How Mira Nair’s cinema shaped Zohran Mamdani’s politics
New York City wakes up to a new era, one scripted, perhaps poetically, by art and politics alike. Zohran Mamdani, at 34, has made history as the city’s first Muslim and South Asian mayor. But last night, as cameras turned toward the jubilant crowd in Queens, a voice rose above the applause. “I am the producer,” said Mira Nair, filmmaker, mother, and the real architect behind this story of representation.
Because before Mamdani ever produced a political campaign, Nair produced worlds. Worlds of colour, contradiction, and conscience.
Mira Nair’s cinematic journey began with Salaam Bombay! (1988), a raw portrayal of street children surviving in Mumbai’s underbelly. It was not just a debut; it was an awakening. The film earned global acclaim, an Academy Award nomination, and set the tone for everything Nair would go on to create: stories that dared to humanise those the world looked away from.
Then came Mississippi Masala (1991), a love story between an African American man and an Indian Ugandan woman. It was radical for its time, a collision of exile, identity, and desire. Long before “diversity” became a Hollywood buzzword, Nair filmed it with warmth and clarity, exploring how race and migration shape who gets to belong.
Her global breakthrough, Monsoon Wedding (2001), looked inward, to India’s middle-class heart. Beneath the chaos of marigolds and music lay a quiet rebellion against patriarchy and hypocrisy. It addressed family secrets and the moral compromises of modernity while celebrating life’s messiness. Few films have balanced realism and revelry with such deftness.
And then there was The Namesake (2006), adapted from Jhumpa Lahiri’s novel: an intimate chronicle of the immigrant experience. It followed a Bengali family navigating grief and assimilation in America. For many in the diaspora, it was not a film but a mirror, reflecting the ache of those suspended between two homes.
Across continents, from India’s streets to Uganda’s slums to New York’s apartments, Nair’s lens has remained democratic. The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2012) confronted post-9/11 suspicion and America’s moral blind spots, giving the “brown man in crisis” both voice and depth. Queen of Katwe (2016) turned a Disney production into a tribute to Ugandan resilience, telling the true story of a young girl who becomes a chess prodigy.
In each film, Nair took systems of exclusion, whether class, colour, gender, or nation, and reimagined them through empathy. She did not simply tell stories; she recalibrated perspective.
Last night, as Zohran Mamdani addressed a cheering crowd, thanking New Yorkers for “believing that a city could belong to everyone,” his mother stood beside him, calm, proud, radiant. She smiled as he invoked words such as dignity, justice, and belonging. Words she has spent more than three decades shaping through art.
Because Mira Nair’s films were never only about art. They were rehearsals for reality. The street children of Salaam Bombay! demanded visibility. The exiles of Mississippi Masala sought home. The family of Monsoon Wedding confronted its silences. The prodigy of Queen of Katwe proved that talent is not governed by geography.
In every story, there was politics. In every frame, empathy. And in every reel, a quiet manifesto: progress begins by seeing the unseen.
Zohran Mamdani’s victory may be a political milestone, but it is also a cinematic one. His campaign for affordability, immigrant rights, and cultural inclusion could have been lifted from his mother’s filmography, a continuation of her belief that storytelling, in any form, is an act of justice.
When Nair said, “I am the producer,” it was not modesty. It was truth. She produced a generation that sees power differently. A son who now translates her philosophy into policy.
From Salaam Bombay! to City Hall, the arc is clear. The camera may have stopped rolling, but the story Mira Nair began is still unfolding, now on the grandest civic stage of all: New York City itself.
The filmmaker who made the margins seen
Mira Nair’s cinematic journey began with Salaam Bombay! (1988), a raw portrayal of street children surviving in Mumbai’s underbelly. It was not just a debut; it was an awakening. The film earned global acclaim, an Academy Award nomination, and set the tone for everything Nair would go on to create: stories that dared to humanise those the world looked away from.
Then came Mississippi Masala (1991), a love story between an African American man and an Indian Ugandan woman. It was radical for its time, a collision of exile, identity, and desire. Long before “diversity” became a Hollywood buzzword, Nair filmed it with warmth and clarity, exploring how race and migration shape who gets to belong.
Her global breakthrough, Monsoon Wedding (2001), looked inward, to India’s middle-class heart. Beneath the chaos of marigolds and music lay a quiet rebellion against patriarchy and hypocrisy. It addressed family secrets and the moral compromises of modernity while celebrating life’s messiness. Few films have balanced realism and revelry with such deftness.
And then there was The Namesake (2006), adapted from Jhumpa Lahiri’s novel: an intimate chronicle of the immigrant experience. It followed a Bengali family navigating grief and assimilation in America. For many in the diaspora, it was not a film but a mirror, reflecting the ache of those suspended between two homes.
A cinema of conscience
Across continents, from India’s streets to Uganda’s slums to New York’s apartments, Nair’s lens has remained democratic. The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2012) confronted post-9/11 suspicion and America’s moral blind spots, giving the “brown man in crisis” both voice and depth. Queen of Katwe (2016) turned a Disney production into a tribute to Ugandan resilience, telling the true story of a young girl who becomes a chess prodigy.
In each film, Nair took systems of exclusion, whether class, colour, gender, or nation, and reimagined them through empathy. She did not simply tell stories; she recalibrated perspective.
