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Amara Karan
Amara Karan
from Wikipedia

Amara Karan[2] (born Amara Karunakaran; 1 January 1984) is an English actress.[3]

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

Karan was born to Sri Lankan Tamil parents who had emigrated from Zambia to the United Kingdom two years before she was born. She was born in Wimbledon and attended Wimbledon High School.[4]

Karan went on to study at St Catherine's College, Oxford[5] and while there began acting in amateur plays including Sunday Morning at the Centre of the World at the Burton Taylor Theatre for which she received rave reviews[6] and was also singled out for her performance in When We Are Married at the Old Fire Station theatre.[7] During her time at Oxford, Karan wrote, directed, produced, and acted in a short film, By Myself, which came in second place in the 2002 Shoestring Shorts Competition.[8]

Karan began her career as an investment banker (at Hawkpoint and CIBC World Markets) specialising in mergers and acquisitions,[citation needed] before studying for an MA degree in acting[citation needed] at The Arts Educational Schools London.[9]

In 2007, Karan made her film debut as Rita in Wes Anderson's The Darjeeling Limited (2007), which premiered at the Venice Film Festival, and as Peaches in St Trinian's (2007).[10] In 2008, Karan made her stage debut as Jessica in an RSC production of The Merchant of Venice and as Bianca in an RSC production of The Taming of the Shrew. With the latter, she made her West End debut at the Novello Theatre.[citation needed]

In 2008, Karan carried the Olympic Torch during its time in London.[11]

In 2016, Karan co-starred on the HBO crime drama mini-series, The Night Of. In 2012, she co-starred in the film A Fantastic Fear of Everything.[citation needed]

Since 2016, Karan has been in a relationship with English actor Jamie de Courcey.[12]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2007 The Darjeeling Limited Rita
St Trinian's Peaches
2011 The Task Toni
2012 All in Good Time Vina
A Fantastic Fear of Everything Sangeet
2013 Jadoo Shalini [13]
2017 Those Four Walls Jasmine
2018 The Death and Life of John F. Donovan Mrs. Kureishi
2023 T.I.M. Rose
2024 House of Spoils Hiral Sen

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2007 The Bill Abha Chaudhari Season 23, Episode 46 "Match Day Violence"
2008 Agatha Christie's Poirot Princess Shaista Season 11, Episode 2 "Cat Among the Pigeons" [14]
2011 Doctor Who Rita Season 6, Episode 11 "The God Complex"
2011–2012 Kidnap and Ransom Carrie Heath, Dominic's assistant 5 episodes
2013 Ambassadors Isabel Main cast, three-episode serial
2014 Goodness Gracious Me various roles Reunion special
2016 The Night Of Chandra Kapoor 6 episodes
2016–2018 Stan Lee's Lucky Man DS Suri Chohan 28 episodes [15]
2017 Bancroft Anya Karim 4 episodes
2019 The Twilight Zone Rena Episode 1 "The Comedian"
2021 Midsomer Murders Adele Paige Episode 1 "Scarecrow Murders"
2021–2022 Hope Street DC Leila Hussain Main cast
2022 Moonhaven Indira Mare Main cast
2023 Culprits Doctor Recurring role
2023 Fired on Mars Crystal Recurring role

Radio

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2007 The Making of a Marchioness Lady Agatha Frances Hodgson Burnett for BBC Radio 4
2017 The Beard Thea Collins Timothy X Atack for BBC Radio 4

Theatre

[edit]
Year Title Role Venue(s) Production
company
Ref.
2008 The Taming of the Shrew Bianca The Courtyard Theatre
Stratford-Upon-Avon, England
Royal Shakespeare Company
The Merchant of Venice Jessica The Courtyard Theatre
Stratford-Upon-Avon, England
Royal Shakespeare Company
2009 The Taming of the Shrew Bianca The Novello Theatre
London, England
Royal Shakespeare Company
2012 Much Ado About Nothing Hero The Courtyard Theatre
Stratford-Upon-Avon, England
[16]
2022 Bloody Difficult Women Gina Miller Riverside Studios
London, England
[17]

