Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

I Want To Take Big Swings At Big Names: Indian-American Comedian Hasan Minhaj

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Aug, 2018 02:47 PM
    From speaking of his own identity crisis while growing up in the US as an immigrant, to picking on US president Donald Trump at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, to tackling Islamophobia, Hasan Minhaj likes to add current political and social issues to his comic narrative.
     
     
    The reputed Indian-American comedian says he is not afraid to take "big swings", and doesn't think "log kya kahenge", a Hindi phrase for "what will people say".
     
     
    "I am very lucky. I am in an incredible privileged position as a comedian in America and we are given certain protection. Despite the problems that the country has, we are given these incredible privileges and protections," Hasan told IANS over the phone.
     
     
    "I know a lot of journalists, activists and performers around the world who don't get that. So, I just feel incredibly grateful for the opportunities that I have," Hasan said before the release of Lionsgate Films' "The Spy Who Dumped Me" in India.
     
     
    He essays the role of Topher Duffer, a CIA Harvard alum in the movie -- an action thriller, starring Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon in comical roles. "And because I have those opportunities, I want to take big swings. I want to say things that I really feel about," he added when asked whether he thinks about the consequences before taking on big names on public platforms.
     
     
    After doing some gigs, Hasan got his big break when he became a part of "The Daily Show". But he found worldwide fame with his "Homecoming King", debuted Off-Broadway in October 2015. He then recorded a version of that show in January 2017 for his first Netflix special.
     
     
    Growing up in the US as a Muslim from Aligarh was a bumpy ride for Hasan. And he gave words to his story through "Homecoming King", filled with anecdotes of his struggle searching for his identity.
     
     
    Hasan was also applauded for roasting Trump at White House Correspondents' Dinner last April, an event Trump had refused to attend.
     
     
    He infuses a wide spectrum of issues to his stand-up acts, but says the content doesn't stem from an angry space.
     
    "I just think in my performance style, I am not particularly angry. I try to come out from a really honest place. Even when people disagree with me (and express themselves) via internet comments or even in the streets, they are like 'Look, I don't agree with you or I don't like the show but I don't dislike you. I see where you coming from'," he says.
     
     
    "I can live with that and I think that is a far more nuanced way to have a dialogue, especially in these times," Hasan adds.
     
     
    How does he look back at his struggle of finding a voice -- and his own identity -- in the country?
     
     
    "I think it is one of those things where, for the longest time, one of my goals was to make it as a simulation of American comedians. Just do everything you can to fit in and try to relate it to the audience," said the star.
     
     
    Looking back, he said: "In 'The Daily Show', Jon Stewart and Trevor Noah really push you to say what is your perspective and what is your take...That is the unique thing. That is the thing which breaks the chat.
     
     
    "Once I realised that, I was like, 'Oh, actually being generic, trying to play everybody, isn't very good for comedy or storytelling'. So, I just doubled down to the things which I really believe in and are a part of my identity," he said.
     
     
    Hasan wants to continue on the same path.
     
     
    "That is the most interesting thing. I think the best feeling which I have as a performer, when I share the project, is when people in the audience say 'I always felt that way' or 'Thank you for saying that' or 'You were able to put that in words'," he says.
     
     
    "That means a lot to me. It is so cool that in the US comedian special I got to put the concept like 'log kya kahenge'," he adds.

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    I'Ve Always Looked Up To Rajkummar's Work: Mouni Roy

    ) Mouni Roy is set to play Rajkummar Rao's wife in the upcoming film "Made in China", and the actress of "Naagin" fame says he is a tremendous actor.

    I'Ve Always Looked Up To Rajkummar's Work: Mouni Roy

    Richa Chadha Becomes Face Of Save The Elephants Campaign

    Actress Richa Chadha has become the face and voice of the Save the Elephants campaign by animal rights organisation PETA.

    Richa Chadha Becomes Face Of Save The Elephants Campaign

    Remember 90S Actress Farha Naaz? This Is How Tabu's Elder Sister Looks Now

    Remember 90S Actress Farha Naaz? This Is How Tabu's Elder Sister Looks Now
    Yesteryear heroine Farha Naaz, who is actress Tabu's elder sister, disappeared from Bollywood after her first marriage to Vindu Dara Singh. We bring you unseen personal pictures from her younger days and how she looks now

    Remember 90S Actress Farha Naaz? This Is How Tabu's Elder Sister Looks Now

    Shah Rukh Khan Drops Off Forbes 100 Celebs List, Akshay Kumar And Salman Khan Swap Spots

    Shah Rukh Khan Drops Off Forbes 100 Celebs List, Akshay Kumar And Salman Khan Swap Spots
    Bollywood superstars Akshay Kumar and Salman Khan, with earnings of $40.5 million and $37.7 million, have made it to Forbes' World's Highest-Paid Celebrities 2018 list, topped by former professional boxer Floyd Mayweather.

    Shah Rukh Khan Drops Off Forbes 100 Celebs List, Akshay Kumar And Salman Khan Swap Spots

    Harbhajan Mann's Son Avkash Won't Promote Violence, Alcohol Through Music

    "I won't deny the fact that people know who my father is but it's not that I told my dad that 'I wanna do a movie'. I went through the audition process. My father and I are clear on the fact that I don't want to follow his path.

    Harbhajan Mann's Son Avkash Won't Promote Violence, Alcohol Through Music

    Casting Couch Is One's Own Choice: Actor Rajneesh Duggal

    Casting Couch Is One's Own Choice: Actor Rajneesh Duggal
    Actor Rajneesh Duggal, who made the transition from the world of modelling to Bollywood with "1920" a decade ago, says he has never experienced the casting couch, which he feels is a matter of personal choice for an individual.

    Casting Couch Is One's Own Choice: Actor Rajneesh Duggal