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Mayukh Sen on the History of South Asian Performers in Hollywood

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麻豆果冻传媒 (Shourie Family) 2025 Fellow Mayukh Sen spoke about diversity in Hollywood for 鈥淭hree questions鈥 in The Fifth Draft, the Fellows Program鈥檚 monthly newsletter. Sen is a culture journalist and the author of Taste Makers and Love, Queenie whose work focuses on immigration.

Your book , is coming out in March 2025. How did you come to the story of Merle Oberon n茅e Queenie Thompson?

I first became aware of Merle as an Oscar-obsessed high schooler, when I learned she was the first performer of color ever nominated for an Academy Award (Best Actress, 1936). She had been born into poverty in India but had to conceal her maternal South Asian heritage in Old Hollywood and 鈥減ass鈥欌 for white to overcome both Hollywood鈥檚 racist barriers and America鈥檚 federal restrictions on immigration from India. The truth of her origins emerged after her death in 1979. As embarrassing as this is for a biographer to admit, I felt a kinship with Merle鈥攕he grew up in Kolkata, the same city where my dad was from鈥攁nd I found her work as Cathy in聽Wuthering Heights聽(1939) moving and powerful. There hasn鈥檛 been a proper biography of her since 1983, and I wanted to correct the record based on new information that had since emerged about her life.

I try to look at who鈥檚 been erased, ask myself why, and then write from a place that affirms their humanity.

Your Fellows project will be a book entitled聽Brown Hollywood.聽Can you tell us about that project and how it relates to聽Love, Queenie?

When I began writing Love, Queenie, I naively believed the book would be a straightforward, womb-to-tomb account of Merle鈥檚 life. But as I worked through drafts, I found myself pursuing something a bit more ambitious: I wanted to set her story against its proper social and political backdrop. America had imposed a federal outlaw on immigration from India from 1917 until 1946; a Supreme Court ruling in 1923 also prevented Indians from gaining American citizenship. These laws were the result of long-simmering animus towards South Asians, and they no doubt curtailed Merle鈥檚 life but also those of other South Asian figures in Hollywood鈥攖he Anglo-Indian horror icon Boris Karloff, the action star Sabu. I found myself wanting to document, in book form, the stories of South Asian performers in Hollywood whose lives were shaped by America鈥檚 changing attitudes towards South Asians. That鈥檚 where Brown Hollywood was born.

, your first book, is about the lives of seven path-breaking immigrant chefs and food writers. How do you choose the subjects of your work? Is there a characteristic or idea central to a person or story you are particularly drawn to? 聽

I accidentally began my writing career in food, despite my childhood aspirations to become a film critic. As a result of feeling I didn鈥檛 belong on the food beat, I turned my gaze towards figures who may, too, have seen themselves as outsiders to the industry just as I did, and who pushed forward despite feeling the odds were against them. That emotional connection was key. These were quite often chefs who had been effaced in prevailing narratives of food in America. I found that immigrants were particularly susceptible to being overwritten, especially in a political moment when those in power could demonize immigrants. I wanted to combat that through my storytelling. That outlook extends to my work with聽Love, Queenie聽补苍诲听Brown Hollywood: I try to look at who鈥檚 been erased, ask myself why, and then write from a place that affirms their humanity.


厂耻产蝉肠谤颈产别听here聽to receive next month鈥檚 issue of聽The Fifth Draft.

More 麻豆果冻传媒 the Authors

Mayukh Sen
Mayukh Sen, National Fellow
Mayukh Sen

Shourie Family Fellow, 2025

Mayukh Sen on the History of South Asian Performers in Hollywood