- Priyanka Chopra is the first Bollywood movie star to headline an American TV series
- Chopra is the star of ABC's upcoming drama "Quantico"
(CNN)She's a megastar from Mumbai, India, home to the world's most prolific film industry.
She's
an award-winning actress, a former Miss World, a singer and a dancer.
She serves as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador and as a United Nations Girl
Up Champion, and she is involved in efforts to promote the education of
girls in India.
She's a social media queen, with more than 10 million followers on Twitter.
Priyanka
Chopra has international cachet and a global fan base. But her star
power has been relatively lackluster in the United States.
That may be about to change. Chopra is the star of "Quantico," a drama premiering September 27 on ABC. In recent weeks, her face has been splashed across billboards and buses from Los Angeles to Toronto to New York.
Chopra,
33, has thrived in the Indian film industry for more than a decade. But
as she gets ready for her close-up on American television, she feels
like a complete newcomer.
"I'm excited
about making a new foray, but I'm also very nervous," Chopra said. "I
feel like a debutante, like how I felt when my first movie was releasing
in 2003. Every time I see a billboard, every time I see my face on a
bus or a magazine, I'm just like, 'It's a new culture, a new country.' I
hope that I'm accepted as an actor."
'An empowered woman'
In
the series, Chopra plays Alex Parrish, one of a diverse group of new
FBI recruits, each with a mysterious past. As the show cuts between the
present and the past, Parrish becomes the prime suspect in a devastating
terrorist attack in New York.
Chopra describes her character as a "Jason Bourne in a female form."
"She's
smart, she's sexy, she's intelligent, she kicks ass, and she's not
afraid to take her life in her own hands. But the beauty of Alex is,
she's not macho. She's very feminine, and she's vulnerable," Chopra
said. "I love that she's a celebration of the modern woman. She's not
just an ass-kicking, feeling-less robot."
"Quantico"
has been described as "Homeland" meets "Grey's Anatomy." Its cast
includes Aunjanue Ellis as the assistant director of the FBI academy and
Jake McLaughlin as a fellow FBI recruit and love interest, but Chopra's
character has the central role.
"This
is an idea that no one has explored: taking a global actor, a global
talent, and launching them in the American market," Chopra said. "It's
new for all of us -- ABC, me, everyone -- it's the new prototype. I
guess we'll find out what happens."
Chopra,
who lived in the U.S. for four years as a teenager, credits the show's
producers and ABC for taking a chance on her. She believes that such
diverse casting could be a precursor of entertainment's future as the
world shrinks.
"I think the globe has
become a really small place now, and we are all global citizens, at
least I think I am," she said. "The girl next door's face has changed.
She does not come from a particular place. ... She can be anyone from
anywhere."
Indian actors on American TV
In
recent years, an increasing number of actors of Indian origin have made
an impact on American TV: Kunal Nayyar of "The Big Bang Theory," Mindy
Kaling of "The Mindy Project," Archie Punjabi of "The Good Wife," Dev
Patel of "Newsroom," Nimrat Kaur of "Homeland," Aziz Ansari of "Parks
and Recreation," Aasif Mandvi of "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and
"The Brink," and Kal Penn of "House" and "Battle Creek."
Veteran
Indian actor Anil Kapoor ("Slumdog Millionaire") is the first major
Bollywood star to get a meaty role on U.S. television, as the president
of a fictional Middle Eastern country on the eighth season of "24."
But
he was not the lead character. That distinction goes to Chopra, the
first bona-fide star from India to headline an American series.
"It's
certainly unprecedented for an A-list Bollywood actor, male or female,
to land a major role on a major American network series," said Gitesh
Pandya, editor of BoxOfficeGuru.com and an entertainment analyst who follows the Indian film industry.
"This
could be huge for the years ahead, not only for Priyanka but for other
stars out of Bollywood, because Hollywood does have a copycat
mentality," Pandya said. "So when something works, competitors want to
do the same thing."
Breaking stereotypes
In
"Quantico," Chopra does not come across as a Bollywood actress, said
Matt Roush, senior television critic for TV Guide. Alex Parrish's dad is
white, and her mother is Indian. Even the character's name does not
sound Indian, he said.
"This kind of
colorblind casting is a step in the right direction," Roush said. "What I
like about this kind of casting is that the character could be played
by an Asian; she could be played by an African- American; she could be
played by a Swede. It doesn't really matter."
It is a part that any actor would love, and this drew her to the role, Chopra said.
