Aasif Mandvi bridges East-West gap

  • By Lorraine Ali Los Angeles Times
  • Thursday, July 2, 2015 1:37pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

As the senior Muslim correspondent on Jon Stewart’s “The Daily Show,” actor Aasif Mandvi parodied some of the media’s most absurd notions about Islam, the Middle East and essentially any brown culture that qualified as “foreign.”

While “reporting” on a puzzling amendment in Alabama to ban sharia law, he said: “Anyone could see how easily we could go from Alabama to Al-habama.”

The India-born, America-raised Mandvi is yet again mining material in the ignorance between East and West, this time with HBO’s new comedy drama series “The Brink.” The series, which debuted to mixed reviews, opened to solid ratings.

As Rafiq, a driver for the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, he’s thrust into the middle of a potential world war when a military coup in Pakistan leads to American intervention in the region. Complicating matters are a terminally drunk secretary of state (Tim Robbins), a drug-dealing fighter pilot (Pablo Schreiber) and a loutish, low-level foreign officer with high aspirations (Jack Black).

Mandvi, also a writer and producer on “The Brink,” cites “Dr. Strangelove” as an early blueprint for the series.

“You’re dealing with geopolitics and all these heavy things,” says Mandvi over breakfast in his Los Angeles apartment. “But you’re also dealing with the ineptitude and narcissism and pettiness that goes on in the worlds of those people who are shaping global politics.”

In a scene tailor-made for Mandvi, Rafiq and the ugly American Alex Talbot (Black) are caught on the streets of Islamabad in a political demonstration complete with burning effigies and armed militants. Cut off from the embassy, they flee to Rafiq’s home, where his family sizes up Alex to decide if he’s secretly a CIA operative.

As they talk in Urdu among themselves, one of them asks Rafiq if Alex understands what they’re saying. “A U.S. State Department official actually bothering to learn the native language?” he answers. “You must be joking.”

Over the past two decades Mandvi has played countless South Asian and Arab doctors, dentists, cab drivers, delivery boys, chefs, nerds and terrorists. In at least one old film credit he’s simply referred to as “The Indian Character.” He’s appeared in “Spider-Man 2,” TV’s “Sleeper Cell,” and Broadway’s “Oklahoma!” Mandvi also stars in his own Web series “Halal in the Family,” a Muslim version of “The Cosby Show.”

“I never set off to be identified with any particular (group or) whatever,” says Mandvi, 49, of his frequent roles playing the Other. “I’m an actor. I do lots of things. But it’s just the way people started to see me.”

Although Mandvi was born in India, he moved to England as an infant and then relocated to Florida with his family when he was 16. There Mandvi studied drama at the University of South Florida and forged his early theater career in various productions at DisneyWorld. He eventually made his way to New York where he began his career in earnest off-Broadway and in bit parts for film and TV.

“Everything I have done — stuff on “The Daily Show,” my book (“No Land’s Man”), “Halal in the Family” — it’s existed in between cultures,” he says. “Being American and being an outsider at the same time, it’s a perspective I often bring to a character.”

Which brings us back to Rafiq. In “The Brink,” he appears to be one of the only reasonable and level-headed characters in the fast-moving, foreign-policy satire. His sophisticated composure is a switch from the usual media portrayals of people from that region.

“If I was just playing Rafiq it could have been a much more stereotypical role, but because I was involved in the writing, I was able to give voice to that character and give him a perspective,” says Mandvi. “It’s part of the reason they had me come in as a writer — to make sure Rafiq represented another point of view that wasn’t American-centric. His family is wealthy, academic people who know global politics. They know much more about American foreign policy than Americans do because they’re on the other side of those drones.”

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