City Times

Growing up, no one looked like me on TV: Mindy Kaling

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For long, Mindy Kaling felt like an outsider in Hollywood due to constant reminders that she is different - thanks to the stereotypi­cal attitude towards her ethnicity and gender. The actress, who has Indian roots, is glad that things are changing. “We talk about how representa­tion matters in Hollywood, so much that it almost loses its meaning. But it’s actually real,” Mindy said while talking about how things have changed for women of colour in the West.

“Growing up, I realised that there was no one who looked like me on TV, so I often found myself drawing parallels to people who are like me on shows like the Cosby family or characters on white sitcoms. You cannot imagine how excited I was when Bend It Like Beckham came out. The idea that I could actually see people from my community onscreen blew my mind,” added Mindy, who is basking in all the appreciati­on coming her way for her latest Netflix show Never Have I Ever.

Mindy has always been a torch-bearer for diversity and right representa­tion. At the age of 24, she was the only woman and person of colour when she joined the writing team of popular show The Office, in which she also essayed the role of Kelly Kapoor. She also became the first woman of colour to write, star in and create the primetime sitcom titled The Mindy Project in 2012.

Looking back at her struggle with stereotypi­cal attitudes because of her ethnicity and gender, the 40-yearold said: “When I was starting out, it was a bit of both.”

“It was more common than not to have an all-white writers’ room that was also all-men. The struggle when you’re the only minority and the only woman is that everything you say is a representa­tion of all women and all minorities, and that’s a lot of unfair responsibi­lity. Luckily you don’t see writer’s rooms like that much anymore,” added the multi-hyphenate talent.

In her recent show, Never Have I Ever, which she cocreated with Lang Fisher and co-executive produced, she has used her “relationsh­ip with being Hindu” and the experience of “straddling the lines of two cultures” to narrate the story of a 15-year-old Devi, a first-generation Indian American, and her desperatio­n to feel a sense of belonging, and her journey to shed her reputation as a nerd.

Mindy mentioned that her “coming to terms with my ‘Indian-ness’ is a big part of the show”.

“I was born in the US, raised in a pretty white area, without speaking any Indian languages, so culturally I always felt I straddled the lines of two cultures. Having a daughter really made me look at my faith and culture in a new way, because I really want her to identify as Indian, and that’s kind of up to me,” she said.

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