Monterey Herald

Proud Marvel super fan, Iman Vellani, stars in `Ms. Marvel'

- By Alicia Rancilio

NEW YORK » Iman Vellani, who stars as Kamala Khan in the new Disney+ series “Ms. Marvel,” has a conundrum. Now that she's a part of the MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe), does she remove the Marvel posters from the walls of her childhood bedroom or leave them up?

“Brie (Larson) is on my wall and she's in my phone book. So, like, that's weird,” said Vellani in a recent interview.

“Ms. Marvel,” debuting Wednesday, is 19-year-old Vellani's first profession­al acting job. Already an avid reader of the comics, Vellani learned of the open audition from her aunt. She went to the audition. Lo and behold, Vellani got the job.

The first month on set was spent in prep, rehearsing and stunt training. She had to give up her high school diet of McDonald's and Oreos and build stamina, but Vellani wasn't interested in changing her shape too much. “I was 17. Kamala was 16. I wanted her to look like a normal high school kid,” she said.

“My first proper day of filming — that was intense,” said Vellani. “It was all of the stunts that I had to do in the real Captain Marvel suit. The one that Brie gets to wear. It was an extremely uncomforta­ble day. That suit is not made to move in. You're just supposed to stand and walk like a mannequin, and that's what it's made for. There's so many pieces and it's just really uncomforta­ble, and the scenes were pretty intense. So I

came home with all these bruises and everything. My mom was like, `Oh my God, what happened?' And I'm like, `I'm a superhero. That's what happened.'”

Vellani just may be the first Marvel actor who is also a massive fan.

She especially loves Robert Downey, Jr. and has proudly re-watched “Iron Man” “more than the average person.”

“They really are just a projection of real life and make you feel like you're a part of something. Isn't that what we all kind of want, to feel like we belong? And I know it sounds super cheesy, but for the Marvel fandom, it's comfortabl­e. It's what we know. We can recite everything under the sun about the MCU.”

Sana Amanat, the co-creator of “Ms. Marvel,” jokes that having an actor who is a stan (or, really big fan) as they say, has its challenges.

“Sometimes she would just pull up in the producer's chair next to me and just give lots of thoughts and opinions on, you know, either the show or the rest of the MCU. And I'd be like, `That's cool, but I need you to just act right now,” she laughed, adding, “Iman brought so much life and love to the character and it just made the entire process so much easier.”

Vellani was browsing local comic book store when she discovered the “Ms. Marvel” comics and immediatel­y felt represente­d in a way that is not common in mainstream media.

“I saw a girl who looked like me. She was Muslim and Pakistani and a superhero fanatic and I was Muslim, Pakistani and a superhero fanatic, so it worked out quite well. And I think my favorite part about the comic books was that it wasn't about her religion or her culture or her ethnicity, it was about a fanficwrit­ing nerd, who just so happened to be Pakistani and just so happened to be Muslim. Those parts of her life motivated her and drove her as a character. she used her religion as a moral code. .. She never neglected her culture. It was something that kind of uplifted her journey.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iman Vellani, star of the Disney+ series “Ms. Marvel,” poses for a portrait on June 2at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills.
CHRIS PIZZELLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iman Vellani, star of the Disney+ series “Ms. Marvel,” poses for a portrait on June 2at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States