desi people
  • Home
  • Ask me something
  • Submit

Jan
3rd
2012

Photo
trembleoftheheart:

Writer and actress Meera Syal was born in 1963 near Wolverhampton in the West Midlands and was educated at Manchester University where she read English and Drama. She co-wrote the script for ‘My Sister Wife’, a three-part BBC Television series, and wrote the film Bhaji on the Beach for Channel 4. She co-writes and is a cast member of the popular BBC Television comedy series ‘Goodness Gracious Me’ and The Kumars at No. 42’. She also works as a journalist and is a regular contributor to The Guardian.Meera Syal’s childhood experiences growing up in a small mining community provided the background to her first novel, Anita and Me (1996). The novel was shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize and won a Betty Trask Award. It tells the story of Meena Kumar, a young Asian girl struggling to accommodate the opposing influences of her white schoolfriends and her traditional Punjabi background. Syal’s second novel, Life Isn’t All Ha Ha Hee Hee (1999), narrates the adventures of three young Asian women growing up in Britain.Meera Syal was awarded an MBE in 1997 and won the ‘Media Personality of the Year’ award at the Commission for Racial Equality’s annual ‘Race in the Media’ awards (2000), as well as the EMMA (BT Ethnic and Multicultural Media Award) for Media Personality of the Year in 2001.

trembleoftheheart:

Writer and actress Meera Syal was born in 1963 near Wolverhampton in the West Midlands and was educated at Manchester University where she read English and Drama. She co-wrote the script for ‘My Sister Wife’, a three-part BBC Television series, and wrote the film Bhaji on the Beach for Channel 4. She co-writes and is a cast member of the popular BBC Television comedy series ‘Goodness Gracious Me’ and The Kumars at No. 42’. She also works as a journalist and is a regular contributor to The Guardian.

Meera Syal’s childhood experiences growing up in a small mining community provided the background to her first novel, Anita and Me (1996). The novel was shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize and won a Betty Trask Award. It tells the story of Meena Kumar, a young Asian girl struggling to accommodate the opposing influences of her white schoolfriends and her traditional Punjabi background. Syal’s second novel, Life Isn’t All Ha Ha Hee Hee (1999), narrates the adventures of three young Asian women growing up in Britain.

Meera Syal was awarded an MBE in 1997 and won the ‘Media Personality of the Year’ award at the Commission for Racial Equality’s annual ‘Race in the Media’ awards (2000), as well as the EMMA (BT Ethnic and Multicultural Media Award) for Media Personality of the Year in 2001.

  • Reblogged 4 months ago from trembleoftheheart
  • 24 notes
  1. castellanosko9 liked this
  2. fitzpatrickyou834 liked this
  3. zippyapplelips reblogged this from missletmesitonit
  4. crocusinbloom liked this
  5. anjalai liked this
  6. hinduthug liked this
  7. tachycardia reblogged this from brownpeople and added:
    I wish “Goodness Gracious Me” And “The Kumars at No. 42” still aired on our BBC channel. They were hilarious.
  8. thesubcontinental liked this
  9. missletmesitonit reblogged this from brownpeople
  10. 5feet12inches reblogged this from xtremecaffeine
  11. 5feet12inches liked this
  12. lovethrivebreathe liked this
  13. bollywoodsuperstar liked this
  14. autopsy-of-violets liked this
  15. lily-calla liked this
  16. lily-calla reblogged this from brownpeople
  17. xtremecaffeine reblogged this from brownpeople and added:
    Funny & Smart & Awesome & Goodness Gracious Me is probably the last funny sketch show on TV ever.
  18. brownpeople reblogged this from trembleoftheheart
  19. nickthejam liked this
  20. trembleoftheheart posted this
desi people
[BROWN. WE ARE ALL THINGS. WE ARE MANY THINGS.]

i am a desi diaspora chick interested in people and their browness in various forms (especially those that might deviate in different ways from the slick bollywood images that i/we regularly consume)

browness is a fluid term used by many in many different ways. i generally use it as we did growing up; desi peeps
Follow me
Search
Following
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Mobile
Tumblr Themes   by Templatemela