Thakrar was born around 1984, and grew up in the St Matthew's area[2] of Leicester, England. She is of Indian descent,[3] and both parents worked in factories.[2]
She attended Taylor Primary School[2] and Soar Valley College.[3][4] She took drama as a GCSE subject and acted in a play at the Phoenix Theatre. As a teenager, Thakrar became involved with Hathi Productions, a theatre club based in Leicester run by Jez Simons, her drama teacher, who has written for EastEnders.[2]
She was going to study textile design, but decided to take a year out, which led to several roles on the stage as well as learning a lot about the theatre production.[2]
Career
Acting
In 2004, Thakrar landed the role of Roopa Chauhan in the radio dramaSilver Street, which was broadcast on the BBC Asian Network.[5] Thakrar played the role from the first episode in 2004, to the last episode in 2010. In 2006, Thakrar made her first TV appearance in BBC drama Banglatown Banquet. Thakrar went on to feature in a number of TV series including Doctors, Holby City, Peep Show and, notably, played a lead character in the British-Asian drama Cloud 9.
Thakrar was cast in EastEnders in 2013 and made her first on-screen appearance on 13 January 2014. Her character, Shabnam Masood, had previously been played by Zahra Ahmadi from 2007 to 2008.[6] Thakrar's most famous storyline while portraying Shabnam was when the character gave birth to a stillborn son, with viewers, critics and co-workers praising her performance throughout the storyline. Due to her performance in the storyline, Thakrar has subsequently become an ambassador for the stillbirth charity, Sands. Thakrar left EastEnders in 2015 and was last seen onscreen on 5 February 2016, following Shabnam's failed marriage to Kush Kazemi (Davood Ghadami).[7]
In 2019, she began portraying the role of Emily Sands in the Netflix comedy drama series Sex Education.[8] (2019–2023).[9]
In 2004, Thakrar was one of 20 young people recruited to the Leicester Mercury's Pathfinder scheme. Run in conjunction with Leicester City Council, it enabled a team of young journalists to spend 10 months gaining an introduction to print journalism and reporting on their communities. During this time, Thakrar wrote articles on subjects such as the influence Bollywood has had on Leicester, as well as the peculiar situation of being born on 29 February.[2]