Film

Lilly Singh’s (Superwoman) Bollywood ambition

February 28 2014

YOUTUBE sensation Lilly Singh, better known to her fans, as Superwoman, has told www.asianculuturevulture.com she wants to break into Bollywood as a possible stepping stone to Hollywood.

The 25-year-old comedy video artist, who has more than two million subscribers to her youtube (Superwoman) channel just three years after her first, is currently in Mumbai and has just completed a youtube video with her favourite Bollywood heroine, Madhuri Dixit. You can see it here.

Before appearing at the youtube fans festival in Mumbai with other four other youtube hits on March 1, she was in London for the BBC Asian Network Big Comedy Night (recorded on February 7), but spoke exclusively to www.orangered-oyster-271411.hostingersite.com film columnist and BBC London 94.9FM Sunny& Shay host Sunny Grewal about her favourite films and stars.

Speaking before she left for Mumbai, she told www.orangered-oyster-271411.hostingersite.com : “One of my big projects for this year is to enter into Bollywood, in some shape or form, whether it’s musically on a rap track or acting and it will happen even if I have to camp outside someone’s house to make a movie.”

She said she has no plans to give up comedy and will continue to make her popular video sketches and skits but revealed acting was a long term ambition.

“Don’t get me wrong, I would love Hollywood, but I say Bollywood right now because it’s feels like it is the right platform to get to Hollywood.

“I want to act – and I don’t care if I fail an audition, I want to do it.”

Producers and filmmakers, take notice – with a two-million plus fan base and a winning personality, the attractive Toronto-based entertainer could be an even bigger star waiting to happen.

In an exclusive chat with www.orangered-oyster-271411.hostingersite.com film columnist Sunny, she reveals her favourite movies, both Bollywood and Hollywood, as well which actors she most admires and fancies. You can read it here

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(Feature)

HOW LILLY SINGH BECAME SUPERWOMAN

LILLY SINGH, better known by most of adoring her fans (two million and counting) as Superwoman, is maturing.

In a manner of speaking.

When she was in London earlier this month she was on one of Radio 4’s flagship comedy programmes, “The Now Show”.

“That was interesting – it was in front of a live audience, full of middle-aged white people and so I was like: this is very, very different but it was a good experience,” she told www.orangered-oyster-271411.hostingersite.com

She made her name uploading hilarious videos to youtube that struck a chord with many around the globe, both young and old.

Not only are the skits funny, but often reveal the bump and grind of different cultures trying to get along, sometimes succeeding, but more often than not failing (far funnier) and spotlighting the peculiar idiosyncrasies of Asian and Punjabi families.

While Lilly’s immediate terms of reference are Toronto and Canada, and its multi-cultural society, her humour travels well, beyond boundaries, connecting continents and people in the very common language of laughter.

Most of all her work touches young (Asian) girls and women, whose aspirations just like Lilly’s sometimes appear out of sync with the way traditional parents or a conservative Indian culture wants them to think and behave.

In that regard, she is an inspiration and hugely refreshing. A young Asian woman (25) with the balls to tell it like it is, but with a healthy masala dose of infectious charm, humour and energy.  You go girl!

When ACV met her she had just chewed a whole roll of cinematic cud with ACV film columnist, Sunny Grewal (pictured here right with his wife and broadcasting partner Shay)

testThe room is still reverberating from their hilarious exchanges about Bollywood/Hollywood, Punjabi movies, comic book superheroes and subtitled films. It’s here.

Dressed casually in jeans and her own merchandise hoodie top and signature baseball cap and sitting in what constitutes her short-stay home in suburban East London, this petite dynamo is hot.

Not just in the way you might be thinking – much more than that, she is a force and radiates both warmth and steel, humour and power, fun and danger (who would want to get on the wrong side of her?). She berated one airline on twitter for its poor customer service, after a series of delays.

But here, she is relaxed and smiley and just a little sweet too, charmed as she has been by both Sunny and Shay (who host a show on Sunday 6pm-8pm on BBC London 94.9FM).

