Spider-Man 2 Actor Aasif Mandvi: “The Heroes Don’t Always Have To Be White Men”

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Indian-origin American actor Aasif Mandvi played out various stereotypes while exploring a career in Hollywood because he had just two options — grab the opportunity or starve. Now, the Indian-American star is happy that these things are being challenged and says that people have started seeing the economic and financial viability of telling stories that do not revolve only around white people.

“Early in my career, I think there was a lot of that (stereotypical notions attached to people of colour), and it continues in some respects even today. But we are at a point in history where a lot of these things are being challenged. A lot of ideas of who gets to tell what stories and what stories matter are now being questioned. I think we’re also seeing the economic and financial viability of telling stories of people who are not just white,” Aasif told IANS in an interview.

“The heroes don’t always have to be white men. When I was coming up in the business, there were a lot of stereotypes, a lot of playing what I like to call the ‘patanki-ing’, which is like the way the westerners hear the Indian accent, which is like, patank, patank, patank, patank. And a lot of (people) asking us to do that, and sort of play with those stereotypes. I find that less now. The culture has changed, Hollywood has changed somewhat. We still need a South Asian superhero, and that will be the culmination,” he shared, and joked: “When that happens, then I’ll have nothing to bitch about.”

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