Glasgow Times

Comedian Kumar on experience­s of racism

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COMEDIAN Nish Kumar has said his “experience of being a brown man in Britain shifted” following the 9/ 11 attacks in New York.

The 38- year- old, known for hosting satirical comedy programme The Mash Report and Late Night Mash, reflected on his experience­s of racism and the collapse of the Twin Towers when he was 16.

In the Big Issue’s Letter To My Younger Self column, he said: “I felt that my experience of being a brown man in Britain shifted ( after 9/ 11).

“My dad sold fabrics and went on a business trip to New York three weeks after, though we all begged him not to go. He had a terrible time at JFK ( airport), he was pulled into an interrogat­ion room and they were chucking out fabric samples all over the table.

“It definitely changed something in the culture for people who look like me, and we were a Hindu family, we’re not even a Muslim family.

“So, what it must have been like for Muslim families is unfathomab­le to me.”

Kumar also reflected on the people he looked up to when he was growing up.

He said: “I would much rather have them be my role models than Rishi Sunak, Suella Braverman and Priti Patel, the most prominent British- Asians in the country right now.”

The stand- up comic cited fellow comedians Sanjeev Bhaskar, Meera Syal, Nina Wadia and Kulvinder Ghir as his younger self’s heroes.

“Seeing them live brought about a seismic shift in my understand­ing of who was able to do comedy,” he said.

“But I still had no sense of what a career in comedy would have looked like and how I would have achieved that.”

The comedian said watching theatre production­s at this age helped him understand Shakespear­e and “blew my head wide open”.

He said: “A very enterprisi­ng teacher of mine who believed that culture should be for everybody discovered a scheme where students could get cheap theatre tickets. So at 16 I started to go and see West End shows for about five quid.

“I used to go to the National Theatre and the Barbican all the time.

“Now I think what an absolute privilege that was, to have access to that. “It just blew my head wide open.

“If you put a bunch of 16- year- olds in front of something good, they’ll really get into it. I remember seeing Tim West do King Lear.

“We were bored by Shakespear­e in class and I hadn’t read it. And it was amazing, we even understood all of it and I don’t know how that was possible.”

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