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Gilu Joseph
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Gilu Joseph is a Malayali poet and lyricist.[1][2] She earlier worked as an air hostess with Flydubai.[3] She has also acted in Malayalam film.
Key Information
Personal life
[edit]Gilu hails from Kumily, Idukki district, Kerala, she also has two sisters. She moved to Dubai at the age of 18 to work as cabin crew with Flydubai.
Gilu appeared on the cover of the March edition of Grihalakshmi, breastfeeding a baby as a part of their 'breastfeed freely' campaign.[4][5] A complaint was lodged with the State Child Rights Commission against the magazine and Gilu, by various lawyers.[6] A petition was filed with the Kerala HC alleging that the magazine cover violated provisions of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offenses Act (POCSO), However, the court did not agree with the petitioner's allegation. The court observed that 'obscenity lies in the crotch of the beholder'.[7]
Work
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (March 2023) |
- Vaarikkuzhiyile Kolapathakam (2019)
- Ottamuri Velicham (2017)
- Adam Joan (2017)
- C/O Saira Banu (2017)
- Sathya (2017)
- 2 Penkuttikal (2016)
- Lailaa O Lailaa (2015)
Plays
[edit]Filmography
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (March 2023) |
| Year | Film | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Jacobinte Swargarajyam | Abdul's wife | Debut film |
| 2017 | C/O Saira Banu | Lawyer | |
| Thrissivaperoor Kliptham | Damayanthi | ||
| Aby | Mini | ||
| Rabbit Hole[10] | Christy | Short film | |
| Aana Alaralodalaral | Kadeesu | ||
| 2018 | Parole | Varkkichan's wife | |
| Kadha Paranja Kadha | Devi | ||
| Aabhaasam | Chitra | ||
| Abrahaminte Santhathikal | Maria | ||
| Ranam | Aadi's mother | ||
| Nonsense | Biology teacher | ||
| 2019 | Ihitha | Unnamed | Short film |
| Sitayanam | Sita | ||
| Sanchari | Traveller | Music video | |
| Thakkol | Clara | ||
| 2020 | Anjaam Pathiraa | Doctor | |
| Shepherds From Hell | Shiny Mathew | Webseries | |
| 2021 | Instagraamam | Vanaja | |
| Jan.E.Man | Saramma | ||
| Bhramam | Samuel's wife | ||
| Kaaval | Varghese's wife | ||
| Sumesh and Ramesh | Asha | ||
| 2022 | Bhoothakalam | Dr. Beena | |
| Sreedhanya Catering Service | Simi | ||
| Rorschach | Police Constable | ||
| Chathuram | Balthazar's sister in law | ||
| Durga | Unnamed | Short film | |
| 2023 | 2018 | Jiji | |
| Kunjamminis Hospital | Elsy | ||
| Antony | Selena | ||
| Pookkalam | Remani | ||
| 2024 | Vishesham | Mini | |
| 2025 | Identity | Smitha Shankar | |
| 2025 | Azadi |
Awards
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Mekhangale chumbicha malakakavithakal (The angel's poems that kissed the sky)". No. Kozhikode. Mathrubhumi. 20 May 2014. Archived from the original on 7 March 2018. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ "Adding mojo to music". The Hindu. 17 March 2017. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
- ^ "An Indian Air Hostess Writes An Emotional Farewell To Her Colleagues On The FlyDubai Aircraft That Crashed In Russia". The Times of India. 20 March 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
- ^ "'No regrets': Malayalam actress who breastfed child on magazine cover responds to controversies". The Indian Express. March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ "India breastfeeding magazine cover ignites debate". BBC News. BBC. March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ "Case filed against Grihalakshmi, Gilu Joseph for breastfeeding cover". The News Minute. 2 March 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
- ^ "Kerala HC refuses to declare breastfeeding cover photo of magazine as obscene". India Today. 21 June 2018. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
- ^ a b "The Joy of being Gilu Joseph". Outlook. 6 March 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
- ^ "Hand of God - A play by FIFTH ESTATE". W City. Archived from the original on 8 March 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
- ^ "'Rabbit hole' discusses Depression". The Hindu. 15 February 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
- ^ "Gilu Joseph Poems". Red Leaf Poetry India. Archived from the original on 8 September 2017. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
External links
[edit]- Gilu Joseph at IMDb
Gilu Joseph
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Family and Upbringing
Gilu Joseph was born on March 14, 1990, in Kumily, a town in the Idukki district of Kerala, India.[7][8] She is the youngest of three daughters of Joseph S.J., her father, and Annakutty Joseph, her mother.[9][2] Her two elder sisters completed the immediate family structure, with no public documentation of extended relatives influencing her early years.[9] Raised in the rural, agrarian setting of Idukki—a district characterized by its hilly terrain, spice and cardamom plantations, and predominantly Malayali Christian communities—Joseph experienced a conventional family environment typical of the region.[7][2] Public accounts indicate an ordinary upbringing without evidence of specialized early training in arts, poetry, or performance, aligning with the socioeconomic norms of small-town Kerala where familial stability and local traditions predominated over creative pursuits.[9] Her family's conservative outlook, as later referenced in her statements on personal choices, shaped a childhood grounded in regional customs rather than professional ambitions.[4]Education and Pre-Entertainment Career
