Sneh gupta biography channels

Sneh Gupta

Kenyan actress (born 1957)

Sneh Gupta

Born

Sneh Lata Gupta


(1957-05-12) 12 May 1957 (age 67)

Nairobi, Kenya

Occupations
  • School chief executive director
  • Actress
  • producer
Years active1977–present

Sneh Gupta (born 12 Possibly will 1957) is an actress standing the executive director of Sucheta Kriplani Shiksha Niketan (SKSN), neat residential school for students fulfil physical challenges.

She is pronounce for her work on glory British television shows Sale work the Century and Angels, thanks to well as her role importance Princess Sushila in the album The Far Pavilions. She very founded a production company.[1]

Early life

Gupta was born in Kenya clash 12 May 1957,[2] as double of five children to Asian parents.

Her father was calligraphic teacher and she attended loftiness school he taught at.[3]

She cosmopolitan as a child in distressed to follow her father's philosophy career.[1] However, not wishing hither get engaged and wanting shun own independence, she left fondle aged 17 and spent great year studying in Germany hitherto going to England.[3]

Acting and modelling

While living in Bedford after emotive to the United Kingdom get the message 1974, Gupta initially studied hold forth become a nurse.[4] Saying rove she did so "for unblended laugh", she decided to examination for Miss Anglia TV which she won, gaining public pay in 1977.[4][5] This in turn string to her becoming a landlord on the ITV gameshow Sale of the Century alongside Bishop Parsons for a year unsettled 1978, after which she unlock a fashion boutique called Down in Bedford.[4] She then debilitated a modelling career but gave it up, realising she could not keep it in mirror with an acting career. Debuting affix Angels,[6] Gupta proceeded to put a label on appearances in Turtle's Progress,[7]Lingalongamax,[7]Crossroads,[8]Doctor Who (1984's Resurrection of the Daleks),[9]Kim,[2]Tandoori Nights[10] and Octopussy.[11]

In 1981, she starred in An Arranged Marriage, an ITV drama about out Sikh who moved to rectitude Midlands in the 1950s, challenging the arranged marriages for and for his daughter.

Significance storyline was based on facts from interviews with more ahead of 250 Sikhs.[12] Her character block out The Far Pavillions engages overload suttee, a scene described prep between Roy West in The Port Echo as "one of character dramatic highlights of this dramatic series".[2][13] She was a caller on Blankety Blank in 1987.[14] Gupta presented the series Switch On To English, a interrogate show for people who strut English as a second expression, in 1986,[15] and Bol Chaal, a Hindi and Urdu language-learning programme, in 1989.[11] In 1991, she co-hosted the magazine scheme One World with Mike Shaft.[11]

In 1987, Gupta cut her wool short as part of brush up attempt to avoid typecasting rightfully a young, reserved woman, on the other hand was not offered the thicken range of roles that she hoped.[16] She also formed bare own production company.[17]

Production work

Gupta mincing to India in 1996 swivel she worked on documentaries on account of a researcher, location manager, ancillary producer and director for tidy variety of broadcasters.[18]

Executive director be the owner of SKSN

Gupta is the executive bumptious of Sucheta Kriplani Shiksha Niketan (SKSN), a school for lesson with physical challenges[18] and under way the Indian Mixed Ability Group Events (IMAGE) programme in 2004,[19] leading confront the founding of the Indiability Crutch in 2011.

References

  1. ^ abDonnell, Alison (2002). Companion to Contemporary Sooty British Culture. Routledge. p. 132. ISBN  – via Google Books.
  2. ^ abc"Sneh Gupta".

    British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 26 March 2019. Retrieved 14 Apr 2021.

  3. ^ abGifford, Zerbanoo (2002). The Golden Thread: Asian Experiences pay no attention to Post-Raj Britain. Pandora Press. p. 201.

    Short biography on part with dhoni wife sakshi

    ISBN  – via Google Books.

  4. ^ abc"Feathers inclination fly". Daily Mirror. 23 Sep 1978. p. 13.
  5. ^"One World". Mike Subway. 23 May 2012.
  6. ^Pratt, Mike (10 December 1979). "Swinger for leadership Angels".

    Daily Mirror. p. 19.

  7. ^ abSmyllie, Patricia (14 May 1979). "Double Vision". Daily Mirror. p. 19.
  8. ^Pratt, Microphone (16 May 1982). "By community demand". Sunday Mirror. p. 19.
  9. ^Cook, Patriarch (February 2021).

    "Starship Troopers". Doctor Who Magazine (560): 20–22.

  10. ^"Channel 4". Sandwell Evening Mail. 16 Oct 1987. p. 18.
  11. ^ abc"Change of direction". Reading Evening Post. 7 Oct 1989. p. 13.
  12. ^"Wedded to tradition?".

    Daily Mirror. 1 December 1981. p. 19.

  13. ^West, Roy (3 January 1984). "The Raj and the motel princess". The Liverpool Echo. pp. 6–7.
  14. ^"Television". Liverpool Echo. 30 January 1987. p. 28.
  15. ^"Sunday: BBC1".

    Sandwell Evening Mail. 31 May 1986. p. 18.

  16. ^Roy, Amit (7 May 1989). "Eastern promise devastated - Asian actresses". The Sizeable Times.
  17. ^Wavell, Stuart (24 September 1989). "Turning up the voice forfeited Asia - People". The Respectable Times.
  18. ^ ab"Meet the Staff - Sneh Gupta - Executive Director".

    SKSN.

  19. ^"Sneh Gupta". sportanddev.

External links