Russell Peters is a highly successful Canadian-born comedian, now living in L.A. and Las Vegas, whose shtick is to ask immigrants in the audience where they are from and then make fun of their accents (video on Indian accents) and customs (video on why whites should beat their children so the white kids don't feel left out when talking to their nonwhite friends). He loves ethnic stereotypes and is clearly a student of them. Judging from the video I saw of his show in London, nonwhites turn out in huge numbers for him. (Forbes said he made $15 million in 2010, mostly from ticket sales.)
Peters begins the one special of his I've seen talking about how Indian he is, about how he's not white, about how brown he is, presumably to reassure the audience that what is to follow is okay to laugh at. Yet, he certainly doesn't sound Indian. (He sounds like, I dunno, Don Rickles or Rodney Dangerfield in Caddy Shack.) But he apparently hadn't been out in the L.A. sun much before the show I saw (in contrast to the video clips above where he is well-tanned). I was struck by how, when not tanned, he's not terribly Indian looking. He looks like he's from somewhere in between India and England. So, I guessed he must be a Parsi, the Persian ethnicity of Bombay.
But, on RussellPeters.com's FAQ:
Is Russell Peters your real name?
Yes it is. My family and I are Anglo-Indian. Anglo-Indians are a community of Indians, from India who were mixed with the British when they occupied India. Both of my parents are Anglo-Indian and both of their parents were Anglo-Indians and so on. Anglo-Indians traditionally always married Anglo-Indians.
Anglo-Indians are Christian (I'm Catholic, as is my mom and my brother, my dad was Anglican), which also goes back generations. The first language for Anglo-Indians is English and our communities could primarily be found in Calcutta, Bombay and Madras.
This is the question that I get asked the most often and I'm always amazed as to how many Indians, especially the younger ones, don't have a clue about our history. Go ahead and GOOGLE 'Anglo-Indian' and check yourself!
Good advice. The Wikipedia article on Anglo-Indians is pretty interesting:
The first use of the term [Anglo-Indian] was to describe all British people living in India [e.g., Kipling]. This is the definition contained in the Indian Constitution. However in popular usage the term changed to describe Anglo-Indians as people who were of mixed blood descending from the British on the male side and women from the Indian side.[14] People of mixed British and Indian descent were previously referred to as 'Eurasians' but are now more commonly referred to as 'Anglo-Indians'.[15]
During the British East India Company's rule in India in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, it was initially fairly common for British officers and soldiers to take local Indian wives and have Eurasian children, due to a lack of British women in India at the time.[16][17] By the mid-19th century, there were around 40,000 British soldiers, but less than 2,000 British officials present in India.[18] As British females began arriving in British India in large numbers around the early to mid-19th century, mostly as family members of British officers and soldiers, intermarriage became increasingly uncommon among the British in India and was later despised after the events of the Indian Rebellion of 1857,[19] after which several anti-miscegenation laws were implemented.[20][21] As a result, Eurasians were neglected by both the British and Indian populations in India.
Over generations, Anglo-Indians intermarried with other Anglo-Indians to form a community that developed a culture of its own. Anglo-Indian cuisine, dress, speech and religion all served to further segregate Anglo-Indians from the native population. They established a school system focused on the English language and culture and formed social clubs and associations to run functions like their regular dances on occasions like Christmas and Easter.[14]
... A number of factors fostered a strong sense of community among Anglo-Indians. Their English language school system, their Anglo-centric culture, and their Christian beliefs in particular helped bind them together.[22] ...
During the independence movement, many Anglo-Indians identified (or were assumed to identify) with British rule, and, therefore, incurred the distrust and hostility of Indian nationalists.[citation needed] Their position at independence was difficult. They felt a loyalty to a British "home" that most had never seen and where they would gain little social acceptance. (Bhowani Junction touches on the identity crisis faced by the Anglo-Indian community during the independence struggle.) They felt insecure in an India that put a premium on participation in the independence movement as a prerequisite for important government positions.
Most Anglo-Indians left the country in 1947, hoping to make a new life in the United Kingdom or elsewhere in the Commonwealth of Nations, such as Australia or Canada. The exodus continued through the 1950s and 1960s and by the late 1990s most had left with many of the remaining Anglo-Indians still aspiring to leave.[23]
Like the Parsi community, the Anglo-Indians are essentially urban dwellers. Unlike the Parsis, the mass migrations saw more of the better educated and financially secure Anglo-Indians depart for other Commonwealth nations.
