Mindy Kaling
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- In full:
- Vera Mindy Chokalingam
- Born:
- June 24, 1979, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. (age 44)
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Mindy Kaling (born June 24, 1979, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.) American actress, comedian, and author who was known for her offbeat humour, which was on display in such projects as the television show The Mindy Project (2012–17).
Kaling was the daughter of Indian immigrants. Her father, an architect, and her mother, an obstetrician-gynecologist, met at a hospital in Nigeria where both were working, and they moved to the United States in 1979. As a child, Kaling paid rapt attention to such televised sketch comedies as In Living Color and Saturday Night Live. She attended Dartmouth College (B.A., 2001), where she majored in theatre and joined both the all-female a capella group Rockapellas and the campus improv troupe the Dog Day Players. In addition, she drew the well-liked comic Badly Drawn Girl for the university newspaper.
Following graduation, Kaling shared an apartment in Brooklyn with her college friend Brenda Withers. Kaling and Withers turned a running joke into an infotainment satire, Matt & Ben, in which the women portrayed the actors Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. The play was entered in 2002 into the New York International Fringe Festival, where it took the award for best overall production. The comedy then had a successful two-year run Off-Broadway, followed by a transfer to Los Angeles.
After writer and producer Greg Daniels saw Matt & Ben, he recruited Kaling in 2004 to write for an American version of the popular British mockumentary-style TV comedy The Office. Kaling also portrayed the character Kelly Kapoor, one of the fictional office’s “most ethnic co-workers.” Kaling remained with the hit show throughout its 2005–13 run. She also served as executive producer for the series from 2008, and she directed several episodes as well.
Kaling later developed the innovative TV show The Mindy Project, which centred on the life of Mindy Lahiri, an obstetrician-gynecologist who is fixated on finding a romantic partner. The character Mindy is self-involved, impulsive, and prone to romantic delusions and has a great fondness for designer clothing. The half-hour show premiered in 2012 and became known for its clever dialogue and singular take on popular culture. In addition to starring on the show, Kaling also wrote and served as executive producer. The Mindy Project moved to the Internet video streaming service Hulu for its fourth season. The series ended in 2017. She then cocreated the TV series Champions (2018), about a theatre kid who moves in with his dad so that he can attend school in New York City. Kaling wrote several episodes and played the boy’s mother. In 2019 she cowrote an adaption of the 1994 romantic comedy Four Weddings and a Funeral as a limited series, featuring a more diverse cast, on Hulu. Drawing inspiration from her own life, Kaling then cocreated and cowrote the Netflix show Never Have I Ever (2020– ), about a first-generation Indian American teenager. She later created and cowrote The Sex Lives of College Girls (2021– ), a comedy series that centres on four college roommates; it aired on HBO Max.
Kaling lent her acting talents to such film comedies as The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005), License to Wed (2007), and Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) and voiced characters for the animated movies Despicable Me (2010), Wreck-It Ralph (2012), and Inside Out (2015). She later appeared as Mrs. Who in the 2018 film adaptation of Madeleine L’Engle’s acclaimed 1962 sci-fi novel, A Wrinkle in Time. Kaling also joined the mostly female cast of Ocean’s 8 (2018), a reboot of the Ocean’s Eleven franchise from the early 2000s. In 2019 Kaling wrote her first feature-length screenplay, Late Night, in which she also starred as a diversity hire on the writing team of a nightly talk show. She later voiced the title character in the animated TV series Velma (2022– ), which was inspired by the teen mystery show Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! (1969–70).
In addition, Kaling found time to write the autobiographical essay collections Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (and Other Concerns) (2011) and Why Not Me? (2015). Her offbeat sensibility carried over to her Twitter feed—which she kept constantly updated, to the delight of her millions of followers—and to her popular Instagram account.