I'm Not a Terrorist, But I've Played One on TV (2 page)

Wow, I think this new blazer I bought makes me look really hot because all of these scantily clad, beautiful women in lingerie keep staring at me.
As Sally Field would say, “I can't deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!” Turns out that right then they just really liked my credit card, which at that time in my comic career was maxed out.

I once talked to a stripper for a while and the conversation came around to the fact that she needed a sugar daddy. She was telling me about her rent problems and how she had a little dog she needed to feed and the whole time I was thinking,
I wonder how many months' rent I could cover with my credit card that might have $250 left before it hits the limit
.
Maybe I could at least pay for a bag of dog food for her dog. I wonder if that gives me a shot with this girl.

I know this is a story about Dallas, but to be completely honest the dog food conundrum occurred at a strip club in Los Angeles. There are so many Persians in Los Angeles and we have a reputation for being well-off financially, so perhaps this girl was thinking that I was a sheikh or a shah or at least a chiropractor—for some reason there's an inordinate number of Persian chiropractors in Los Angeles. I think it's because it's an easy way to consider yourself a doctor and impress people while also being able to charge insurance companies and make the kind of money to be able to afford a Mercedes-Benz, which every self-loving Persian owns—preferably in black with a personalized license plate like CHIRODK which could be read as Chiro Dick but is actually meant to be read as Chiro Doc.

But back to Dallas. My costar on the Chuck Norris film, who was also a Middle Easterner playing a terrorist, talked me into going to a strip club, since that seemed to be the place most recommended by the locals. At the time I was dating a girl who would later become my wife and I felt bad going to the strip club
and not telling her even though I honestly didn't want to go. At some point I gave in to my guilt and decided to call her to tell her where I was.

“Honey, it's me. I have something very important to tell you.”

“What?”

“I've just realized that I really, really love you.”

“That's nice to hear, Maz. What made you come to this conclusion?”

“Well I'm at a strip club and I was talking to this stripper and I realized I had zero desire to get a lap dance from her. Then later, during the lap dance, the only person I was thinking about was you and I thought I'd call and let you know that I'm at a strip club and thinking about you.”

“Where are you?”

“At a strip club. Even though a Jimi Hendrix song came on—and Jimi has something like a fifteen-minute blues riff in this one, which is one of the most efficient songs to get a lap dance to—I decided to call you instead.”

Click.

“Honey? Hello? You don't like Jimi Hendrix?”

That was not the end of the stripper saga for my wife and me. Years later, my son Dhara came to a show at the Comedy Store in L.A. called
The Naughty Show.
I didn't think twice before taking him because I just had to stop in and do a set. It's like fifteen minutes, round-trip. As I'm waiting to go up they have a pole dancer come out and do a dance. I'm in the back getting ready to go on and not thinking at all that my four-year-old is out in the audience watching a stripper do a pole dance.

A few weeks later out of nowhere he mentions it. “Daddy, why was that lady dancing on a pole?”

I realized I had become my parents, letting my little
Iranian-Indian-American kid see things he was not supposed to see, like J. R. Ewing, and strippers.

“Um, she was actually an off-duty fireman. She was practicing going up and down the pole to save people.”

I hope I didn't mess him up too bad. But mostly I hope he never tells my wife.

Fighting Chuck Norris

I was heading into this fantastic stripper and cowboy land to face down its favorite son in a battle for—well, a battle for the attention of television viewers awake at two o'clock in the morning on a Tuesday. This was before September 11, but even back then Hollywood supported the stereotype of Iranians and other Middle Easterners as members of an evil cabal. My earliest acting roles cast me in the way that I was, of course, paranoid that my fellow Americans saw me—as a terrorist. I was working then as an assistant at an advertising agency, and while I did not want to take these roles promoting a stereotype that I knew to be false, I felt I had to in order to build my career. I also wanted what most Americans wanted—to quit my day job. If that meant yelling “
Allah o akbar
!
” at the climax of an action scene, right before the good guys killed me, so be it.