Peters caused a stir while visiting India by saying:
“I hate Bollywood. The films are all garbage, just terrible. It’s my opinion — obviously there are billions who love them. I have never seen a Bollywood film in my life. I have refused to do them earlier and will do so in future,” Peters claimed at a press conference.
As per few media reports, Peters allegedly also cracked some jokes about Aishwarya Rai-Bachchan’s mediocre acting skills and even joked about her pregnancy. According to sources, he however retracted his statements on Bachchan later. Whatever the case be, Peters is nonchalant about the angst he seems to have evoked amongst Bollywood fans.
This was not popular with self-appointed offense-takers in India:
The political wings of India also condemned Russell’s alleged statements on Bachchan’s pregnancy. Shalini Thackeray, cine-worker’s union president of Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) commented, “Bollywood is a vast industry, which churns out more films than anyone else in the world and Peters has no right to talk ugly or disgrace our industry or its actors. His comment on Aishwarya Rai-Bachchan is indeed in a bad taste, but I think his irrelevant comment should not deter or affect an actor of her calibre.”
A leader from Shiv Sena, on the condition of anonymity, said, “Who is this Russell Peters and why should we entertain him? I think he should be banned in the country if he doesn’t respect our traditions and films.”
Peters was unimpressed:
Standing by his opinion, Peters tweeted, “There is no reason for me to like everything you like, my opinions are just that — my opinions. There are plenty of things I love that you won’t! The fact that my words have upset some of you so much only makes me victorious!”
I once watched one of his performances on Youtube, and what was weird was that every single joke in the 30-minute routine was about this or that ethnicity or race. He's all about ethnic jokes.
ReplyDeleteDude's a dead ringer for Derek Jeter.
ReplyDeleteRussell Peters looks and sounds like an average Indian-American to me. He doesn't look like a Parsi at all.
ReplyDeleteWith Anglo-Indians, you have something of the one-drop rule. They usually look like regular Indians, but if they have even a small amount of English ancestry, that makes them "Anglo."
He is a white guy by blood and is from a low caste raped group
DeleteI hate Bollywood.
ReplyDeleteGood for him.
Inglos
ReplyDeleteSomeone who knows India well fill me in on this: did south India seem to "Anglicize" more during the colonial era than in the rest of the country? From the Indians I've met, I kinda get that idea.
ReplyDeleteGood show about Alistair McGowan's Anglo-Indian roots. Normally, Who do you think you are is preachy and maudlin, the US version being worse than the UK version for this. But both are bad.
ReplyDeleteBut this episode was funny, particularly because McGowan's family described themselves as "English in India." McGowan's conversation with his Uncle Rusty about the family was pretty funny, in an understated way.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R85IkGW3y9c
Is this the guy who I saw talking about going to India to finally meet his people? He said he got off the plane and took a whiff and said these are not my people.
ReplyDeleteIt seems like it might have been him.
Russell is big here in Canada. The routine about his friend Ryan and Western vs. immigrant disciplne is his most famous joke. I think he officially retired it. It begins at 3:38 in the clip you linked to.
ReplyDelete"Somebody gonna get hurt real bad!"
His accents are good. He does funny Indian and Chinese accents.
ReplyDeleteWhat surprise me about India is the bureaucracy, how a country colonised by Britain ended being the most bureaucratic in the World?
ReplyDelete@as, Indian caste society, in theory has the 1 drop rule, and any Anglo-Indian with 1 drop of blood outside caste, was out-casted, and ended up in Anglo-Indian society, not Indian society
ReplyDeleteAnglo-Indians vary a lot in skin tone and hair color, In my school we had a few, blond and blue-eyed Anglo-Indian English teachers. They vary in looks from full Indian to almost full white
They are in heavy demand in call-centers, as trainers of English speech, as their accent does not have Indian accent.
@Anon @ 4.26, South India and Bengal came under british rule by 1760, whereas Punjab only came under british rule in 1849
There were british military cantonments all over South India
I haven´t watched his videos, but I doubt he is funnier than Don Rickles. When I was reading your article on Sacha Cohen,and saw the "I never laugh at Jewish comedians" posts, I kept thinking about how funny and unapolegetically jewish Don Rickles is.
ReplyDeleteOf course Rickles comes from a generation that was greatful to be American, and you can tell that when he is interviewed.
Rickles' performance in Casino was a revelation to me.
ReplyDeleteYou're slipping, Saylor--where's the reference to me, venerable producer of countless, indistinguishable wet-hanky classics? That Ben Kingsley and Japanese novelist fellow got nuthin
ReplyDeleteHe sure doesn't look "Anglo" to me.