Public information regarding Gilu Joseph's formal education remains limited, with no verified details on specific schools attended or academic qualifications obtained beyond basic schooling in her native Kerala.[7] In 2008, at the age of 18, Joseph moved to Dubai to begin working as a cabin crew member for Flydubai airline.[10] [11] She held this position for approximately nine years, involving routine duties such as passenger service and safety procedures on international flights, without any documented creative or entertainment-related components.[3] This role provided her with exposure to diverse cultures and travel but served primarily as a professional occupation in aviation hospitality.[2] Joseph resigned from Flydubai around mid-2017, marking a deliberate shift from aviation employment to personal pursuits outside structured professional roles.[10] This transition occurred without public elaboration on interim jobs, positioning her subsequent endeavors as a departure from her prior career trajectory.[3]Literary Career
Poetry and Publications
Gilu Joseph began composing and sharing poetry in the late 2000s, prompted by a failed romantic relationship that channeled her despondency into verse.[3] Her early works appeared on personal blogs, where she posted impulsively written pieces reflecting personal turmoil.[12] By 2013, examples of her Malayalam poems, such as those titled "വേനൽ പൂക്കൾ" (Summer Flowers), circulated online, evoking imagery of transient beauty and emotional introspection tied to everyday observations and inner conflict.[13] Her poetry recurrently delves into themes of melancholy, loss, and eventual resilience, often drawing directly from autobiographical episodes like heartbreak and self-doubt, which she has described as transforming despair into connective expression.[3] Readers reportedly resonated with this raw emotional authenticity, though the works emphasize volume and personal catharsis over structural innovation or broad literary experimentation.[12] By mid-2018, Joseph had produced three poetry books alongside exceeding 3,000 individual poems, primarily disseminated via blogs and independent channels rather than established publishing houses.[12] These publications have garnered niche appreciation within Malayalam literary circles for their unfiltered vulnerability, yet lack documented mainstream critical breakthroughs or extensive scholarly analysis, aligning with a pattern of prolific output focused on therapeutic self-expression over paradigm-shifting contributions.[12] No major awards or translations into other languages for her standalone poetry volumes are recorded, underscoring a reception confined to personal fanbases and regional online communities.[3]Lyric Writing and Recognition
Gilu Joseph began contributing lyrics to Malayalam cinema in the mid-2010s, adapting her poetic style to musical compositions for film soundtracks. Her work often features introspective themes drawn from personal emotion and nature, collaborating with composers such as Gopi Sundar and Mejo Joseph. Notable credits include "Nanayumee Mazha" from the 2015 film Lailaa O Lailaa, sung by Sithara Krishnakumar, which evokes imagery of gentle rain mirroring inner longing.[14] In 2017, Joseph penned lyrics for multiple projects, including "Thaniye Irulil" in C/O Saira Banu, performed by K. S. Chithra, emphasizing solitude and quiet revelation amid darkness. She also contributed to Otamuri Velicham with "Novin Kaatil," and to Adam Joan, integrating her verses into action-oriented narratives where emotional depth contrasts the plot's intensity. These efforts marked her transition from standalone poetry to collaborative songwriting, though her film lyric output remains selective, totaling fewer than a dozen documented tracks across indie and mainstream releases.[15][16] By 2019, Joseph wrote for Vaarikkuzhiyile Kolapathakam, including "Melle Innen," composed by Mejo Joseph and sung by M. M. Keeravani, blending subtle melancholy with rhythmic subtlety suited to the film's thriller elements. Earlier contributions, such as "Randu Penkuttikal Here We Go" from the 2016 family film Randu Penkuttikal, highlight playful yet poignant family dynamics. Her lyrics have appeared in non-film contexts like The Edge of Sanity's "Ee Nila Cholayil," extending her reach beyond commercial cinema. Despite these credits, her recognition as a lyricist stems primarily from synergies with her broader literary profile rather than standalone acclaim in music circles, reflecting a niche rather than dominant presence in Malayalam playback singing.[17][16][14]Acting Career
Theater Plays
