Sugith Varughese Explained

Sugith Varughese
Birth Date:1957 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Cochin, Kerala, India
Nationality:Canadian
Occupation:Writer, director, actor

Sugith Varughese (born 25 April 1957) is an Indian-born Canadian writer, director and actor.

Background

Born in Cochin, Kerala, India into a Syriac Saint Thomas Christian family ("Varughese," also sometimes spelled "Varghese" and "Verghese" and variously pronounced, is Syriac-Malayalam for "George"),[1] he immigrated to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan as a child when his neurosurgeon father obtained a professional appointment there.[2] His family's native language is Malayalam; having grown up in anglophone western Canada he naturally speaks English with a Canadian accent but from time to time affects an assortment of South Asian accents when playing dramatic roles that call for them.

Sugith Varughese was raised in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, began university studies at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon with a double major in pre-medicine and drama,[3] and continued on to an undergraduate degree in drama at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and a Master of Fine Arts at York University in Toronto.[4] He went on to write, act in and direct film and television productions in Canada and the USA. He was the first visible minority accepted to attend the Canadian Film Centre as a writer-director. As a director, he has been nominated for and won several Canadian film and television and international film festival awards.[5] He also holds a black belt in karate.[6]

Credits

His credits include the following.

Acting

As a film and television actor:

Other credits include ; ; ; Overdrawn at the Memory Bank; The Expanse. and played the role of the informant on season 1 of 72 Hours (Ep.1 Burning Obsession).

As a stage actor:

Writing

Stage

Film and television

Awards

Directing

Notes and References

  1. Neither the famous Dr Abraham Verghese nor the American stand-up comedian Paul Varghese, both also of Malayali Syrian Christian backgrounds, is necessarily any relation of Sugith Varughese: Malayali Syrian-Orthodox Christians do not have public family names (they have "house" names) and their putative surnames are simply their fathers' Christian names.
  2. http://www.rediff.com/news/2001/may/18usspec.htm Aseem Chhabra, "I Didn't Want To Be Invisible."
  3. http://www.writersguildofcanada.com/magazine/articles/summer03-w-files.html Paul Lima, “The Writer As Warrior: Sugith Varughese,” Writers Guild of Canada: The W Files.
  4. Chhabra.
  5. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0890268/ Internet Movie Database: Sugith Varughese
  6. Lima.
  7. http://www.diasporadialogues.com/index2.asp?section=2&article=feb7-07.inc Writing at the Intersection: The Diaspora Crosswalk. Diaspora Dialogues
  8. http://www.bestprices.com/cgi-bin/vlink/0920486738BT?id=nsession Best Prices.com. "Where Is Here? : A CBC Radio Drama Anthology"