One of my early parts was in that movie starring Chuck Norris. As a Middle Eastern male, when you're in a Chuck Norris movie of the week you know you're going to die. You will never see a movie with Chuck and Hassan becoming besties and saving the world together.

“Hey Chuck—you get these guys and I'll get the other guys and see you back at the base.
Allah o akbar
!

Those words will never be spoken in a Chuck Norris movie because audiences watch those movies to see Chuck Norris roundhouse kick anyone or anything that does not comply with Chuck Norris's worldview. They don't want Chuck Norris to get a Middle Eastern partner. They don't want Chuck Norris to be tolerant of other ethnicities and cultures. So when I got the call about auditioning for a Chuck Norris film, I knew it was for a bad guy.

The movie was titled—wait for it—
The President's Man: A Line in the Sand
. If you ever get the chance to watch this movie, don't. I played the role of a physicist who worked for an Osama bin Laden type who had come to Chicago to do what all Middle Eastern characters do in Chuck Norris films—attempt to blow up buildings, then suffer a fury of Chuck Norris roundhouse kicks to the face. Again, this was
before
September 11.

I was torn. On the one hand, playing a terrorist and promoting this stereotype. On the other hand, quitting my day job. I found a compromise: I would bring humanity to the role and in the process move my career forward and be one step closer to quitting my day job. Maybe I could tweak my delivery of words such as, “I will kill you in the name of Allah!” What if I said those lines but made them more humane by posing them as a question? “I will kill you in the name of Allah?” “Would you mind if I killed you in the name of Allah?” “If I had to kill you in the name of anyone, is it okay to do so in the name of, oh, I don't know . . . Allah?” This Chuck Norris movie would be my ticket to stardom. Who knows, maybe I'd even win an Emmy for it. Actors have a little trick where we give characters backstory, imagining their lives before the present moment in order to more accurately tap into the persona. I decided I would bring depth to this character, really show the sophisticated American viewing public that watches movies at two
o'clock in the morning on Tuesdays what made this guy tick. I dug deep to understand how my character had developed up until the point that Chuck Norris would kick him in the face—something along the lines of how he had been a kid in Afghanistan when the Russians attacked and killed his parents with arms supplied by the Great Satan, which furthered his hatred maybe not directly in regards to Chuck Norris, but Chuck Norris–related things, such as America. As you can see my logic was all twisted because if the Russians killed his parents, why would they use weapons from America? America was their enemy. None of this made sense.

I showed up at my wardrobe fitting feeling good about how I would portray this terrorist. Then the wardrobe lady handed me my outfit, which included a shirt, pants, and . . . a turban? Wait a second. I was playing an Afghan in America who wants to blow up a building. Afghans in America do not wear turbans. And Afghans in America planning to blow up buildings
definitely
do not wear turbans (unless they're hiding the bomb under the turban, in which case the turban could come in really handy).

“I've done my research,” I begged the wardrobe lady. “I'm trying to bring humanity to this role. Don't you see? Russians killed his parents!”

She tilted her head, confused. “Then why does he want to kill Americans?”

“I don't know! Maybe he's just angry and wants to take it out on anyone. Or maybe he couldn't get a ticket to Moscow so he came to Chicago.”

She shrugged. “Either way, this is the outfit the producers said to wear.”

“But it doesn't make sense.”

“And your story does?”

“Good point, but I still think he wouldn't wear the turban.”

She shrugged again. “I'll let the producers know.”

The next day when I showed up at my trailer, I looked in my closet to find a shirt, pants, and . . . a scarf.

“I see you spoke with the producers and they saw it my way. I appreciate that. And I will gladly wear this scarf instead. Thank you.”

“That's not a scarf. That's the turban. You just gotta roll it up on your head.”

“Are you kidding me? Did you even talk to the producers?”

“Yep! And they want you to wear the turban.”

