Windsor Star

Comedian Peters tackles four-part series

Canadian comic takes dramatic turn on new show

- BILL BRIOUX

Russell Peters says his new TV series asks a simple question: “What would the average Joe do in this situation?”

Loved by audiences around the world as a successful standup comedy headliner, The Indian Detective casts Peters as a less-than-stellar Toronto police officer who finds himself in the middle of a murder investigat­ion when he visits his father in Mumbai.

Think Eddie Murphy’s breakthrou­gh 1984 comedy Beverly Hills Cop, he suggests, “without a budget or Eddie Murphy.”

There’s actually plenty of budget and plenty of adventure in The Indian Detective. The four-episode miniseries was shot over two months, mainly in South Africa, but also in Mumbai and Toronto.

The concept was almost six years in developmen­t.

“We had so many people coming in and out of the project,” says Peters, “that I literally had to ask: ‘Is that person still involved?’”

Things changed, however, when Frank Spotnitz arrived. The former X-Files and The Man in the High Castle showrunner took charge four years ago.

“The guy’s got one of those crazy, creative minds,” says Peters.

Still, the highly regarded executive producer confessed he simply didn’t know how to write jokes for Peters.

“Just leave that to me and you be Frank Spotnitz,” said the comedian.

Born in Toronto, raised in nearby Brampton and of Indian descent, Peters has made an impressive living sending up his own multicultu­ral upbringing. Selling out arenas around the world, he regularly stands near the top of the annual Forbes list of highestgro­ssing comedians.

Despite his establishe­d comedy cred, Peters says he pushed for his series to be “less jokey.”

“I wanted my character to be a smartass and a bit of a screw-up,” he says, but felt it was also important that the character be “root-able. Viewers should feel he’s not as inept as he seems.”

The result, as Spotnitz describes it, is “a drama with a lot of comedy. I think if you’re a Russell Peters fan, you will recognize the sensibilit­y of the show; it really was tailored for him.”

Told he’s a surprising­ly good actor, Peters waves off the suggestion.

“All you’ve got to do is say these words,” says Peters, who insists his biggest acting challenge was the long days and early starts. “The hardest part of acting is waking up.”

Having appeared in several films and TV projects, Peters is now backed by a veteran cast, including William Shatner as a ruthless property developer.

“What a trip, dude,” says Peters of working with Shatner. “We start to do a scene and he says his line and I was so caught up with watching him I forgot mine.”

Peters finds it hard to fathom that Shatner is 86 years old. “He looks like a hard-drinking 62.”

Top Bollywood actor Anupam Kher (Silver Linings Playbook) steals scenes as Peters’s eccentric father. Christina Cole (Suits), Mishqah Parthiepha­l (Snake Park) and Hamza Haq (Quantico) round out the internatio­nal cast.

 ?? CTV/BELL ?? Veteran Canadian comedian Russell Peters pushed for his new miniseries, The Indian Detective, to be “less jokey.”
CTV/BELL Veteran Canadian comedian Russell Peters pushed for his new miniseries, The Indian Detective, to be “less jokey.”

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