Video games

[edit]
Year Title Voice role Ref.
2017 Dark Souls III Sister Friede

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Amara Karan (born 1 January 1984) is an English actress of Sri Lankan descent, best known for her roles in film and television, including Rita in Wes Anderson's The Darjeeling Limited (2007) and DS Suri Chohan in the series Stan Lee's Lucky Man (2016–2018). Born in Wimbledon, London, to Sri Lankan parents who had relocated from Zambia to England for her father's career opportunities, Karan attended Wimbledon High School before graduating from the University of Oxford with a degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. She began her acting career with early television appearances, such as in the series (2011), and gained prominence through supporting roles in films like St Trinian's (2007), where she played Peaches. Karan's notable television work includes her portrayal of Chandra Kapoor, Naz Khan's defense attorney, in the HBO miniseries (2016), as well as appearances in (2019), Moonhaven (2022), and Hope Street (2020–2022). She carried the Olympic Torch during the 2008 London Olympics relay. Her recent projects include the series Culprits (2023), the animated (2023), and (2024), showcasing her versatility across genres.

Early life and education

Family background and childhood

Amara Karan was born on 1 January 1984 in Wimbledon, London, England. Her parents, of Sri Lankan Tamil descent, emigrated from Zambia to England two years prior to her birth to pursue opportunities in her father's career. Karan was raised in a Sri Lankan household in Wimbledon, immersed in her family's conservative and fairly religious traditions. Her father worked as a financier, while her mother was employed at a Jobcentre, fostering a stable yet culturally distinct environment that included practices such as arranged marriages and a ceremonial party marking a girl's first menstruation. This upbringing highlighted the blend of Tamil heritage and London multiculturalism, though Karan later reflected on feeling embarrassed by certain cultural differences, like protective plastic coverings on furniture. She attended , a single-sex , where her interest in first emerged through participation in school productions.

Academic pursuits and early acting

Karan enrolled at , where she pursued a degree in (PPE), graduating with a 2:1 honours. Her time at university marked the beginning of her engagement with the arts, as she balanced academic studies with participation in productions. During her undergraduate years, Karan immersed herself in Oxford's vibrant student drama scene, performing in several plays that honed her acting skills. Notably, she appeared in Sunday Morning at the Centre of the World at the Burton Taylor Theatre, where her role as a narrator was praised for its clarity of tone and ability to convey the piece's poetic rhythms. She also contributed to student theatre projects beyond acting, writing, directing, producing, and starring in the By Myself in 2002, which earned second place in the Shoestring Shorts Competition. These experiences shifted her interests toward the creative arts, fostering a passion that contrasted with her initial academic trajectory. Following graduation, Karan entered the finance sector, working for a year as an investment banker specializing in at firms including Hawkpoint and CIBC World Markets. She chose this path as a practical application of her PPE degree, seeking financial stability and a professional challenge in the competitive environment, despite her longstanding interest in . This period provided her with valuable experience but ultimately underscored her desire to pursue performance professionally.

Professional career

Transition to acting

After graduating from the University of Oxford in 2003, Amara Karan worked for approximately two years as an investment banker at Hawkpoint, a boutique firm in , handling . She resigned in the mid-2000s, around 2005, to pursue acting full-time, a decision she later described as requiring significant courage to abandon a stable, high-paying career for an uncertain path in . This transition was motivated in part by her positive experiences with during her university years, where she had directed and performed in student productions. Following her resignation, Karan enrolled in a master's program in acting at the Arts Educational Schools (ArtsEd) in London, completing her training there before entering the professional scene. Her early professional auditions led to small but visible opportunities, including being selected as one of the torchbearers for the Beijing Olympics Torch Relay in London on April 6, 2008, where she carried the flame across Waterloo Bridge as a representative of emerging British talent. She also began securing initial stage work, debuting professionally in a 2008 Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Merchant of Venice at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, playing Jessica. The shift from to presented challenges, including the long hours and emotional toll of banking that left her ambivalent about her future, as well as initial perceptions of the acting industry as dominated by "horrific people" and doubts about financial viability. Despite these hurdles, Karan's determination propelled her forward, with her ArtsEd training providing a structured foundation for navigating early auditions and minor roles that built her professional confidence.

