Seth first appeared in Peter Brook's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, which toured in 1972.[citation needed] Seth entered feature films in Richard Lester's Juggernaut (1974). However, subsequent filmmakers only wanted Seth for limited ethnic roles, so that his career stalled.[6]
David Hare met Seth in Delhi in 1982, and asked him to play author Victor Mehta in Hare's biographical play A Map of the World. Seth left his editing job and returned to acting.[6]A Map of the World toured for several years in Australia, London, and New York.[citation needed] After the release of the multi-award-winning movie Gandhi (1982), Seth was much in demand, and when A Map of the World's Broadway run finished, his movie career took off. His work in 1984 included major roles in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and David Lean's A Passage to India. Following that he played a lead in My Beautiful Laundrette (1985), and he played Pancks in Little Dorrit (1988).[citation needed]
In 2001, Seth appeared in Monsoon Wedding and he has continued working steadily in British and American films.[citation needed] In 2003 he played the lead in the American film Cosmopolitan, which was broadcast nationally on PBS. He also recently returned to mainstream Indian cinema with his role in the 2012 film, Ek Tha Tiger.[citation needed]
Personal life
Seth was married to author Pepita Seth, but they separated in the late 1980s and divorced in 2004.[8][9] His brother is the retired Indian diplomat Aftab Seth.[10]
^Carole Zucker (2002). Conversations with actors on film, television, and stage performance. Heinemann. p. 157. ISBN0325003726. He came to Patna as a professor of biochemistry at the Patna Medical College.
Canadian Film Awards 1968–1978, Genie Awards 1980-2011, Canadian Screen Awards 2012–present. Separate awards were presented by gender prior to 2022; a single unified category for best performance regardless of gender has been presented since.