Taraporevala wrote the screenplay for and directed her first feature film, Little Zizou (2007), an ensemble piece set in Mumbai.[4][5] This film explores issues facing the Parsi community to which she belongs. It went on to win the Silver Lotus Award (2009) at the National Film Awards for Best Film on Family Values.[6]
Taraporevala was born to a Parsi family in Mumbai in 1957. Her granduncle had been a studio photographer in Bombay, and her father Rumi had been an amateur photographer.[8] She completed her schooling from Queen Mary School, Mumbai. Taraporevala got her first Instamatic camera at age 16.[8] She received a full scholarship to attend Harvard University as an undergraduate, where with a loan from a roommate she bought a Nikkormat camera, which was stolen upon her return to Bombay in the 1980s.[8] At Harvard she majored in English and American Literature, she took many film courses including filmmaking taught by Alfred Guzzetti.[9] Taraporevala met Mira Nair as an undergraduate, leading to their longtime creative collaboration. Next she joined the Cinema Studies Department at New York University, and after receiving her MA in Film Theory and Criticism, in 1981, she returned to India to work as a freelance still photographer.[10][11][12] Her early work from this period was shot on a Leica and her father's Nikon.[8] She returned to Los Angeles in 1988 and worked as a screenwriter, writing commissioned screenplays for a wide variety of studios including Universal, HBO and Disney. She moved back to India for good in 1992 where she lives with her husband Firdaus Batlivala and children Jahan and Iyanah.[8] Jahan and Iyanah Batlivala played the role of Xerxes and Liana respectively in Little Zizou.[13]
In 2020 she wrote and directed a feature film based on her documentary. The Netflix Original film Yeh Ballet produced by Siddharth Roy Kapur and Roy Kapur Films can be seen on Netflix worldwide.
Photography
In 1982, during a break from college, she met photographer Raghubir Singh, who, after looking at her work, which included photographs of her extended Parsi family, suggested she work on a book about the Parsi community. This started her extensive work of photo documentation of the Parsi community.[9]
...she had the eye, the patience, the empathy of a seasoned portraitist; but she also had something even harder to find — a lifelong, unillusioned, affectionate closeness to an entire community whose numbers were dwindling with every passing year (Pico Iyer, in Home in the City, 2017).[8]
In 2000, she self-published Parsis, the Zoroastrians of India: a photographic journey, 1980-2000 about the traditionally closed off community since their persecution in Persia, the first and only visual documentation of the Parsi community.[15] An updated edition was published in 2004.[16]
Her photographs have been exhibited in India, the US, France and Britain, including London's Tate Modern gallery.[citation needed]
In 2017/2018, the Whitworth in Manchester exhibited her photographic show Home in the City, Bombay 1977 – Mumbai 2017. It was selected by The Guardian as one of UK's top 5 shows.[citation needed]
A larger version of Home in the City with 102 photographs was exhibited at Chemould Prescott Road, Mumbai, from 14 through 31 October 2017.[17] An accompanying book, Home in the city: Bombay 1977 – Mumbai 2017, was released with essays by Pico Iyer and Salman Rushdie.[18] It then traveled to the Sunaparanta, Goa Centre for the Arts in Altinho, Goa, opening there on 11 November 2017.[citation needed]
^Taraporevala, Sooni (2000). Parsis, the Zoroastrians of India: a photographic journey, 1980-2000. Mumbai: Good Books. ISBN9788190121606. OCLC46352914.
^Perreire Hawkins, Blendine; Jackson, Melanie N. G. (April 2013), "The Namesake, Sooni Taraporevala", Journal of Feminist Family Therapy, pp. 135–137, doi:10.1080/08952833.2013.777876, S2CID216136386