I spent the morning discussing it with anyone who would listen. “My character would want to blend in.” “The turban is so cliché.” “He had a rough childhood.” “He's just misunderstood, really.” “He'd rather be in Moscow!” Everyone nodded, but they were all in cahoots and certain that the turban was cinematic gold.

Come to find out, everyone who works on a Chuck Norris film is somehow related to Chuck Norris. The director was Chuck's kid. The executive producer was Chuck's brother. All of the Norrises had decided—probably at Norris Sunday supper over giant bowls of meat—that the bad guy would be easier for the audience to recognize at two o'clock on a Tuesday morning if he was wearing a turban.

Worse than furious, I was humiliated. Why did I think I could bring humanity to this character? It was a Chuck Norris movie, after all. Adding insult to injury, it was a Chuck Norris movie in which Chuck Norris played a college professor. But I was still looking forward to the fight scene between Chuck and me, a moment that I hoped would become iconic in the Norris oeuvre.

On the day we were set to shoot the fight scene, Norris showed
up and had a word with his son. Why this never came up when all the Norrises had gathered around to craft this masterpiece in the first place we'll never know, but Chuck decided rather than fighting me, it would be much easier just to shoot me. In my head I had choreographed this amazing fight scene where Chuck and I would go blow for blow, then he would eventually pull on my turban and it would unravel, making me spin and get dizzy. Chuck would give my character the final roundhouse kick to the face, and I would be immortalized on film. Instead, he just had me run toward him with a machine gun in my hand and he took out a pistol and shot me. Nice and quick. No time to milk it. Good-bye Emmy!

By the time the film was ready, September 11 had occurred. I was mortified that they might release it but fairly certain they would not. Then, a couple months after 9/11, I read that Chuck Norris had actually come out and pushed to release the movie, claiming it was a patriotic film because the terrorists got what they deserved. I was worried people would see me in the streets and think I was an actual terrorist: “Hey, ain't that the sumbitch hassling Chuck Norris the other night on channel eight? Let's get him!”

I wrote letters to Chuck and CBS, asking them to
not
run the movie, but I heard nothing back. Soon I saw it on my TV listings and steeled myself to watch. The good news was that it was so, so bad, I couldn't get past the first ten minutes. I found reason to hope that very few people would be able to bear watching long enough to get to my scenes. I thought to myself,
Someone should shoot me not for being a terrorist, but for agreeing to do this movie.

Lights, Camera, You Go!

After that I told my agents no more terrorist parts, no matter what. After all, 99.99 percent of Middle Eastern people are
not
terrorists, and by playing one on television I was promoting this stereotype. So I said, “That's it, never again.” Then the show
24
called. They said they had a part for a terrorist.

“No!” I told them.

“But,” they continued, “he changes his mind halfway through the mission!”

“Ahhh, the ambivalent terrorist! I suppose it doesn't hurt to play just ONE more,” I said. “I mean, this guy's a terrorist with a heart of gold. I'll bring humanity to the role. And then quit my day job. Emmy Awards, take two.”

Even my family and friends were getting tired of watching me die. It's exhausting bragging to people that you were hired to star in a movie or show and alerting them to when the program will air, all the while knowing that the story will climax with your death. After the episode of
24
aired, my mother called to discuss my burgeoning film career.

“Vhy you keep dying?”

“What do you mean why do I keep dying? This is the movies. That's how they write it, Mom.”

“Vhy don't you kill
dem
von time?”

“I can't just kill them. There are scripts, wardrobes, directors, other actors. I can't just start doing my own thing.”

“Sure you can. Vhen they say ‘lights, camera,' you go on camera. Don't vait for ‘action,' you little pussy. That movie you were in vith Chuck Norris—I vatch again the other day. There vas plenty of opportunities to kill him, but he kill you instead.”

It was not just me who was sick of dying. It was my mother, too. And that's when I took my final stand and stopped taking these parts. I have not played or auditioned for another terrorist role in more than ten years. My management knew about my choice and although they supported it, there were times they just wanted to triple-check that I was still standing strong.

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