Key roles and achievements

Karan's breakthrough role arrived shortly after her acting training, when she was cast as Rita, the compassionate train stewardess, in Wes Anderson's ensemble comedy-drama (2007), marking her international film debut alongside , , and . She gained wider recognition for portraying Kapoor, an ambitious young defense attorney navigating ethical dilemmas and courtroom pressures, in the miniseries (2016), a role that drew critical praise for its emotional nuance and complexity. Karan subsequently broadened her scope into and diverse television formats, portraying the AI entity Indira Mare in the sci-fi drama Moonhaven (2022) and playing Detective Constable Leila Hussain, the first Muslim officer in a Northern Irish town, in the procedural Hope Street (2020–present). In recognition of her ensemble work, Karan earned a 2020 CinEuphoria Awards nomination for Best Ensemble – International Competition for her supporting turn as Mrs. Kureishi in Xavier Dolan's drama The Death & Life of John F. Donovan. Her trajectory in recent years highlights versatility across sci-fi, animation, and horror, with roles such as Rose in the AI thriller T.I.M. (2023), Crystal in the animated series (2023), and Hiral Sen in the supernatural horror House of Spoils (2024). Karan has also taken on biographical portrayals, including activist and campaigner in the political stage production Bloody Difficult Women (2022), which dramatized key Brexit-era events.

Filmography

Film

Karan made her feature film debut in two 2007 releases. In St Trinian's, directed by and , she portrayed the character Peaches. In Wes Anderson's , she played Rita, a train stewardess. Her subsequent film roles include Toni in the horror film The Task (2010). In 2012, she appeared as Vina in the romantic comedy All in Good Time. That same year, Karan starred as Sangeet in A Fantastic Fear of Everything, a comedy-thriller directed by Crispian Mills and Chris Hopewell. In 2013, she led as Shalini in the family comedy Jadoo. Karan played Ursula Triplett in the 2017 comedy-drama The Upside. Also in 2017, she portrayed Jasmine in the drama Those Four Walls. Her role in 2018 was Mrs. Kureishi, an English teacher, in Xavier Dolan's drama The Death & Life of John F. Donovan. In the 2023 sci-fi thriller T.I.M., directed by Spencer Brown, Karan played Rose. Most recently, in 2024, she appeared as food critic Hiral Sen in the horror-thriller House of Spoils.

Television

Karan began her television career with guest appearances in British series before transitioning to more prominent roles in both ongoing dramas and limited series. Her early work often featured supporting characters in crime and procedural formats, evolving into lead and recurring parts in international productions across streaming platforms. The following catalogs her key television appearances chronologically:
  • 2007: The Bill as Abha Chaudhari (1 episode).
  • 2008: Agatha Christie's Poirot ("Cat Among the Pigeons") as Princess Shaista (1 episode).
  • 2011: Doctor Who ("The God Complex") as Rita (1 episode), a medical student companion in a storyline.
  • 2011–2012: as Carrie Heath (5 episodes), serving as the assistant to the lead hostage negotiator in this ITV thriller miniseries spanning two seasons.
  • 2013: Ambassadors as Isabel (3 episodes), a diplomat's aide in this political satire miniseries set in a fictional Central Asian nation.
  • 2016: as Chandra Kapoor (8 episodes), the junior defense attorney in this limited crime drama miniseries adaptation of the British series .
  • 2016–2018: as DS Suri Chohan (26 episodes), a partnering with the protagonist in this Sky1 procedural series.
  • 2017: Bancroft as Dr. Anya Karim (4 episodes), a forensic pathologist aiding investigations in this ITV crime thriller's first season.
  • 2019: ("The Comedian") as Rena Pradhan (1 episode), a supporting role in this Peele-revived All Access anthology series.
  • 2021: ("The Scarecrow Murders") as Adele Paige (1 episode), a in this long-running ITV mystery procedural.
  • 2020–2024: Hope Street as DC Leila Hussain (main cast, 38 episodes across seasons 1–4), a in this Northern Ireland-set police drama series on and .
  • 2022: Moonhaven as Indira Mare (6 episodes), a key figure in the utopian community in this AMC+ sci-fi limited series.
  • 2023: Culprits as Doctor (4 episodes), a medical expert involved in a heist aftermath in this Disney+ crime thriller miniseries.
  • 2023: Fired on Mars as Crystal (8 episodes, season 1), voicing a colleague in this Max animated sci-fi comedy series.
  • 2025: Hope Street (season 5, ongoing) as DC Leila Hussain (main cast, episodes TBD).
Karan's television work distinguishes between episodic guest spots in established series like and , recurring roles in ongoing procedurals such as Lucky Man and Hope Street, and central characters in miniseries like and Moonhaven, often highlighting themes of justice, identity, and societal tension.

