Sridhar Rangayan

Sridhar Rangayan
Born2 April 1962
Mandya, Karnataka, India
Other namesSridhar Rangayyan
Sridhar Rangaihn
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter, film producer
PartnerSaagar Gupta[1][2]
Parent(s)M. R. Thirunarayan, Yadu Narayan

Sridhar Rangayan (also spelt Sridhar Rangaihn); born 2 April 1962)[3] is an Indian filmmaker who has made films with special focus on queer subjects. His queer films, The Pink Mirror, Yours Emotionally, 68 Pages, Purple Skies, Breaking Free & Evening Shadows have been considered groundbreaking because of their realistic and sympathetic portrayal of the largely closeted Indian gay community. His film The Pink Mirror remains banned in India by the Indian Censor Board because of its homosexual content.[4]

Rangayan was born in Mandya, Karnataka. As a gay activist, he has been one of the front-rank leaders in the LGBT movement in India and has contributed immensely towards the growth of awareness about sexual minorities in India.[5][6][7]

He is a Founder Member and Trustee of The Humsafar Trust, the first gay NGO in India, along with Ashok Row Kavi. He served on its board till January 2013. He also designed and edited India's first gay magazine Bombay Dost between 1999–2003.

In 2006, he was awarded the South Asian Achievers Award for his contribution to global mainstream media by Triangle Media Group (TMG), UK.

In 2010, he has served on the Jury for the Teddy Awards at the 60th Berlinale (Berlin, Germany),[8] Jury for Matter of Act awards at the Movies That Matter film festival (The Hague, Netherlands)[9] and also as Jury for Outfest, Iris Prize, Mardi Gras and Image+Nation.

He is the founder Festival Director of KASHISH Pride Film Festival that is held in Mumbai, India every year for past 14 years, is first ever queer film festival to be held at a mainstream theater - PVR Cinemas (2010), Cinemax (2011-2013) and Liberty Cinema (2014-2023)

He was elected as Regional Director (region 19)[10] of Interpride which is a network of more than 160 Gay Pride organisations from more than 35 countries in 162 cities, dedicated to LGBT Pride parades and other events.

He is also the Festival Director of Flashpoint Human Rights Film Festival that was held in Mumbai, India from 8–10 December 2010 at Alliance française de Bombay and screened 8 documentary films on human rights issues along with panel discussions on several topics like human trafficking and the law, violence against women and religious intolerance.

  1. ^ "LGBT COUPLE BEACH MUMBAI". The Hindu. 6 September 2018.
  2. ^ MYTHREYEE, RAMESH (15 February 2023). "Valentine's Day: Same-Sex Couple in Their 50s Recounts Love Story With 'Pride'". The Quint.
  3. ^ "AIDS film storms small town in Karnataka". Merinews. 19 October 2008. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  4. ^ Smith, Neil (6 May 2004). "UK premiere for Indian drag film". BBC News.
  5. ^ "Call for Indian film censor to be more gay friendly". Smashits. Melon Farmers. 22 July 2009.
  6. ^ "God Save The Queer". Gaylaxy. April 2010. p. 17.
  7. ^ Tania Ameer Khan (June 2010). "A Flight For Freedom". Society Magazine. pp. 66–80.
  8. ^ Sharma, Supreet (5 February 2010). "Indian filmmaker in Berlinale jury". TopNews.
  9. ^ "Movies That Matter Festival Awards Winners Announced - The Hague Online". The Hague Online. 1 April 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2017.
  10. ^ "2013_annual_report_final" (PDF). interpride.[permanent dead link]