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March 24 Meet Leela, Sesame Street's Newest Cast Member|
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By LISA TSERING
India-West Staff Reporter
The
newest neighbor on Sesame Street just happens to be Indian American,
because the role was originally dreamed up with no particular ethnicity
in mind.
"It was incidental," actress Nitya Vidyasagar told
India-West by phone last week from New York City, where she is
currently taping the 39th season of the award-winning PBS children's
show. "The casting notices said nothing of ethnicity."
But the New York-based stage actress made such a strong impression
on the show's producers that they found themselves willing to create
her role from scratch.
Vidyasagar plays Leela, a young Indian
American woman who runs the local laundromat. Unlike many of the other
actors on the show, who use their own first names as their character's
names, she felt more comfortable with the name Leela. "My name is hard
for some people to say," she explained.
"Sesame Street" now has successful local in-language editions in
India ("Galli Galli Sim Sim"), Bangladesh ("Sisimpur") and nearly 120
other countries. But this will be the first time the show will
incorporate a major Indian American character. Elements from Leela's
cultural background and Indian holidays will make their way onto the
show, and she is collaborating with its writers to educate them about
the Indian American experience.
"I'm so excited," said Vidyasagar. "This is a big deal for me, and
for the Indian American community … and it shows that India has a
growing place in the world profile."
The new Leela is quite an
international woman, and speaks Hindi and Telugu. Born in Muscat, Oman,
she moved to India with her family when she was a year old. She and her
family lived in Kolkata, Hyderabad and Bangalore before moving to the
United States when she was 12, and she speaks English with a delicate,
yet hard-to-place, Indian accent. "They said I could speak with my
accent, too," she laughed.
One of the best things about the "Sesame Street" gig is that it
will allow Vidyasagar to continue working as a stage actress, she said.
"Absolutely, I will stay active in the theater," she added. "Theater is
my true love. I can't imagine my life without it. That was the reason I
became an actor to begin with."
Vidyasagar has no children herself, but she said, "I adore kids."
The
39th season of "Sesame Street" will start airing sometime in August,
and the cast is currently shooting. "I've shot three or so episodes,"
said Vidyasagar, "some smaller inserts, and one full episode."
Some guest stars have joked in the past that it's easy to be
upstaged by such megawatt kiddie superstars as Big Bird, Snuffy and of
course the mighty and all-powerful Elmo. But Vidyasagar just laughed at
the suggestion.
"Upstaged? Honestly, I'm oblivious [to] it," she told India-West.
"There's not even a question. I didn't even think of the word
'upstaged.' It's all the elements of 'Sesame Street' that matter."
"Their puppeteers and characters are fabulous," she continued.
One of the most famous humans behind the success of "Sesame
Street," Kevin Clash, the voice and creator of Elmo, is especially
great to work with, she said. On her callback audition, she got to
improvise with Clash. "He's multitalented, a warm, sweet guy," she said.
Vidyasagar earned a bachelor's degree in fine arts from New York
University's Tisch School of the Arts. She was in the news most
recently for her well-reviewed performance as a Sri Lankan research
scientist in the off-Broadway comedy "Serendib," presented at the
Ensemble Studio Theater. Her other theater credits include "Love's
Labour's Lost" (The Shakespeare Theatre Company), "Ninja: The Musical"
(Desipina Co.), "The Baby Carriage Opera" (The Harold Clurman Center
for New Work in Movement and Dance Theater), "Electra" and "Top Girls"
(Stella Adler Studio) and the films "Forging Love" and "Three."
The natural and spontaneous mood of the typical "Sesame Street"
episode may seem improvised, but each episode is the product of many
hours of research and consideration by child education experts.
"Rehearsal is very limited," said Vidyasagar. "That's why you might
have thought it was improvised. It's got a very lively energy."
The magic of "Sesame Street" is in the way it communicates concepts
such as letters, words, numbers and concepts to small children without
ever coming across as talking down to them. "What's incredibly
important to them is that nothing is ever patronizing," she explained.
"Yet it's communicable to a very young audience."
Vidyasagar relishes the chance to play Leela, yet to be herself on
the show. "It's a very honest approach," she told India-West. "They
never asked me to be something that I'm not. I'm cross-cultural. I've
spent my life here and in India, and the show is taking advantage of my
cultural background."
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