Her fan base is widening and nobody should be surprised.

“I did a meet and greet at the end of last year in Toronto and the whole queue was white, and I thought ‘DAMN’…  slowly and surely I am getting more of a universal audience,” she told us.

Last year, she was something of a globetrotter – visiting Australia and New Zealand it wasn’t just about the brown faces.

It was also the year she credits as having made a serious breakthrough, brokering movie, song and merchandise deals, as well as her own app, and putting Superwoman on the map internationally.

“It was an eye-opener, I’ve branched off from having just a Punjabi or Asian fan base. The UK is my third most popular subscriber base.”

The room is about to break into howls of laughter (and derision) when she talks about the make-up of her subscribers in one particular country. Wait for it…

For the record and in order of the biggest first, comes the US, Canada, the UK, Australia and India (which often switch positions) and Dubai.

“Here’s a funny thing – in every country around the world my main demographic is 13-25 females and they form the majority of the subscribers – with the exception of India, where the majority of people watching are older men (over 35), it’s statistically proven.”
No one can contain themselves.

The spectre of the Indian uncle poring over Lilly’s – rather than Superwoman’s – output is too much to bear – nobody can contain themselves.

The speculation is that not only are these men tickled and stimulated – but some probably don’t want their daughters or female family members to go getting any ideas.

But in some ways that is precisely where Lilly and Superwoman’s strength lie – taking the fight in a fun and clever way against parents and a culture that sometimes very distinctly prohibits girls and young women “from doing stuff” as she said in her talk with Sunny.

She tells www.orangered-oyster-271411.hostingersite.com she was Superwoman before she created her youtube channel with that name.

“I used to call myself Superwoman long before I was Superwoman on youtube. It’s from the Lil’ Mo song “Superwoman”, I must have been nine or 10 and it was back in those MSN days when my name was Superwoman.”

She is not just street smart (that much is obvious from her videos) but academic smart – she has a degree in psychology and was contemplating a Masters as she reached a definitive crossroads in her life.

superwoman5rezied

“When I made the decision to do youtube full-time (about 18 months ago) I was actually  applying for Masters degree and my dad was very keen on it, I didn’t want to do it, I was thinking how am I going to do this, I can’t even do the application.”

She had made up her mind.

“I went to my parent’s room and I said ‘I don’t want to do a Masters, I want to do youtube full time – you can imagine that wasn’t the easiest thing to do.

“But my Dad said the greatest thing he has ever said to me, he said: ‘If you want to do it, do it really well, better than anyone else, and we will support you’.”

You can understand how pivotal that must have been – getting the approval of an Asian parent is a bit like a judge not only handing you a reprieve from death row, but then also setting you free.

Lilly credits her ‘Punjabi mothers video’ as the one that proved to her she could make a career of what essentially started as a bit of fun from her bedroom.

“It was a random idea, it was a spoken word piece and it was so crappy, it got a couple of hundred views and I thought, Oh My God, I am so cool. It was on religion. It’s no longer on the internet.”

She remembered dressing up for it, buying a new blazer, straightening her hair and applying make-up.

“It didn’t matter what the video was about, I fell in love with process. I sourced the content, edited it, uploaded it and I controlled the marketing, controlled where it went and no one else told me what to do.”

This idea of being in control is very strong and is common to many who try stuff on the net but finding the audience is the trick.
How did she find hers?

“There’s a lot of trial and error, it’s just such a new thing, you can’t look back and say, ‘Oh, what did this person do, let’s do that; we were all guessing as went along to be honest  and it’s a lot about thinking of creative ways to market online.”

Her second video about the nuances of pronouncing certain Punjabi words was hugely popular and showed there was an appetite for her observational cultural comedy.

And yet her recipe for success is almost as disarming as her unaffected manner and lack of ego.

“I have two rules of success: be nice to people and work hard.”

Over to you…

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