The Vancouver actor who would be king
By: Ryan Porter Special to the Star
Published on Mon Jul 06 2015
Avan Jogia, who plays pharaoh Tutankhamun in TV miniseries Tut, is intent on taking his career to the next level.
At 17, Avan Jogia was a struggling (OK, bored) high school student at Killarney Secondary School in Vancouver with enough acting credits on his IMDB page to make him seriously question the point of his math homework.
His parents struck a deal. āGo down to L.A. for six months; if you get a job, good for you, youāre an actor,ā Jogia (whose name is pronounced AH-van JO-ghee-a) recalls. āIf you donāt get a job, then you have to come back to Vancouver and you have to go back to school.ā
Much to the chagrin of stay-in-school advocates everywhere, Jogia was quickly offered the role of the charismatic Beck Oliver on Nickelodeonās Victoria Justice vehicleVictorious. While starring opposite Justice and a then-unknown Ariana Grande made him the toast of the tween mags, Jogia, now 23, was ready for something more.
This month, the Canadian actor gets his chance, playing the iconic Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun in the three-part epic Spike miniseries Tut (premiering July 19 at 9 p.m.). The sand soap is produced by Montreal-based Muse Entertainment Enterprises, known for splashy miniseries such as The Pillars of the Earth and The Kennedys.
āIāve always been a give-me-the-ball type person,ā Jogia says over the phone from his home in Los Angeles, where he is playing with his dog, Maybelle, while reviewing the first cut of a short film he recently directed. āThe more responsibility, the more pressure, the more comfortable I feel. For me, I finally got to do the thing that I wanted to do.ā
Tut fills in the holes in the known history of Tutankhamun by imagining the young pharaohās growing suspicion of his advisers, including the scheming Grand Vizier Ay, played by Sir Ben Kingsley.
Shot in Morocco, the production called for Jogia to spend 16-hour days filming elaborate action sequences in oppressive desert heat. He followed a restrictive diet to lose weight for the role and yet no one had more energy on the gruelling shoot.
During a chase sequence, he tripped and cut his hand. Not wanting to interrupt the schedule, he had the onset medic give him stitches during his lunch, then swapped his fighting hand to finish the day. āI was adamant about wanting to finish,ā he says. āSlowing down the pace doesnāt help me.ā
Kingsley describes Jogia as an āintelligent and alertā co-star. Asked if he mentored Jogia on set, the actor laughs. āIām not that pompous!ā he says. āItās like tennis: you smash a ball over the net and you want them to smash it back at you to have a great game. If I can play a good game with (my co-star), weāre both learning.ā
To Jogia, Kingsley is a personal hero: they share the same Indian-English background. (Jogiaās father is British-Indian and his mother is British-German; his older brother, Ketan, is a music producer in London.)
Jogia says being a mixed race actor in Hollywood has been āa very long journey.ā However, he is encouraged by recent casting decisions, including John Boyegaās lead role in the upcoming Star Wars sequel. (Boyega, 23, plays Finn in the film to be released in December.)
āThe lead in Star Wars, being a black man: thatās truly amazing,ā Jogia says. āItās going to help further prove that itās about the story, itās about the humanity, itās about the spectacle, and we can watch anyone of any race onscreen and there are no hang-ups.ā
The coming months bring a series of meaty dramatic roles that signal Jogiaās eagerness to be taken seriously as an actor. He has pivotal roles in indie films 10,000 Saints, a coming-of-age story with Asa Butterfield and Hailee Steinfeld set in the punk scene of ā80s-era New York City, and I Am Michael, the true story of a gay activist, played by James Franco, who became an evangelical heterosexual Christian.
āIāve been doing this now for nine years,ā Jogia says. āAnd now itās finally bearing the fruits of labour.ā
He compares his own transition from teen idol to leading man to his Egyptian alter egoās rise to power. āFor him itās solidifying his position as a person of power and freeing his people,ā he says. ā(My goal) is a little less grand: I just want to tell good stories. We are similar as far as our willpower is concerned. I just donāt have to worry about ruling Egypt.ā
thestar.com