ReplyDeleteNeither does he look like Freddy Mercury.
ReplyDeleteIts good to have comedians like this making light of political correctness, but we will know there has been real progress when a WASP man can do it without being burned at the stake...
ReplyDeleteSomeone who knows India well fill me in on this: did south India seem to "Anglicize" more during the colonial era than in the rest of the country? From the Indians I've met, I kinda get that idea.
ReplyDeleteThe British spent most of their efforts trying to Anglicize north-west India. That was the whitest region and the one closest to Christianity. It was south India, as you suspect, that took the bait instead.
North Indians are conquerors themselves. Many British women married North Indian males. This is was mostly runaways like the dacoit from Madhya Pradesh who ran off with a British woman. The south indians were a lot more docile and were mentally soft people
Delete"That was the whitest region and the one closest to Christianity."
ReplyDeleteThe Christianity part thanks to Portuguese efforts.
Portuguese never invaded north India and were not able too
Delete"The Christianity part thanks to Portuguese efforts."
ReplyDeleteTrue but even prior to the Portuguese, Christianity was in Kerola.
I suppose someone will eventually get around to denouncing him for abusing his Anglo-Indian privilege. After all, ethnicity is no laughing matter. Or do the slit-eyed ideologues like to spare a few tokens to pretend that they are not humorless?
ReplyDeleteGilbert P.
If he was elected mayor of LA would he be considered an "Anglo" mayor?
ReplyDeleteAnglo-Indians is not a rigorous identification; it includes the vast and much more ancient (from XVI century) Portuguese-Indian commmunity. They built the most european city of Índia: Goa.
ReplyDeleteThe label also includes the descendants of even more ancient communitys, like the Greeks and Armenians.
There's also the comedian Joe Wong:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gD0s7gfTotk
He's a FOB (fresh off the boat) and has a bad accent.
I wrote: With Anglo-Indians, you have something of the one-drop rule. They usually look like regular Indians, but if they have even a small amount of English ancestry, that makes them "Anglo."
ReplyDeleteI meant, they embrace their Anglo-Indian identity (i.e. people who look and sound like average Indians calling themselves "Anglo").
Its obvious that you have no clue. Anglo-Indians are culturally British, light skinned and some lighter skinned than the british. "One drop rule" refers to one drop of Indian blood if any.
DeleteYou obviously have no clue. Anglo-Indians are culturally British and some have a little Indian blood.
Delete"That was the whitest region and the one closest to Christianity."
ReplyDeleteThe Christianity part thanks to Portuguese efforts.
True but even prior to the Portuguese, Christianity was in Kerola.
Where Kerala and the Portuguese colonies in North-West India, now Pakistan?
I think anti-SBC is a good way to categorize him. A lot of his jokes are self deprecating about his own family and his people (Indians). He's equal opportunity when it comes to others. And his jokes aren't mean spirited, like SBC's.
ReplyDeleteSBC by the way can't take a joke at all when it's directed against him. There's some videos on Youtube of people pranking him, and he looks fuming mad in them.
My goodness, have you just now discovered the joy of youtubing Russell Peters, Steve? You are in for a lot of delight, this guy is utterly hilarious.
ReplyDeleteThe Anglo-Indians in the US, like the Jains and Brahmins, are light-skinned and wicked smart.
Freddie Mercury was a Parsi by the way.
ReplyDeleteSome famous anglo-indians:
ReplyDeleteSebastian Coe, champion athlete
Engelbert Humperdinck, singer
Diana Hayden, Miss World
Boris Karloff, Actor
Ben Kingsley, Actor
Merle Oberon, Actress
Cliff Richard, Singer
Pete Best, musician Beatles
Vivien Leigh, Actress
Julie Christie, Actress
Reita Faria, Miss World
Lara Dutta, Miss Universe
True but even prior to the Portuguese, Christianity was in Kerola.
ReplyDeleteWhere Kerala and the Portuguese colonies in North-West India, now Pakistan?
Kerala is the southwestern part of the southern tip of India. It's the most Christian (~20%) state in India. There's an Orthodox community that claims St. Thomas brought Christianity to the region a few decades after the Crucifixion--to be diplomatic, I have my doubts about that. There's a Catholic community that dates back to the Portuguese. And believe it or not, they actually permit their children to intermarry!
The Anglo-Indians in the US, like the Jains and Brahmins, are light-skinned and wicked smart.