Gilu Joseph's involvement in theater has been limited and primarily supplementary to her film acting, with few documented stage performances in the Malayalam regional scene. She participated in the play Hand of God, which provided her an introduction to live theater amid her emerging film career.[18] This experience occurred around 2018, during breaks from film shoots, highlighting theater's role as a flexible outlet for actors transitioning between mediums.[18] In reflections on her work, Joseph has contrasted theater's demands—requiring sustained, unedited delivery without retakes—with the segmented nature of film production, underscoring how stage practice builds foundational skills in timing, voice modulation, and direct audience engagement.[3] Despite these benefits, her theater engagements lack extensive critical documentation or awards, suggesting a minor scale relative to Malayalam theater's established troupes and playwrights, and no evidence of lead roles or regional tours that propelled broader recognition.[19] This sparse stage footprint aligns with her career pivot to cinema by 2016, where film opportunities overshadowed live performance; empirically, theater's skill-building value is evident in her versatile supporting roles, yet it yielded negligible fame or controversy in Kerala's theater ecosystem compared to her literary or screen outputs.[1]Film Roles and Performances
Gilu Joseph debuted in Malayalam cinema with a minor supporting role in the 2016 family drama Jacobinte Swargaraajyam, directed by Vineeth Sreenivasan and starring Nivin Pauly, marking her entry into film acting alongside her literary pursuits.[20] Her early roles remained peripheral, such as the biology teacher in the 2018 comedy Nonsense and Aadi's mother in the crime drama Ranam, both released that year and featuring ensemble casts without notable critical focus on her contributions.[21] In Abrahaminte Santhathikal (2018), Joseph portrayed Maria in the action thriller directed by Shaji Padoor, supporting Mammootty's lead as a police officer unraveling family conspiracies; the film earned praise for its engaging suspense and commercial viability during its Eid release, though her role was limited to familial context without standout acclaim.[22] Subsequent appearances included supporting parts in thrillers like Anjaam Pathiraa (2020) and Rorschach (2022), where she contributed to narrative depth in ensemble-driven stories but did not transition to prominent billing.[23] A notable performance came in the 2023 disaster survival film 2018, directed by Jude Anthany Joseph, where Joseph played Jiji, a character amid the Kerala floods' chaos; the movie's authentic depiction of collective resilience drew widespread acclaim, grossing over ₹100 crore worldwide in 12 days and totaling approximately ₹160 crore, becoming one of Malayalam cinema's top earners through strong domestic and overseas performance.[24][25][26] Her portrayal added to the film's realistic ensemble dynamics, though critiques emphasized the leads' intensity over secondary characters. Joseph continued in supporting capacities, including Bhoothakaalam (2022) and Vishesham (2024), maintaining a pattern of authentic, understated performances in genre films without achieving lead status or widespread directorial breakthroughs in Malayalam industry roles. In 2025's Azadi, a crime thriller directed by Jo George, she enacted Mini alongside Sreenath Bhasi's central jailbreak narrative; released on May 23, the film garnered mixed reception for its clichéd plotting and weak twists despite Bhasi's effort, with Joseph's role serving the thriller's familial tensions.[27][28] Overall, her film work has enhanced diversity in supporting portrayals, particularly in thrillers and dramas, but box-office data and reviews indicate reliance on ensemble strengths rather than individual stardom.[1]Controversies and Criticisms
Grihalakshmi Breastfeeding Cover Shoot
In March 2018, the Malayalam fortnightly magazine Grihalakshmi published its cover featuring model and poet Gilu Joseph in a saree, holding a baby to her exposed breast while gazing directly at the camera, as part of the "Breastfeed Freely" campaign aimed at destigmatizing public breastfeeding in Kerala.[29] The image, captioned "Mothers to Kerala: Don't Stare, We Need to Breastfeed," drew both support for challenging cultural taboos and sharp criticism for perceived obscenity and inauthenticity, given Joseph's unmarried status and that the infant was not her own child.[30][31] Critics argued the cover violated norms of public modesty, with complaints highlighting the explicit exposure as promoting vulgarity rather than maternal empowerment, especially since Joseph was simulating breastfeeding without personal maternal experience, which some viewed as exploitative sensationalism by the magazine.[32][33] This led to a criminal case filed in a Kollam court against Grihalakshmi, its publishers, editor, and Joseph under sections of the Indian Penal Code for obscenity and outraging modesty.[34][35] Defenders, including women's rights advocates, countered that the image normalized a natural biological act suppressed by patriarchal gaze, though the unmarried model's role raised questions about the campaign's representational authenticity versus performative activism.[36][37] On June 21, 2018, the Kerala High Court dismissed the obscenity petition, ruling that the image did not offend "society's moral fabric" and that perceptions of obscenity were subjective, lying "in the eyes of the beholder," thereby quashing further proceedings.[38][39][40] The ruling aligned with broader legal precedents under Section 292 of the IPC, which exempts artistic or scientific depictions from obscenity charges if they lack intent to deprave.[41] The event empirically fueled a polarized national discourse on breastfeeding rates—India's at around 55% exclusive for the first six months per UNICEF data—highlighting urban-rural divides, yet it also intensified conservative critiques of media as vehicles for cultural erosion, with social media backlash emphasizing traditional family portrayals over staged advocacy.[42][29] No subsequent legal actions succeeded, but the controversy underscored tensions between public health normalization efforts and societal resistance to visual explicitness in conservative contexts.[43][44]Awards and Achievements