"I
don't want to be the stereotype of an Indian girl, because I see a lot
of Indian talent being put into that box," Chopra said. "I like to break
barriers."
Chopra has refused roles
that called for her to change accents and act more Indian, said her U.S.
manager, Anjula Acharia-Bath, who herself faced prejudice as an Indian
girl growing up in England.
Chopra was
cast in "Quantico" after Acharia-Bath met with Keli Lee, executive vice
president of casting for ABC, and compared notes about growing up in a
television culture that did not reflect the diversity of the real world.
Lee has helped discover some of the
most famous faces in television, including Sandra Oh in "Grey's
Anatomy," Sofia Vergara in "Modern Family" and Kerry Washington in
"Scandal." She flew to Mumbai to meet Chopra last year, and the actress
signed a talent deal with ABC studios.
Chopra said she owed it to her fans to settle for nothing less than a stellar, starring role.
"I
have a certain belief in myself, and I wouldn't want to do anything
less than I'm used to," she said. "I feel ABC recognized that, and they
gave me 'Quantico' on my terms, which is why I've taken this leap."
Power of Indian cinema
Even before its pilot airs, "Quantico" has been sold to dozens of countries around the world, Chopra said.
"That
just goes to show the power of Hindi cinema," she said. "It's amazing
the kind of reach we have in countries where people don't even speak
English. Hindi transcends language and borders. We're just stories about
life."
Although the Indian film
industry is commonly identified with Bollywood -- the Hindi-language
film industry based in Mumbai -- regional movie centers across the
country churn out hundreds of films every year in other languages,
including Tamil, Telugu and Bengali.
The
scale of the industry is staggering. India's film board estimates that
more than 1,250 feature films are produced every year. Most of the
movies follow a predictable pattern: gorgeous heroines, dashing heroes,
implausible plot lines and much dancing and singing -- a formula that
has captivated Indians for a century.
With
48 movies and counting, Chopra is one of Hindi cinema's highest-paid
actresses. She began her movie career shortly after being crowned Miss
World in 2000 and has appeared in hit Indian films playing a variety of
roles, from an autistic girl (in "Barfi," India's 2012 Oscar entry) to a
world boxing champion (in "Mary Kom") to a serial killer. In one movie,
she played 12 distinct characters.
But
until now, Chopra may have been best known to American audiences for
her music. Her debut single, "In My City," featuring entertainer
will.i.am, was a theme song for the NFL's "Thursday Night Football."
Manager
Acharia-Bath said people often underestimate the strength of Chopra's
following, which reaches from Sydney to Dubai, Berlin to Cape Town. She
recalled an episode last year in which the actress, as a model for
Guess, visited the brand's flagship store in London. As word of
Chopra's presence spread on social media, fans mobbed the store and
police had to shut down Regent Street.
'A different beast'
It's
been crazy-busy lately for the "Quantico" cast and crew, who've been
shooting 16-hour days in Montreal and New York to get the 13 episodes
ready for this season.
"I've only done movies in my life. Television is a different beast," Chopra said.
She
got unexpected insight into the medium from an unlikely source: actor
Kevin Spacey, whom she met at the International Indian Film Academy
awards last year. The two conducted a film workshop class together and
exchanged notes about acting.
"He
happened to mention that TV was most exciting medium of almost
everything, because he has no idea what his character (Frank Underwood
in 'House of Cards') is going to do, and I find that so true," said
Chopra, who admits to being mostly in the dark about "Quantico's" plot
line. Audiences will learn the identity of the terrorist by the end of
season 1, she said.
Early reviews for
Chopra in "Quantico" have been positive. Entertainment Tonight named her
one of three breakout stars for the fall TV season, while The Hollywood
Reporter called her "one of the most formidable talents hitting TV this fall."
Roush
said Chopra was the only "Quantico" actress to appear at the Television
Critics Association's press tour in Los Angeles in August. "It's
unusual during the press tour with a cast of that size to present only
one actor, so it's clear they see a big star in her," he said.
For
now, Chopra's plan is to straddle two performing careers: one in the
U.S. and the other in India. Next, she's working on an Indian epic
historical drama about an 18th-century Indian warrior.
"For
me, success means achieving something people did not expect you to
achieve," said Chopra, who is extremely close to her family and still
feels the absence of her father, who died in 2013.
"My
dad always told me -- and I always follow this," she said. "As a girl,
you should not be someone who tries to fit into a glass slipper. You
should shatter the glass ceiling, and that's what I'm trying to do."
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