ReplyDeleteTypical indian BS.
What surprise me about India is the bureaucracy, how a country colonised by Britain ended being the most bureaucratic in the World
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure that Britain is the most bureaucratic country in the world. Americans have some odd misconceptions of what Blighty is like.
The british comedian Danny Bhoy who is half indian and half scottish cracks me up:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jepZVctaVmo&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uOEMJSPE0I
I saw his performance on Youtube recently, he seemed happy to make fun on races and ethnicity of ppl and get away with it... I must appreciate d tolerance and intellect of audience...
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of Anglo-Indians in India being smart.
ReplyDelete---
There's a Catholic community that dates back to the Portuguese. And believe it or not, they actually permit their children to intermarry!
Kerala Christian communities have caste-ism.
Non-castism among Indians means: men of uglier groups marrying women of better looking groups.
It's a lot like non-racism.
Popular British singers of the 1960s Cliff Richard and Englebert Humperdinck are Anglo-Indians.
ReplyDeleteAnglo-Indians used to run the railways and the police in colonial India, the British used them as an intermediate caste, not quite Indian, but not quite British either.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure that Julie Christie is Anglo-Indian in the mixed-race sense. She was born in India to a mother from England and a father who managed a tea plantation - not, at that time (1940s), a likely occupation for Anglo-Indians. (Nor is it likely that an English woman would have married a known Anglo-Indian.) She does however have a half-sister with an Indian mother: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-513285/The-secret-Indian-sister-haunts-actress-Julie-Christie.html
ReplyDeleteThe highway bandit Gujjars married a British woman
DeleteFreddy Mercury was Anglo-Indian, out of Zanzibar, via London.
ReplyDeleteRussel Peters is very popular among young, educated Indians who work in the outsourcing sector, so regardless of what Indian pc-defenders may say, he definitely has mojo in India.
ReplyDeleteFreddy Mercury was not Anglo-Indian, except by nationality/papers.He don´t have a drop of european blood (Portuguese or British); etnically he was Parsi, a group that escape from Persia 1000 years ago, due to Arab invasion. Racially, he was Caucasian (if you don´t like to apply White to Iranians...). Anniway,the Indians, Malayans, Shuailis, Ethiopians, etc... use the same words to describe the Portuguese, English,Dutch,Turkish,Persians,Afghans, etc... "Ferengy" (Franks) or "Rumi" (Romans);or like the Chinese say "the big noses"...
ReplyDeleteWhat a fool, many North Indians are Caucasian from Aryan invaders already
Delete"The British spent most of their efforts trying to Anglicize north-west India": in what sense?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, if you want Anglo-Indians what about our three Prime Ministers?
(Lord Liverpool, the Earl of Chatham, and Pitt the Younger)
How Scots-Irish is Bollywood?
ReplyDelete"or like the Chinese say "the big noses"... "
ReplyDeleteround eyes!
"Russel Peters is very popular among young, educated Indians who work in the outsourcing sector,"
yes, a friend was a big fan of him. He also recounted how he used an insinuation of racism to get out of a trick situation with cops in London.
"so regardless of what Indian pc-defenders may say"
huh?
Indian pc-defenders would not defend indian things.
Son of Flashman, obviously.
ReplyDeleteLet's not give this guy to much credit until he starts making fun of Jews. Indians are easy targets.
ReplyDeleteParticularly notable Parsis in other areas of achievement include rock star Freddie Mercury,
ReplyDeletePeters seems pretty funny, going by his youtube clips. A lot funnier than Sasha Baron Cohen.
ReplyDeleteI thought he was quite funny when he was just becoming popular, but I think his ethnic based jokes have worn out their 'funniness' to those of us that have heard them before.
ReplyDeleteThe city he was born in, (Brampton, Ontario)probably has one of the highest concentrations of South Asians (mostly Sikhs and some Hindus) than just about any where else in North America. When Peters was born there in 1970, Brampton was probably still over 90 percent white.
South India and Eastern India( the Bengal area) are more anglicised than North India. The best written account of the British impact on India is Nirad Chauduri's The Autobiography of an unknown Indian. VS Naipaul said of the book "No better account of the penetration of the Indian mind by the West—and by extension, of the penetration of one culture by another—will be or now can be written."
ReplyDeleteThe city he was born in, (Brampton, Ontario)probably has one of the highest concentrations of South Asians (mostly Sikhs and some Hindus) than just about any where else in North America. When Peters was born there in 1970, Brampton was probably still over 90 percent white.
