata was also a member of the US Republican Party's panel on the Entertainment industry at an annual convention, where she shared the podium with Vice-President Dick Cheney. And, oddly  -  but understandably  -   was declared the GOP "Babe of the Week" at the convention!  [For "Beauty and Brains", explain the Republican web-sites.] She spoke about the need to support ventures such as her production company which aims to be inclusive and, at the same time, make pro-America films.  It was Namrata's chance to show the Party that not only did people in Hollywood care about America, but so did Sikhs and other visible minorities.

Also, being a member of panels where she speaks directly to South Asians and Sikhs is "a great honour", says Namrata, and quickly adds that she welcomes every opportunity to counsel others who hope to get into the industry.  She admits, however, that besides talent one needs luck as well to get your foot in the door.

Namrata has a passion for making films for the new generation.  She knows that the last thing most people want when they go to see a film is to be blatantly educated by it.  Namrata realizes that, primarily, audiences want to be entertained - if they learn something along the way, then that's a bonus.

It's this principle that she applied when making Americanizing Shelley.  The movie is a romantic comedy, but Namrata hints that audiences will, along the way, also learn a little bit about Sikhs. The film, however, does not market itself just towards the new-American  communities  -  Namrata is confident that the film is one that the general population at large will want to see.

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