logo
#

Latest news with #Express:AisletoGlory

Kal Penn recalls he had to stop showing up on Indian film set to get his due payment: 'I'm not coming until I get paid'
Kal Penn recalls he had to stop showing up on Indian film set to get his due payment: 'I'm not coming until I get paid'

Hindustan Times

time03-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Hindustan Times

Kal Penn recalls he had to stop showing up on Indian film set to get his due payment: 'I'm not coming until I get paid'

Actor Kal Penn has shared that once, while working on an Indian film, his payment was so delayed that he had to stop showing up on set to get it. Speaking with the Indian Express, Kal spoke in detail about the incident when he flew from the US to India and started working on the film "in good faith," even though the money wasn't there. He added that he was warned by fellow Bollywood actors that he might not get paid. Kal Penn talked about an unpleasant incident while working in an Indian film. Kal Penn shares he stopped going to film's set to get his due payment Kal shared that even though the filming was about to end, he didn't get his payment. "So with, like, three days left to go, I told everybody on set, 'I'm not coming tomorrow until I get paid.' And the crew was like, 'Yeah, finally. Good for you.' And the producers were like, 'Okay.' So that second-to-last day, there's a phone call: 'Sir, your car is ready.' And I said, 'No, actually, I'm not coming today. You can let the driver go. I haven't been paid.' Then, like ten minutes later, one of the financiers calls: 'Mr. Kalpen, koi problem hai (Is there a problem)?' I'm like, 'I just haven't been paid, so I can't come to work.' We had some strong words after that. He just goes, 'Okay, just wait in your room. In two hours' time, my boy will come.' I'm like, 'Okay',' he said. How his move made producers pay him within a few days He shared how he received the payment, all in cash, in "a brown paper bag" from a man. "He hands it to me and just goes, 'Count it.' I was like, 'Alright. Do you want to come in?' He goes, 'No.' So I closed the door, counted it, it was like half of what the guy owed me, in cash. The phone rings. I was like, 'Uh, actually, this is just half of what you owe me.' He goes, 'Yeah, the other half you'll receive tomorrow.' I'm like, 'Okay.' So I put the money in the safe, fully expecting it to, like, not be there when I came home from work, fully expecting somebody to steal my kidney when I got there,' he also said. Kal added that he was four hours late to work, but the film's team was ready with the money the next day. He added that he returned to the US with the cash, declared it, and filled out forms. About Kal's films The actor has starred in several films over the years, such as Express: Aisle to Glory, American Desi, Van Wilder, Cosmopolitan, Dude, Where's the Party, Ball & Chain, Sueno, The Namesake, Bhopal: A Prayer for Rain, and The Ashram, among many others.

Kal Penn, actor and activist, is guest at Express Adda today
Kal Penn, actor and activist, is guest at Express Adda today

Indian Express

time31-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

Kal Penn, actor and activist, is guest at Express Adda today

Kal Penn wears many hats — actor, author, TV show host, producer and former White House staffer. Most recently, he has been making headlines for reprising the role of Kumar in the upcoming fourth installment in the Harold and Kumar franchise and for the fact that his name for the role of Gogol in Mira Nair's adaptation of Jhumpa Lahiri's The Namesake (2006) was suggested by New York City's mayoral candidate and Nair's son Zohran Mamdani. Penn will be the guest at Express Adda in Mumbai on Friday. He will be in conversation with Anant Goenka, Executive Director, The Indian Express Group. Penn began his acting career in 1998 with Express: Aisle to Glory, but his breakthrough role came only six years later with Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle. Since then, he has been part of close to 100 productions — films, TV shows and as a host — through which he has consistently made a case for, and broken stereotypes about, South Asian representation in Hollywood. Noteworthy parts include those in House (2004) where he plays Dr Lawrence Kutner, whose identity went beyond his ethnicity, and in Designated Survivor (2016), where he plays the White House Press Secretary Seth Wright. He also starred in the immigration sit-com Sunnyside (2019) which he co-created, and Clarice (2021), the sequel to the 1991 classic thriller The Silence of the Lambs. Interestingly, for Designated Survivor, he had first-hand experience to borrow from. After advocating for Barack Obama's presidential campaign in 2007-2008, he went on to become the Associate Director of the White House Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs. As the President's Liaison to Young Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and the Arts community, he worked on issues such as the repeal of 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell', the Affordable Care Act, Pell Grants, arts and culture programmes, the DREAM Act and rapid response to the BP Oil Spill and earthquake in Haiti. As someone who has always had one foot in acting and the other in activism — he has a double major in films and sociology from UCLA — Penn left the White House in 2010 to film A Very Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas. He returned later that year as the national co-chair for the Obama/ Biden re-election campaign in 2012 and served on the President's Committee for the Arts and Humanities, focusing on arts education and cultural diplomacy. During his second stint at the White House, where he served for nearly seven years, he campaigned for both Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton, finally resigning in 2017. He also supported 2024 Presidential candidate Kamala Harris. In 2021, Penn authored his memoir, You Can't Be Serious, where among other things, he introduced his long-time partner Josh and wrote about his sexuality. The Express Adda is a series of informal interactions organised by The Indian Express Group and features those at the centre of change. Previous guests at the Adda include Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, philanthropist Bill Gates and Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store