ReplyDeleteThat's why it's locally known as Bramladesh. It's not a small town either, but a large city of more than 400,000 people. You're right about the percentages: 90% of the first 200,000 folks who settled in this suburb of Toronto, which was virtually all farm fields 50 years ago, were white. 98% of the next 200,000 were Indian. Diversity!
I met him at a local Yuk Yuk's club around 15 years ago when he was a young comedian doing the low-end GTA comedy club scene. Really cool guy.
ReplyDeleteToronto has quite a stifling politically correct atmosphere and his comedy does help to disintegrate these fetters. Whenever I'm around my non-white friends or acquaintances, I always bring up a Russell Peters joke to break the ice.
I have to say though - a key aspect of his comedy is his barely veiled message to the audience which is as follows: "Without the White Man, us Indians would be a bunch of backward illiterate peasants".
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-513285/The-secret-Indian-sister-haunts-actress-Julie-Christie.html
ReplyDeleteThe girl, called June, was the result of a relationship between Julie's father Frank St John Christie, the manager of a tea plantation in India, and one of his Indian tea-pickers.
( Indian teapickers are mostly untouchables and forest tribals )
The Portugese were in southern India -- mostly the western part I think. They were not in the north.
ReplyDeleteSome of the "Indian" ancestry that the "Anglo-Indians" had was actually Persian. So I'm not sure if that counts as some sort of admission to some secret poc club. I mean -- Persian. Cyndi Crawford is part Persian.
ReplyDeleteThere are all kinds of Indians and they range from white (rare) to black (more common). Most are medium brown. So Vivien Leigh may have had an olive skinned Persiann ggggrandmother. And that says---what?
Reply to Jeppo said:
ReplyDelete"90% of the first 200,000 folks who settled in this suburb of Toronto, which was virtually all farm fields 50 years ago, were white. 98% of the next 200,000 were Indian. Diversity!"
I'd say more like ethnic cleansing!
By the way, that 90% white figure is probably more like 99%. Not to mention the farmers in those fields from 50 years ago and more would have been 100% white too.
As a multi-generational Torontonian, if I were to walk around Bramladesh, I would feel as out of place as if I were in the sub-continent. I didn't want to live in India, so I didn't MOVE to India.
But the Indian sub-continent MOVED to me.
Sebastian Coe, champion athlete
ReplyDeleteEngelbert Humperdinck, singer
Diana Hayden, Miss World
Boris Karloff, Actor
Ben Kingsley, Actor
Merle Oberon, Actress
Cliff Richard, Singer
Pete Best, musician Beatles
Vivien Leigh, Actress
Julie Christie, Actress
Reita Faria, Miss World
Lara Dutta, Miss Universe
Im pretty sure some of those are Anglo-Indian in the other sense of the word. i.e. they are Brits born in India, not of any Indian parentage.
He also recounted how he used an insinuation of racism to get out of a tricky situation with cops in London.
ReplyDeleteHold the front page! Dog bites man!
Non-white manipulates racism legislation to get out of trouble.
In India, Anglo-Indian legal definition = English Father + Indian Mother
ReplyDeleteLara Dutta = Indian Father, Anglo-Indian-hybrid-mother.
= Not-Anglo-Indian
Diana Hayden = Born in Anglo-Indian Family
Boris Karloff = 1 / 8 Indian
Merle Oberon = 1 / 4 Indian
Let's not give this guy to much credit until he starts making fun of Jews. Indians are easy targets.
ReplyDeleteSo in other words, white people.
Peters begins the one special of his I've seen talking about how Indian he is, about how he's not white, about how brown he is, presumably to reassure the audience that what is to follow is okay to laugh at. Yet, he certainly doesn't sound Indian. (He sounds like, I dunno, Don Rickles or Rodney Dangerfield in Caddy Shack.) But he apparently hadn't been out in the L.A. sun much before the show I saw (in contrast to the video clips above where he is well-tanned). I was struck by how, when not tanned, he's not terribly Indian looking.
ReplyDeleteI think the problem is Peters realizes stereotypes are ridiculous and he makes jokes about them. You on the other hand apparently listened to him and thought he was giving an anthropology lecture. It cracks me up when people say people don't "sound Indian." I guess Barak Obama doesn't "sound black." Or Colin Powell doesn't "sound black." Really Steve Sailer do you think human vocalizations are based on some phony construct of race or do you think they are based on who you happen to hear the most on radio/TV or in your preschool?