The producer of the candidate
Last night, as Zohran Mamdani addressed a cheering crowd, thanking New Yorkers for “believing that a city could belong to everyone,” his mother stood beside him, calm, proud, radiant. She smiled as he invoked words such as dignity, justice, and belonging. Words she has spent more than three decades shaping through art.
Because Mira Nair’s films were never only about art. They were rehearsals for reality. The street children of Salaam Bombay! demanded visibility. The exiles of Mississippi Masala sought home. The family of Monsoon Wedding confronted its silences. The prodigy of Queen of Katwe proved that talent is not governed by geography.
In every story, there was politics. In every frame, empathy. And in every reel, a quiet manifesto: progress begins by seeing the unseen.
The legacy lives on
Zohran Mamdani’s victory may be a political milestone, but it is also a cinematic one. His campaign for affordability, immigrant rights, and cultural inclusion could have been lifted from his mother’s filmography, a continuation of her belief that storytelling, in any form, is an act of justice.
When Nair said, “I am the producer,” it was not modesty. It was truth. She produced a generation that sees power differently. A son who now translates her philosophy into policy.
From Salaam Bombay! to City Hall, the arc is clear. The camera may have stopped rolling, but the story Mira Nair began is still unfolding, now on the grandest civic stage of all: New York City itself.
Top Comment
U
Ulhas Kulkarni
2 days ago
Why can't the offsprings of a Hindu-Muslim Union ever be virtuous, pious, godfearing Hindus? WHY do they have to be JIHAADI MAMBAs?Read allPost comment
Popular from World
- Another crisis brewing? Pakistan on brink of food supply collapse as flour shortage deepens; prices hit the roof
- UK’s GCHQ shared intel with Canada implicating Delhi in Nijjar, Pannun murder plots: Report
- US to deny visas to people with diabetes, heart disease and other chronic illnesses
- YouTuber Candace Owens fires back at Ben Shapiro after he claims she accused Erika Kirk of killing Charlie Kirk
- 'Against stable and strong Afghanistan': Taliban slams Pak army; accuses it of 'creating tensions'
end of article
Trending Stories
- YouTuber Candace Owens fires back at Ben Shapiro after he claims she accused Erika Kirk of killing Charlie Kirk
- Jack Dorsey on Elon Musk's $1 trillion pay package: ‘This is not about compensation. It's about …’
- Connor McDavid’s wife Lauren Kyle drops ‘Oilers Collection 03’—A racing-inspired fashion release by Sports Club Atelier
- Hundreds of cops resign ahead of Zohran Mamdani’s term in NYC: ‘How do you work for a mayor who wants to defund police?’
- Megan Thee Stallion receives heartfelt apology from boyfriend Klay Thompson after airport pickup mishap
- US to deny visas to people with diabetes, heart disease and other chronic illnesses
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to Mark Zuckerberg: I would have dropped out of college, if I had known …
Featured in world
- What makes Dubai property suddenly within reach for India’s middle class?
- Tampa tragedy: Speeding car fleeing police ploughs into crowd; four dead, 11 injured
- YouTuber Candace Owens fires back at Ben Shapiro after he claims she accused Erika Kirk of killing Charlie Kirk
- Influencer Aundrea Griffin defends love with 26-year older husband Ken Griffin after online hate
- Twitch’s apology for Emiru assault sparks backlash, SmugAlana and fans accuse platform of lying and ignoring sexual assault
- Indian-origin man stopped and questioned over immigration status in Chicago; governor says it was ‘because of his skin color’
Photostories
- Ever noticed this face above temple doors? The powerful story of Shiva’s 'Kirtimukha'
- From better skin to improved mental health: 6 benefits of eating an orange everyday
- Must-watch K-dramas: From 'Last Summer' to 'Dynamite Kiss', new releases heating up November 2025
- 5 reasons to consume Pomegranate Amla Juice daily
- Pollution vs. your gut: 5 ways to stay healthy this season
- Winter weight gain explained: Myths, facts, and proven strategies to stay healthy and fit
- 5 dos and don’ts to wash and store woollen clothes the right way
- Liver health: How lifestyle choices today can lower your risk of liver cancer tomorrow
- Weekly Horoscope: November 10th to 16th, 2025
- 5 unusual and weird creatures in the world
Videos
03:36 Street Racer Loses Control, His Car Rams Into Pedestrians Outside Bar In Florida; 4 Dead, 11 Injured03:31 21,000 Ukrainian Troops Desert: “Busification” Chaos Exposes Cracks In Kyiv’s Collapsing Army04:03 Houthi Rebels Claim Capture Of CIA-MOSSAD Spies After Busting Alleged Spy Network03:13 German General Reveals NATO’s Plan To Deploy 800,000 Troops To Fight Russia | Watch04:19 Russia Unleashes Decisive Strike; Ukrainian Energy Sites Wiped Out | Full Detail03:01 EU Nation Alarms Allies Against Russian Asset Move After Putin Reveals Next-Gen Arsenal17:18 Shocking Video: Biden Aide Admits $4 Mn Payout For 2024 Race; Pressed Over His Mental Faculties06:24 Trump Shifts Tone On Putin Meet As Nuclear Threats Escalate; 'GOOD CHANCE...': Big Admission03:44 Venezuela-US War Anytime Now? ‘Fighter Jets Scramble And Bombers Rise As…’ | On Camera
Up Next