Ex-porn star says she is finally growing comfortable in her new career as mainstream actress.
Bollywood actress Sunny Leone has long faced the wrath of India’s social conservatives for her porn-star past, but she remains determined to carve a career in Hindi movies even as fresh controversy erupted this week.
Canadian-born Leone, whose adult films include Descent into Bondage and Costumed Damsels in Distress, said making the transition to Indian cinema had been difficult but she now felt at home in Bollywood. “When I first got into the industry it was definitely not a good feeling when people are not so happy about your choices in life,” Leone told AFP during an interview in Mumbai. “But as time has gone by, especially over the last six months, I’ve gotten to know and I’ve gotten to meet some amazing celebrities and it’s a journey,” she added.
The 34-year-old, the most searched celebrity on Google in the country for the last three years, has often drawn controversy in deeply conservative and religious India. This week social media erupted in sympathy for Leone after she calmly faced down what many felt was a misogynistic grilling about her past by Bhupendra Chaubey on his top-rating TV show, during which he even suggested she was linked to the increase in India’s pornography viewing.
But in a testament to the increasing acceptance of her by the Bollywood establishment, big name stars such as Aamir Khan, Rishi Kapoor, and Anushka Sharma, took to Twitter to voice support for Leone. A subsequent video on Facebook of Leone expressing her gratitude for the support has been viewed more than a million times.
The actress, whose real name is Karenjit Kaur Vohra, was born in Ontario, Canada to Indian Sikh immigrants in 1981. She moved to India five years ago after a successful career as a porn actress, which included being named “Penthouse Pet of the Year” in 2003. She got her first break in India in 2011 when she appeared on Celebrity Big Brother-inspired local reality TV show Bigg Boss before making her Bollywood debut the following year.
Leone has now appeared in more than eight Indian movies and is set to star in a risqué new comedy called Mastizaade, which will hit screens on Jan. 29.
At a film studio in the north of Mumbai, home to Bollywood, Leone is clearly proud of the progress her career is making. “When I came here there were a lot of people who didn’t want me here and there were a lot of people who had lots of crazy things to say about me,” she said. “But I have so many more fans who care about me, that like me, that like the movies that I’ve put out, or songs or photo shoots. I’ve had more supporters than I’ve had haters.”
Leone admits one of her toughest moments was when a woman filed a police complaint against her in Mumbai last year for “promoting obscenity and destroying Indian culture and society.”
Police are obliged to register a case when such complaints are made and there have been reports of others. “It’s definitely something that did affect me. It was not fun at all,” Leone said of the complaint. “Hopefully situations like that don’t come up again because I’m not a part of that world anymore and I don’t think it’s fair to bring up things that have no merit at this point in time in my life.”
Leone said she feels social attitudes are shifting, with the next generation craving more of the risqué films on offer in the West. Apart from Leone’s Mastizaade, Bollywood is set to release two more with similar themes: Kya Kool Hain Hum 3 and Great Grand Masti.
Some commentators have complained that Mastizaade—in which Leone plays the sexy bikini-clad Laila and the bespectacled geek Lily—objectifies women. She advises those who feel that way: “Just don’t watch the film,” adding that the “movie’s for adults only, it is adult humor.”
But Leone is wary about being typecast and says she has lined up a couple of more serious roles. “I think that transition also takes time and with each movie it’s different,” she explained. “Is there sex appeal? Is there glamour? Yes of course but in the next couple of movies we’ll find out if people like seeing me in a different way.”