Current:Home > NewsAvantika talks 'Tarot' and that racist 'Tangled' backlash: 'Media literacy is a dying art' -Ascend Finance Compass
Avantika talks 'Tarot' and that racist 'Tangled' backlash: 'Media literacy is a dying art'
View
Date:2025-04-15 03:08:32
Heading into "Mean Girls," Avantika Vandanapu was bracing for the worst.
"I had mentally prepared for everyone to dislike me," she says.
So the 19-year-old actress, known simply as Avantika, was pleasantly surprised when many considered her Karen Shetty the standout of the musical remake. The movie has already given her "pull in rooms that I didn't know I could get into before," she teases.
This weekend, she's back with her second film within four months: "Tarot" (in theaters Friday), in which a group of friends participate in a tarot reading, only to start dying at the hand of monsters from the cursed deck.
Avantika also chats with USA TODAY about the most challenging aspect of starring in a horror movie, studying at Columbia University, and, yes, that "Tangled" backlash.
Who is Avantika? How the 'Mean Girls' star got her start
Though she grew up in California, Avantika started acting professionally in India in 2016. South Asian representation in Hollywood was "nowhere near where it is at now," she says, and her mom feared sending her into an American film industry that felt "inherently against" people who look like her.
In India, though, Avantika found that roles typically dry up for adolescents and soon landed the lead in 2021's "Spin," the Disney Channel's first movie centered on an Indian American character. After transitioning into American productions, she also had parts in "Diary of a Future President," "Senior Year" and "The Sex Lives of College Girls."
Her breakout moment arrived when she starred as Karen in "Mean Girls," a character previously portrayed by white actresses.
"I thought it was really, really cool that someone from an ethnicity that is typically shown to only be dorky nerds got to play someone who is so openly stupid," she says, adding that it "feels nice to have championed a little bit of growth."
New 'Mean Girls':Tina Fey consulted her kids, who advised, 'Don't let those millennials overthink it!'
Avantika says that 'Tangled' backlash 'definitely did scare me'
In April, Avantika received racist backlash over speculation she'll star as Rapunzel in a Disney live-action "Tangled" remake, echoing the toxicity Rachel Zegler and Halle Bailey faced after being cast in remakes of "Snow White" and "The Little Mermaid," respectively.
The difference? Disney hasn't even announced a "Tangled" remake, let alone Avantika's casting. According to BuzzFeed News, the source appeared to be an X user who later said they "tweeted it for fun."
"Media literacy is a dying art in the day and age of social media, where you can consume content in short snippets and feel like you know everything without doing even brief research on it," Avantika says. "It's very easy for people to jump to conclusions."
Avantika Vandanapu receives backlash:The internet went wild over speculation she'd play Rapunzel in 'Tangled' remake
Avantika adds she had a "great support system" and "made it out" after letting the racist abuse "roll off" her back. "When people make comments that are so evidently founded in racism, to me, it just seems stupid and it just seems ridiculous," she says.
Still, "to get a taste of what Rachel (Zegler) and Halle (Bailey) were experiencing, on a much smaller scale, definitely did scare me a little, because it must have been so much harder for them," Avantika says.
Avantika opens up about going to college to prove her family wrong
The past year has marked a period of change for Avantika, who also moved to New York to study cultural anthropology at Columbia University.
"The running assumption in my extended family has always been that my parents let me do acting because I was stupid, and because I wasn't good at school," she says. "And I really, really hated that this was the narrative, that somebody had to choose to be an artist because of a lack of capability to succeed in an academic environment."
But balancing work and academics has been difficult, Avantika says, so she's taking a temporary leave from college with plans to return next semester. "Realizing when is a good time to take a break and not burn myself out and prioritize has been helpful," she says.
Avantika reveals the most difficult part of starring in her new horror movie, 'Tarot'
In "Tarot," each character receives a horoscope based on a tarot card and their astrological sign, and Avantika had a personal connection to the material. "My mom was super into astrology growing up, and I grew up very much into the occult and astrology," she says, so doing a film that combined both was a "no-brainer." Plus, "horror is my favorite genre," she notes.
It was both Avantika's first American horror movie and the first movie she shot as an adult. She recalls learning she had been cast in "Mean Girls" after a long, stressful day of filming "Tarot" and amid a fight with her dad about her college application essay.
"That whole day had felt like a fever dream, and this just added to it," Avantika remembers. "I was like, 'Truly, what is happening right now?'"
But the hardest part of making a horror movie was how exhausting it was to shoot scenes where she flees for her life. "I'm really not a runner," she says, laughing. Still, she would "absolutely love" to do more work in the genre.
New horror movies to see in 2024:From 'Lisa Frankenstein' to 'Terrifier 3'
What's next for Avantika?
Talk of "Tangled" aside, Avantika does have a Disney princess project lined up: "A Crown of Wishes," a Disney+ adaptation of a fantasy book that draws on Hindu mythology. She's set to produce and play Princess Gauri.
But if the Rapunzel role did come Avantika's way, would she now think twice about taking it? She says only that she won't allow trolls a say in her career.
"Forming your decisions in this industry and making art as somebody who is really passionate about stories is not, to me, something that can continue to happen and thrive if you're afraid of what people are going to say and are afraid of haters."
veryGood! (44)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Za'Darius Smith carted off field, adding to Browns' defensive injury concerns
- Teresa Giudice Explains Her Shocking Reaction to Jackie Goldschneider Bombshell During RHONJ Finale
- Georgia tops preseason USA Today Coaches Poll; Ohio State picked second
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Uganda sprinter Tarsis Orogot wins 200-meter heat - while wearing SpongeBob socks
- Tropical Storm Debby is expected to send flooding to the Southeast. Here’s how much rain could fall
- Meet the flower-loving, glitter-wearing, ukulele-playing USA skater fighting for medal
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Hurricane Debby: Photos show destruction, flooding in Florida caused by Category 1 storm
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- What is a carry trade, and how did a small rate hike in Japan trigger a global sell-off?
- Google illegally maintains monopoly over internet search, judge rules
- Jessica Simpson Addresses “Misunderstood” Claim About Her Sobriety
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- UK prime minister talks of ‘standing army’ of police to deal with rioting across Britain
- Stop the madness with 3x3 basketball. This 'sport' stinks
- Billions Actor Akili McDowell Arrested and Charged With Murder
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Rural Nevada sheriff probes potential hate crime after Black man says he was racially harassed
Cystic acne can cause pain, shame and lasting scars. Here's what causes it.
'The Pairing' review: Casey McQuiston paints a deliciously steamy European paradise
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
What a last-place finish at last Olympics taught this US weightlifter for Paris Games
Possible small tornado sweeps into Buffalo, damaging buildings and scattering tree limbs
Is this a correction or a recession? What to know amid the international market plunge