Otago Daily Times

Catching a tiger

Priyanka Chopra talks to Andrea Mandell about quarantini­ng with Nick Jonas and chasing The White Tiger.

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PRIYANKA CHOPRA is just like the rest of us when it comes to work video chats.

‘‘I just put my hair in a ponytail, put some lipstick on and make sure I am ‘top presentabl­e’. And the bottom, I'm in sweats,’’ grins the actress, visible in a white silk blouse as she playfully swings her bare feet up to the camera ahead of Netflix's release of The White Tiger, her new drama adapted from the 2008 bestsellin­g novel.

In the film, Chopra plays Pinky Madam, an expanded character from the book about an impoverish­ed Indian villager named Balram (Adarsh Gourav) who uses his wits to transcend his caste and get a job driving for a wealthy family.

Balram finds himself chauffeuri­ng the family's youngest son Ashok (Rajkummar Rao), who has returned from the US with his new American wife (Chopra) — who upsets the traditiona­l family dynamic by questionin­g their dramatic privilege.

Although the darkly humorous film tells a specific Indian story of caste friction, its themes are universal, says Chopra (38), calling from London, where she has been filming.

‘‘How many times has it been that

you've gone past a homeless person and not thought about it?’’ she says.

‘‘Class disparity is what this movie is talking about, and that is superunive­rsal . . . The majority of the world lives in very harsh circumstan­ces.’’

When Chopra heard that author Aravind Adiga's book, which won the Man Booker Prize in 2008, was being adapted for a film, she chased after it, meeting director Ramin Bahrani in cities across the world.

‘‘I auditioned for it multiple times. I begged them to let me be an executive producer so I could put support behind it.’’

Chopra has been working to create more opportunit­ies for diverse storytelli­ng for years.

‘‘I really want to be able to see South Asian stories in Hollywood,’’ says Chopra, noting such projects still feel like ‘‘a box that's required to be checked’’ in the industry.

Chopra broke into the American market with 2015's Quantico, but it is difficult to convey just how famous she is globally. In India, she has been famous since she was crowned Miss India at 17, followed by Miss World. She has starred in more than 50 Indian films, while making waves in the US in movies such as Baywatch and Isn't It Romantic.

Bahrani said Chopra’s fame in India is such that while filming The

White Tiger he couldn’t actually schedule certain scenes ‘‘because there would be a mob and we couldn't shoot them’’.

To accomplish an outdoor night scene covertly, the shoot started at 1am.

‘‘Even then, there was a mob until 3am, when they finally just gave up and cleared the streets,’’ he says. ‘‘And it was like 10 times the security that we would normally have.’’

More in demand than ever, Chopra recently wrapped the romantic drama Text for You and will soon begin filming the Amazon show Citadel, produced by Joe and Anthony Russo (Avengers:

Endgame). She knows all too well her words and actions come under µ

close scrutiny, including her whirlwind relationsh­ip with musician Nick Jonas, whom she wed two years ago. But she has shifted her focus inward.

‘‘You can't please everyone. And especially since I've been straddling the two countries and cultures, which are so different from each other, it's not easy,’’ says Chopra, who now calls Los Angeles home most of the year.

But she has learned to shake off criticism.

‘‘I gave up appeasing a long time ago. Now I just live my life and I'm hoping that if I'm on the right side of the truth, people will see that.’’

Meanwhile, the last year in quarantine with her husband was eyeopening.

‘‘We didn't really have the time to get to know each other very much because of our individual careers. Our teams — and us — are always trying to just play catchup with our schedules.

‘‘But having this time and this year to be with each other and understand each other's likes/ dislikes/habits, has been a real gift. I love the fact that at the end of quarantine, we still liked each other. So that's great,’’ she chuckles.

Later this month, Chopra will release her memoir Unfinished, something she finds slightly terrifying ‘‘because it's the most personal I've ever been’’.

Jonas was among those who got to preview it. ‘‘Nick's read it multiple times,’’ she says.

But not everything made it in. ‘‘Yes, there are things that I have taken out after I wrote it because I was terrified,’’ she says. ‘‘But there are a lot of things that I was like, ‘This has to be in the book because I need whoever's interested to really see that I'm just a girl with a crazy trajectory that happened to me’.

‘‘It required a lot of perseveran­ce. It required a lot of humility and hard work. And I feel proud at what I have achieved today. I'm very selfmade and I'm grateful for everyone I met along the way. And I hope that I still have some ways to go.’’ —

TNS

The White Tiger is available to

stream on Netflix.

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