Literary Awards
Gilu Joseph received the Palm Pusthakapura Akshara Thoolika award for her Malayalam poem Arohanam, described as a mother's monologue addressing her unborn child.[3] This honor, conferred by a literary organization focused on poetic contributions, underscores her early recognition in verse writing amid limited broader acclaim.[45] No additional poetry-specific or lyric-writing awards are verifiably documented across reputable reports, reflecting the empirical scarcity of formal literary distinctions in her career despite her publications.[46]Acting and Professional Honors
Gilu Joseph has participated in Malayalam theater productions, including the play Hand of God in 2018, where she portrayed a central character, though no formal awards or nominations for her performances have been documented.[3][19] Her stage work reflects an organic approach to acting, distinct from film, but lacks individual professional honors.[18] In film, Joseph debuted in 2016 with a supporting role in Jacobinte Swargarajyam and subsequently appeared in titles such as Abrahaminte Santhathikal (2018), Rorschach (2022), and 2018 (2023), the latter selected as India's official entry for Best International Feature at the 96th Academy Awards on September 27, 2023, without advancing to nominations.[1][47] She also featured in the 2017 short film Rabbit Hole, directed by Soumya Sadanandan, which earned festival recognitions including Best Cinematography, Best Sound Design, and a Special Mention for Screenplay at the Eastern Global Short Film Festival in 2018, though these were not attributed to her performance.[48][49] Despite these credits in projects with varying critical reception, Joseph has received no personal acting awards, nominations, or professional honors specific to her performances as of October 2025, per comprehensive film databases.[50] This absence underscores a career trajectory prioritizing breadth over acclaimed individual achievements in acting.Personal Life and Views
Relationships and Family Status
Gilu Joseph has two elder sisters, with whom she shares a family background in Kumily, Idukki district, Kerala.[9][7] Her parents are Joseph SJ and Annakutty Joseph.[9] As of March 2018, Joseph stated she was unmarried and had no children, a detail confirmed in interviews related to her modeling work.[35] No verifiable public records or announcements from reputable sources indicate a marriage, long-term partnership, or children as of October 2025.[51]Public Statements on Social Issues
Gilu Joseph has primarily articulated her views on social issues through statements related to the 2018 Grihalakshmi magazine cover shoot, where she posed breastfeeding a child to challenge taboos surrounding public breastfeeding in India. She emphasized that breastfeeding represents a natural maternal privilege and should not evoke shame or fear, stating, "What we meant to say is that women need not feel shame or fear to breastfeed in public places."[52] Joseph dedicated the images to "all mothers who are 'longing' to breastfeed their children freely and with pride," underscoring her support for women's autonomy in nurturing roles without societal judgment.[43] In response to backlash, including slut-shaming and accusations of obscenity that led to legal complaints, Joseph expressed no regrets, affirming, "This issue is about breastfeeding and it's an important cause. There is no question of regretting anything."[43] She addressed the sexualization of the act, noting, "If you see a lady breastfeeding, it doesn’t mean we’re inviting you to stare at us. We’re simply feeding the kid," and advocated for body confidence, arguing that the campaign promoted "believing in your own body" to enable women to feed children publicly without fear.[53] Despite not being a mother herself, she questioned restrictions on such expressions, asking, "Do you think unmarried women cannot pose for breastfeeding shoots?" and maintained that personal agency over one's body should prevail, as "every mother should celebrate their motherhood."[43][54] Joseph's statements highlight a focus on destigmatizing biological functions tied to women's bodies, rejecting interpretations that frame breastfeeding as provocative. She welcomed criticism as part of advancing the cause, declaring, "I will happily accept and celebrate all the possible criticism which would come in the name of this campaign," while respecting varied practices like covering during feeding but prioritizing freedom from inhibition in public spaces.[43] These remarks, made amid polarized reactions in Kerala, positioned her advocacy against entrenched cultural norms that conflate maternity with modesty, though they drew complaints alleging violation of child rights and public decency laws, later dismissed by the Kerala High Court in June 2018.[53]References
- https://en.wikipedia-on-ipfs.org/wiki/Rabbit_Hole_%28Malayalam_film%29
