
Life is a roller coaster of characters and Koel Purie is having a
blast bringing them alive. By Reshmi Chakraborty
It’s exciting
to be Koel Purie. Or at least do what she does.
She has just
finished having a heart valve replaced amidst high drama between her lover and
husband! It’s of course for a hospital drama called
Holby City
on the BBC. “It was
great fun but I kept being told that I was looking too perky to have a weak
heart,” says Koel, whose own heart is in the right place — theatre.
Setting The Stage
The daughter of
India Today’s
Aroon and Rekha
Purie, Koel burst into the acting arena as the dysfunctional, society girl
Nikita in Rahul Bose’s
Everybody Says
I’m Fine
and more recently as a coke-sniffing model in Ashwin
Kumar’s
Road To Ladakh
.
The trendy actress has also got standing ovations while playing
Shakespeare’s heroines. And the acting bug has bitten hard: “I
thought I would only get dysfunctional society girl characters, but having
played pure-at-heart Desdemona, I’d like a go at playing everything and
anything,” she claims.
The ex-Modernite has done almost
everything connected to the media. She’s assisted Deepa Mehta in the film
Earth
, produced and acted in a Hindi
soap
Aaj Ki Nari
, read the news on
India Decides Election Special
,
anchored the travel show
Great Escape
apart from doing dollops of theatre, both in India and England.
If
that wasn’t enough, Koel is a Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA)
graduate. Something she’s immensely proud of despite wanting to
“drop out at least twice every day” while she was there.
Fortunately, she didn’t. “I stuck with it because I had worked quite
hard to get into it and I’m not a quitter.”
For three
years, Koel slaved over “painfully boring Stanislavsky stuff, the
importance of which I saw only in hindsight,” and the experience has made
her wiser and richer. “It’s hard to get any perspective on a period
that takes over your life and changes it so drastically,” she says
wisely.
Certain reasons to love RADA were purely practical.
“For three years, you get to do the thing you love most — acting
— without worrying where the next job will come from, when your agent will
call or the name of the person you bumped into at a party who might take your
career into fantastic new places,” says Koel, who discovered her love for
theatre while playing Desdemona in a sold-out production of
Othello
at the Haymarket Theatre,
Leicester Square, UK.
“A live audience gives you
instantaneous approval or disapproval at every moment of your performance; the
immediacy is magical,” she raves.
Social Whirl
Does being
her father’s daughter make life easier? Not when you are Koel, who clearly
doesn’t like flaunting her family for the sake of it. “My parents
don’t move in ‘filmi’ or theatre circles, so I’ve had to
do my own networking and make my own contacts,” she points
out.
But parental support she has aplenty, whether in mum Rekha
taking everyone she knew and “a few she didn’t”, to see
‘Everybody Says I’m Fine’ over 50 times at the cinema or dad
Aroon crying with pride every time he sees her on stage.
Her love
for theatre was natural, unexplained. “I think this job actually chooses
you, haunts you and until you find it, you move aimlessly from job to job
unfulfilled...” she philosophises.
For now, Koel is on a roll,
shooting in diverse landscapes like Ladakh and Ireland playing a gamut of
characters. Any spare time sees her cosying up with her “gorgeous
boyfriend” in England, dancing, eating tonnes of ice cream and watching
endless episodes of
Friends
, unnoticed
and unpaid.”
Whatever she does, there are always grand plans,
“I want to jet set glamorously between England, India and the rest of the
world and keep all possible plates spinning.”
And much deservedly,
have a blast!