Seeta Indrani

Seeta Indrani (born 20 April 1963) is an English dancer and actress.

Seeta Indrani
Born (1963-04-20) 20 April 1963
London, England
OccupationDancer, actress, film producer
Years active1981–present
AwardsAsian Film Academy: Best Supporting Actress 1995, for WPC Datta
Asian Film Academy: Best Actress 1996, for WPC Datta
Websitehttp://www.seetaindrani.com

Biography

Performance

After graduation as a dancer from the London Contemporary Dance School,[1] Indrani took the role of Cassandra in the original 1981 West End production of Cats by Andrew Lloyd Webber. She then undertook various pieces of stage work, including seasons at the Royal National Theatre, The Royal Exchange, and the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Indrani then took the role for which she is best known, WPC Norika Datta, in the ITV drama The Bill from 1989 to 1998. She was voted Best Supporting Actress by the Asian Film Academy in 1995, and best actress in 1996. In 2019, Seeta Indrani shared her memories of The Bill during an in-depth interview about her life and career for The Bill Podcast

After leaving The Bill, she returned to the stage with roles in Cruel Garden with the Rambert Dance Company, played Ariel to Alec McCowen's Prospero in The Tempest, and at the London Palladium with Cyd Charisse. She was then invited on the first national tour in 40 years of Britain's oldest opera company, Carl Rosa Opera, playing Prince Orlovsky in Die Fledermaus.

From October 2008 to March 2010 she appeared in the role of Dr. Lily Hassan on the BBC One daytime soap, Doctors. She portrayed Afia Khan's maternal aunt Shameem on EastEnders in 2011. In 2011, Indrani appeared as Brenda Kiely in the Sky1 comedy drama series The Café. In 2013, she made a guest appearance as DCI Stella Morton in the BBC One drama series Casualty in the episode "Badge of Honour". Indrani portrayed Harita in nine episodes of Catastrophe in 2015 and 2017.

Production

Indrani is co-founder and co-owner of MashMosh Films with editor Chris Bishop. Created in 2004, its productions include Asians in Europe, a promo film for Asian Music Award winner DJ Swami funded by Sony Entertainment Television Asia,[2] and short film Snapshots and full production The Good time Girls which both debuted at the Cannes Film Festival.

Indrani also has her own dance company, Fuego Flamenco, which indulges her passion for the Spanish dance, which she also teaches.

Personal life

She was born in London. Indrani's hobbies include ballet, step dance and yoga, while she continues to study singing with Mary Hammond.

Radio

From October 1987 to 1989, Seeta played Anita Sharma in BBC Radio 4's drama series Citizens.

gollark: I should really figure out which one of these days.
gollark: Not advanced ones really, just new and/or mildly useful ones.
gollark: Why the 😆? I'm serious. PotatOS uses a few CC:T features, probably optionallyish.
gollark: It should *work*, but you'll lose SPUDNET and skynet connectivity, among other things. Also it's slower as it has to fall back to emergency backup very uncool reading mode.
gollark: After all, without CC:T you can't run potatOS properly.

References

  1. Coen, Harry Coen (23 May 1999). "Flamenco Fits The Bill For Rambert's Cruel Garden". Sunday Express. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 13 October 2008.
  2. Background at Seeta Indrani Archived 26 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
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