From wanting to be a filmmaker to enabling other storytellers, Purohit has come a long way, and her stint with Amazon Prime Video India as the head of Originals is full of wins
Aparna Purohit, Head of India Originals, · Amazon Prime Video
Image: Mexy Xavier
It was 2008. The storyteller was about to script a bold plot. Five years after landing in Mumbai, Aparna Purohit was elated to go back to her original dream of turning an independent director-producer. A postgrad in mass communications from Jamia Millia Islamia University in Delhi, Purohit landed in Mumbai in 2003. “I just came with a dream of telling stories,” recalls the head of Originals, Amazon Prime Video India. The young woman dreamt of making it big in the film industry. “I felt like the world was waiting for this new director to arrive on the scene,” she recounts.
As an outsider, Purohit had a dream beginning. Within a week, she got a job in a TV show. “I was the only woman assistant director,” she says. The director and the creator didn’t view her through the lens of gender. For the rest of the crew, however, she remained the odd one out. “A young woman giving instructions wasn’t really the easiest thing to do,” she says. Later, Purohit bagged multiple projects, started her film career assisting directors such as Aparna Sen, Bharatbala and Naseeruddin Shah, and her corporate journey had stints at Sony Entertainment Television and UTV Motion Pictures.
By 2008, Purohit was ready to take the solo plunge. She left her cushioned corporate job, and entered into the storytelling business with three friends. The venture was aptly named ‘Chaaryaar Productions’. “I thought it would be easy,” she says.
What awaited her, though, were multiple slaps of reality. The production house churned out multiple stories but there were no takers. “We went from studio to studio, door to door… but nothing happened,” she rues. What made things worse was the entry of one more villain. The year 2008 was when recession hit the country. “Getting back into the system wasn’t easy. It was a very tough year,” she recalls.
(This story appears in the 03 December, 2021 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)