Radio and audio

Amara Karan has contributed to several productions, showcasing her versatility in audio drama through lead and supporting roles. Her early radio work includes portraying Lady Agatha in the adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett's , a period drama broadcast in 2007. In 2013, Karan narrated Roshi Fernando's short story collection Homesick, exploring themes of identity and displacement through a series of interconnected narratives originally produced for and later aired on Radio 4 Extra. She took on a prominent role as Nadzi Khan in the Secrets of the Small Hours by Michael Eaton, a delving into and , co-starring . Karan starred as Thea in The Beard, a 2017 Drama on 4 production written by Sabrina Stein, where she played a film star grappling with an inexplicable physical transformation that upends her career and personal life. Her audio drama credits extend to science fiction with Big Finish Productions. In 2024, she voiced Sinsa in Doctor Who: The Eighth Doctor - Time War – Uncharted: Reflections, a series of stories set during the Time War, marking her debut with the audio range and reuniting her with the Doctor Who universe following her television guest appearance.

Theatre

Amara Karan made her professional stage debut in 2008 with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), portraying Jessica in Tim Carroll's production of The Merchant of Venice at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. In the same season, she appeared as Bianca in Conall Morrison's staging of The Taming of the Shrew, which later transferred to the Novello Theatre in London in 2009. These early RSC roles established Karan as a promising talent in classical Shakespearean theatre, showcasing her ability to embody complex female characters within ensemble productions. Karan continued her association with the RSC in 2012, taking on the role of in Iqbal Khan's vibrant, South Asian-inflected production of at the Theatre. Critics praised her feisty interpretation of the character, which added depth to the traditionally more passive figure in Shakespeare's comedy. This performance highlighted her versatility in blending modern sensibilities with Elizabethan drama, further solidifying her reputation on the British stage. After a period focused on screen work, Karan returned to theatre in 2022 as in Tim Walker's Bloody Difficult Women at in . The play explored the real-life clash between Miller and over proceedings, with Karan's portrayal emphasizing the activist's determination and legal acumen. In 2023, she starred as Ayeesha in Elijah Young's The Cold Buffet at Live Theatre in , a comic set in the North East that drew on her experience with culturally nuanced roles. These later appearances underscore Karan's ongoing commitment to contemporary British theatre, often addressing themes of , and community.

Video games

Amara Karan has made a limited foray into voice acting, primarily through her role in the acclaimed Dark Souls III: Ashes of Ariandel. In this 2016 downloadable content expansion developed by , she provided the voice for Sister Friede, a central and enigmatic character central to the expansion's narrative of a frozen, plague-ridden world. Her performance contributed to the game's atmospheric storytelling, drawing on her prior experience in audio dramas to deliver a haunting and layered portrayal. As of 2025, this remains her sole documented credit in interactive media, highlighting an emerging but selective presence in the medium.

References

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