Global icon Priyanka Chopra has come out in support of the filmmaker Ramin Bahrani who recently experienced a racist attack in Atlanta while speaking to a group of Academy and BAFTA members.
Priyanka has said that though content by Hollywood is embraced around the world, but, it's not always that Hollywood embraces the world. She also added that Hollywood and pop culture have a massive responsibility in the fight for racial equality.
For the unversed, Iranian-American director-writer Ramin Bahrani, recently opened up about how he had to face a verbal racist attack from a bystander while speaking to a group of Academy and BAFTA members in Atlanta last week.
Bahrani is nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay for the Netflix film 'The White Tige'.
As per People magazine, last week, Bahrani, who was born and raised in North Carolina, was doing a Zoom Q&A with 'The White Tiger' executive producer Ava DuVernay when the incident occurred.
"I was in Atlanta on location in a residential neighbourhood directing a TV pilot for Apple," Bahrani told People magazine. He added, "We had worked late that day, so I had to do my Zoom interview with Ava on my phone while we were still in the street. During the interview, I noticed a car parked behind me. When the driver saw me and my colleague (who is South Asian) he said, 'You all think you run the world. You all don't run s---.' His friend told him to calm down and leave it alone. As the driver pulled away, he shouted, Go back to your own country."
DuVernay, who couldn't hear the words themselves in the moment, encouraged Bahrani to talk about what had just happened.
"Ramin was very calm," she said. She added, "Very matter of fact. Which saddened me. It was as if he was used to that type of treatment. Being the ultimate professional, he suggested we proceed with the interview."
DuVernay further said, "But I asked if we could take a moment to discuss it because normalizing that kind of hideous behaviour is what people like the offender expects. And Ramin deserved a moment to be heard and to share and not have it glossed over. He talked about having experienced this kind of racial targeting in other public spaces many times before."
Priyanka Chopra Jonas, who is both an executive producer and stars in the Netflix film, was not present but offered Bahrani her support.
"Asking me about my thoughts on what happened to Ramin is a sign of where we stand today, and the work we have to continue to do," the 38-year-old star told People magazine.
Priyanka added, "So my question in response is - who belongs here, and who doesn't? Isn't America a melting pot of all people from all backgrounds? This country was built on the back of immigrants in search of the American dream, a life of freedom, opportunity, and a safe place not only for themselves but for their families."
"This is about how common it is for many communities to live with incidents like this happening all the time. Content by Hollywood is embraced by the world, but the world is not always embraced by Hollywood. Hollywood and pop culture, in general, have a massive responsibility in this fight for racial equality and representation in global entertainment," she concluded.
Directed by Ramin Bahrani, 'The White Tiger', which premiered in January 2021 on Netflix, explores India's class struggle and is told from the perspective of Balram (Adarsh), a lower-class citizen who becomes a chauffeur for a rich landlord named Ashok and his wife named Pinky played by Rajkummar and Priyanka respectively.