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Indian actress nominated for top British award
Showbiz Desk
LONDON—Delhi girl Tannishtha Chatterjee has been nominated for best
actress in the British Independent Film Awards for her leading role in
the controversial movie “Brick Lane”, pitting her against established
stars like Dame Judi Dench and Anne Hathaway.
Chatterjee, a 29-year-old graduate of the National School of Drama in
Delhi, plays the role of Nazneen in “Brick Lane” — an adaptation of the
best-selling novel by Bangladesh-born author Monica Ali. An overjoyed
Chatterjee said Tuesday: “It’s my first British film and I’ve been
nominated — you can’t get better than this.” The nominations for the
best actress also include Dame Judi Dench (“Notes from a Scandal”), Anne
Hathaway (“Becoming Jane”) and Sophya Myles (“Hallam Foe”).
The maker of “Brick Lane” Sarah Gavron was nominated for best director
alongside David Cronenberg (“Eastern Promises”) and Anton Corbijn
(“Control”). Brick Lane is the name of a winding and colourful east
London street that is populated mostly by ethnic Bangladeshis and is
famous in Britain for the Indian curry restaurants that line both sides
of the street.
The story centres around Nazneen, a Bangladeshi girl who comes to
Britain as a teenager for an arranged marriage with a much older man. In
the course of her life in London — she has daughters who grow up to be
temperamental teenagers — she meets and falls in love with Karim, an
Islamic radical. The film became controversial when a small group of
east London Bangladeshis protested what they called the stereotyping of
local immigrants, prompting the filmmakers to relocate from Brick Lane.
Prince Charles and Camilla then pulled out of a royal gala of the film
amid security concerns that they may become targets of protests.
Chatterjee, however, said Tuesday that there had been a very good
response from screenings attended by members of the Bangladeshi
community in London.
“I honestly don’t find anything controversial in the film. Most of the
people who are reacting obviously haven’t seen it and haven’t read the
book. They have to see it,” she said. Author Monica Ali, in a recent
article in The Guardian, blamed “media distortions” for the controversy
whipped up around the film, saying most of the so-called protesters had
not read the book, and therefore had no idea what they were protesting
against.
“And I am aware that given the nature of the press coverage, and the
rumours circulating that, for example, the film would show a leech
falling into a curry pot in a Brick Lane restaurant (which doesn’t
happen in either novel or film), people who haven’t read the book are
now much more likely to feel hostile towards it,” Ali wrote in an
article titled ‘The Outrage Economy’. Ali revealed that Chatterjee was
the first person to be auditioned for the role of Nazneen, and that
“though the director and producers immediately thought she was great,
she had to wait until they’d satisfied themselves by seeing a lot of
other actors”.
The author has high praise for Chatterjee’s performance, saying,
“Somehow she manages to convey an interior life through looks and
gestures, and she also seems to get more beautiful as the film goes
along, as if in some outward expression of an inner state of being.” The
winners will be announced Nov 28. |