Bollywood icon Priyanka Chopra chooses Toronto for launch of film about reconnecting with roots
Chopra's Punjabi film Sarvann tells story of immigrant family in Canada and son who's lost his way
A new life in a new city isn't just the theme of Bollywood icon Priyanka Chopra's newest film — it's an experience she can relate to firsthand.
Chopra, who also stars in the ABC series Quantico, was in Mississauga, Ont. on Sunday for the international launch of her Punjabi feature film Sarvann. The film is the third to be produced by Chopra and tells the coming-of-age tale of a young man living in Canada who returns to India to reconnect with his roots.
And Toronto, she says, was the ideal place to debut the trailer.
"Toronto was very important to me because it has such a massive Punjabi community," Chopra said at a press-conference Sunday. "I think the Punjabi community is an extremely proud and upheld community in Toronto and I really wanted to bring the film somewhere where it would be appreciated and looked at for what we were trying to make."
The film, starring Punjabi star Amrinder Gill, shot in both Canada and the northern Indian city of Chandigarh, marks Chopra's foray into Punjabi cinema. But she hopes the message will resonate with all audiences, especially at a time when she says so much emphasis is placed on what divides people.
Grateful for the rare opportunity
"I think there are too many labels that promote xenophobia in the world, so many labels that people are always put into little boxes with. People are people. That's the way I see it. We all just move around and do our best to survive: move countries, move homes, just to make sure that our families get a better life.
"And this is a story of an immigrant family in Canada and their son who's lost his way and how he ends up after he find his roots."
Carving out a life away from home an experience one that Chopra, who made the leap from Mumbai's Bollywood scene — where she is already a megastar — to Hollywood, knows all too well.
"Yes, I have got the opportunity to not play the exotic sidekick in a big movie or I've got the opportunity to headline a TV show as the lead of a show, but that doesn't usually happen to South Asian actors," she said.
'If you hold onto your roots, you always have a place in the world'
"For me it was a massive fight. I really had to stand my ground and put my foot down and demand the kind of role I would want to play, otherwise I didn't want to do it. And that's scary, to come to another country and say, 'I'm not going to settle.'"
Chopra doesn't star in Sarvann herself. With nearly 50 Bollywood credits to her name, a busy schedule filming Quantico and a lead role in an upcoming production of Baywatch, the film puts Chopra on the other side of the camera.
And she's using the opportunity to reflect on the reality of life away from home.
"There are so many of us who leave India and our cities and go away and travel and live in other parts of the world and lose touch with what is home," she said.
"I really believe that for anyone who's been displaced from their home, for whatever the reason might be, if you hold onto your roots, you always have a place in the world."
With files from Deana Sumanac-Johnson