Bollywood star Sushmita Sen will play transgender activist in the new television series Taali. The show’s trailer promises a heartwarming yet powerful story of courage and Sushmita shines as Shreegauri Sawant .
Created by Arjun Singgh Baran and Kartk D Nishandar, and directed by Ravi Jadhav, Taali is based on the life of transgender rights advocate Shreegauri Sawant. Sushmita Sen, who portrays Sawant in the six-episode series, carries the burden with the expected grace and brilliance. But despite her admirable attempts, Taali finds it difficult to transcend the biographical drama’s cliched premise. Taali, written by Kshitij Patwardhan, is unable to stop viewing its subject through a constrained, formalistic lens.
After a brief prelude, the series starts in 2014, just before the landmark Supreme Court decision. We have a number of typical flashbacks as Gauri (Sen) tells a journalist about her remarkable life story, including her early years, a life transformation, her youth, and her motherhood.
Gauri, who was born Ganesh and was given that name (Krutika Deo portrays her in her earlier years with touching intensity), flees her Pune home. Police officer and widower her father never gets over the guilt (“My son is dead,” he says). Gauri does odd jobs in Mumbai, such as serving customers as a mustachioed waiter in a cafe. She works as a social worker on the side, but it turns out to be harder job than she anticipated. In one of its most insightful episodes, the program refuses to depict the transgender community—commonly and mockingly referred to as “hijras” in India—as a huge, monolithic tribe. We observe social and class distinctions; Gauri observes that “our conflicts are frequently internal.”
Even as she picks up a common fight for dignity and gender self-identification, the show celebrates the diversity and nonconformity of its central characters.
The fierce, flamboyant protagonist of this series is Sushmita Sen. In current Hindi cinema, the actor is enjoying one of the most thrilling second acts. Her portrayal of the famous trans icon Gauri is more of a celebration than a realistic representation.
Sushmita’s wide eyes, manly voice pitch, angry look, body language, mannerisms, and flawless cosmetics are all spot-on. She did a good job of becoming the role. Only because of her performance will “Taali” turn out to be a successful show. Playing a man is not as simple as it seems. Sushmita is impressive even in the role of Ganesh. She doesn’t create a cartoon version of herself.
Despite its flaws, ‘Taali’ is a series that was produced in a mature manner. It stirs up feelings of compassion among those watching it. If anything, Sushmita Sen alone is worth watching this web series for.