IN THE dynamic world of showbusiness, there are talents that emerge like shooting stars, enthralling audiences with their sheer brilliance and leaving an indelible mark on their minds. One such shining star is Ambika Mod, whose screen presence and exceptional acting prowess in the new drama, One Day have garnered widespread acclaim and admiration. Not so long ago, Mod was a little-known ac tress playing supporting characters in TV shows, but this series has catapulted her into a different category altogether. Best remembered to most viewers for her role as the junior doctor, Shruti Acharya, in the BBC medical drama series This Is Going to Hurt (2022), which starred Ben Whishaw.
The young actress has hit gold now with Netflix’s romantic tale of love and longing in One Day. This is a 14-episode miniseries which premiered in the first week February in 2024, on Netflix. It charts the 20-year on and off romance between Emma Morley and Dexter Mayhew. Ambika, 28, plays the female lead Emma while Dexter is essayed by The White Lotus star Leo Woodall. The series is based on Briton David Nicholl’s bestselling novel of the same name. Interestingly, Nicholls later wrote the screenplay for the 2011 film adaptation starring Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess. For the new series, he served as an executive producer and he wrote the penultimate episode.
In one interview, Mod spoke about how she originally turned down the show because being a woman of colour she could not picture herself as Emma, a character previously played by a white woman. “I kept convincing myself that I was not the right person for the part, and to even go up for it would just be a waste of everyone’s time,” Mod, who is of Indian descent, told the publication. She added: “I think part of the reason why I just did not see myself playing that part was because insidiously and implicitly, that is a message that I have been fed my entire life – that people who look like me are not romantic leads, that people who look like me are not the people who the male romantic lead will fall in love with.” The young ac tress said that she was feeling quite dis appointed by a lot of things she was auditioning for, but One Day came as a breath of fresh air. She saw it as her biggest part yet, loved the book and said it had a personal resonance for her and as a woman of colour “there’s just not that many roles out there” she confided. Getting this role as a South Asian woman was a step forward in terms of representation and enabled others to dream what might be possible too. “I took a long time to see myself in the role of Emma. But I am really proud of it now that I have seen the full thing,” she told a newswire. She was born in Potters Bar, Hertfordshire, to Indian par ents; her mother arrived in the UK as a child, and her father arrived in his 20s.
She attended Dame Alice Owens School but it was not until college that she discovered her passion for the performing arts. She took acting lessons and performed in her college revue and later ended up per forming at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2015. After a few years around the comedy circuit, Mod began to slowly explore screen acting and scored her first credited role in a short film in 2018. Following a series of short films, she bagged her first prominent role in This Is Going to Hurt. Mod earnt praise for being the highlight among the “regular female characters” on the show. Later, she won the Broadcasting Press Guild Award for Best Ac tress for her performance. Ambika also appeared in a couple of episodes of Billie Piper’s I Hate Suzie and a single episode of Apple TV+ comedy Trying. She is now set to play the lead role in the upcoming Disney+ series, Play date. The British series also features Holliday Grainger, Denise Gough, Jim Sturgess, and Bronagh Waugh in prominent roles. Playmate is an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Alex Dahl.