Roshan Seth Obe


Actor

About

Also Known As
Roshan Seth
Birth Place
India
Born
April 02, 1942

Biography

An Indian-born, British trained character actor, Seth began his career after graduating from LAMDA in the late 1960s. He worked as an actor and director in British repertory before landing a role in Peter Brook's version of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which toured the USA in 1972. He made brief appearances on US TV shows and made his feature film debut in Richard Lester's "Juggernaut" (1...

Family & Companions

Lynette Davies
Companion
Actor. British; together 1968-77.

Biography

An Indian-born, British trained character actor, Seth began his career after graduating from LAMDA in the late 1960s. He worked as an actor and director in British repertory before landing a role in Peter Brook's version of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" which toured the USA in 1972. He made brief appearances on US TV shows and made his feature film debut in Richard Lester's "Juggernaut" (1974). Because of his ethnicity, roles in classical productions were scarce and Seth decided to retire from acting and returned to India to pursue a career as a journalist and editor.

At the urging of Richard Attenborough, Seth returned to acting as Pandit Nehru in the biopic "Gandhi" (1982). Around the same time, playwright-director David Hare was casting the lead in his new play "A Map of the World" and he persuaded Seth to create the role of Victor Mehta, a sardonic and celebrated Indian author, first performed in Australia, then London and finally in NYC. Following the success of "Gandhi" and the stage role, Seth was cast as the duplicitous aide-de-camp of the young potentate in Steven Spielberg's "Indian Jones and the Temple of Doom" and also appeared in David Lean's "A Passage to India" (both 1984). Other roles followed including Mr. Pancks in Christine Edzard's epic adaptation of "Little Dorrit" (1988), "Mountains on the Moon" and "1871" (both 1990). In 1991, Seth was a sympathetic Iranian in "Not Without My Daughter" and was the traditional-minded and racially intolerant father of a young girl in love with an African American in Mira Nair's "Mississippi Masala." In "Streetfighter" (1994), he was a biophysicist held captive by an evil dictator (Raul Julia).

In 1985, Seth began a collaboration with writer-director Hanif Kureishi. He played the left-leaning journalist father of a Pakistani youth (Gordon Warnecke) in Stephen Frears' "My Beautiful Laundrette," written by Kureishi. Six years later, he co-starred in Kureishi's uneven feature directorial debut "London Kills Me" (1991) as the owner of a Sufi center. He reteamed with the screenwriter again for the four-part BBC TV miniseries "The Buddha of Suburbia" (1993) in which he played the father of the central character.

Life Events

1964

Moved to England

1969

Worked in repertory theater in the United Kingdom

1972

Toured USA with Peter Brook's production of "A Midsummer's Night Dream"

1974

Film debut, Richard Lester's "Juggernaut"; last film appearance for eight years

1977

Returned to India

1982

Breakthrough film role, Pandit Nehru in Richard Attenborough's "Gandhi"

1985

First collaboration with Hanif Kureishi, "My Beautiful Laundrette"

1991

Co-starred in "London Kills Me", written and directed by Kureishi

1993

Co-starred in British TV adaptation of "The Buddha of Suburbia" by Kureishi

1998

Earned praise for leading role in the Canadian feature "Such a Long Journey"

2001

Played the father of the prospective bridegroom in "Monsoon Wedding"

Companions

Lynette Davies
Companion
Actor. British; together 1968-77.

Bibliography