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Emmy Award winner Archie Panjabi feels television,as compared to films,made her a better actor
While the media across the US,UK and India celebrate her Emmy win,Archie Panjabi like her character Kalinda Sharma in the CBS show The Good Wife which won her the award maintains her poise even as she talks to us about the coveted prize. Winning an Emmy isnt easy for anyone,not just for someone of Asian ethnicity. In fact,I wasnt even thinking of ethnicity when I won the award, asserts the British actress of Indian origin who bagged the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series. She is the only British artiste to bag an Emmy this year. Panjabi plays a cynical,misanthropic investigator on the American legal drama.
The actress was born as Archana to the Panjabis,a Sikh family from Mumbai,and moved to London when she was still a toddler. She recalls wanting to be an actress for as long as she can remember. Even when I went to school and then university,I would keep acting on the side. My first big break,however,came with East is East in 1998. And it was her role in this film as Meenah Khan that got her noticed. This was followed by a variety of roles,including Gurinder Chaddhas Bend It Like Beckham and as Wall Street Journal reporter Asra Nomani in A Mighty Heart that also won her The Chopard Trophy for a Breakout Performance at the Cannes Film Festival.
Last year,when Panjabi was offered Kalindas character in The Good Wife,the actress decided to move bag and baggage to New York. Part of the reason why she decided to make the shift was that the show is produced by brothers Ridley and Tony Scott. I had worked with Ridley Scott before and was sure that the production quality would be excellent. I was initially nervous about the cast (popular television actress Julianna Margulies as lead),which is the best in the US. Besides,Kalindas character is quirky and interesting. And though she misses her family back in London,she now considers the Big Apple her second home. The people I work with have made me feel like family here, smiles the actress who feels she is as much an Indian as she is a Britisher and now American.
What makes Panjabis recent award stand out is the fact that the opportunities for actors of Asian origin are,after all,limited in the West. That is a changing scenario in the 21st century as we increasingly see actors like Kal Penn,Sendhil Ramamurthy (Heroes) and Deep Katdare (American Desi) on screen. However,in 1995,when Panjabi started her career,it was still much tougher. It probably stems from the fact that you dont have too many non-Americans writing the scripts for films and television, she reasons. While the 38-year-old considers herself lucky to have been offered strong characters right from the beginning,she quips,Why just Indians,most ethnicities,be it Europeans or Chinese,dont find representation in the visual medium. Television especially should be reflective of the times we live in and the emerging culture where people of all ethinicities cohabit.
Though the actress known for the spunk she adds to her characters (the first season of The Good Wife ended with ambiguity over her sexuality) has done fair amount of work in the film industry,she doesnt view the medium as superior to television as many of her contemporaries probably do. Im happy doing The Good Wife right now and am honestly not even thinking about what Im going to do next. Explaining her stand,she adds,Ive learned a lot more over the last one year than I did in my entire career spanning 15 years. When you shoot 22 episodes back to back and get the script merely two days before the shoot,you learn to become more spontaneous and think on your feet. With television,I feel Ive grown as an actor.
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