Person Biography:
Amit Naidu's acting career began with an open call for a leading role in the 1986 film Touch and Go, opposite Michael Keaton. This was followed by an ABC Afterschool Specials episode, No Greater Gift, where he played Nick Santana, a 12-year-old boy with a terminal illness.
He then appeared in the MacGyver TV series' first-season episode, To Be a Man, in 1986. Other early film credits include Where the River Runs Black, opposite Charles Durning, and Vice Versa.
Between 1988 and 1995, Naidu worked extensively in classical theatre. He returned to film acting in 1996 with Richard Linklater's SubUrbia, for which he was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male.
On screen, Naidu starred in the cult film Office Space, as well as appearing in such films as K-PAX, SUBWAYStories: Tales from the Underground, Requiem for a Dream, Bad Santa, The War Within, The Guru, Waterborne, and Loins of Punjab Presents.
He co-starred as a series regular in the sitcom LateLine and had guest starring roles on the television dramas The Sopranos, The West Wing, and Bored to Death.
As a breakdancer and M.C., Naidu has been working extensively with musicians from the Asian underground music movement for many years. His vocals have appeared on many records, most notably Talvin Singh's mercury award winner "OK".
In 2006, Naidu directed his first feature film Ashes, which had its release in 2010 and won him Best Actor accolades from the MIACC Film Festival in New York and the London Asian Film Festival.
Naidu's most recent theatre credits include The Kid Stays in the Picture at the Royal Court Theatre, The Master and Margarita with Complicite, a world tour of Shakespeare's Measure for Measure with Complicite, The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui alongside Al Pacino, directed by Simon McBurney, and The Little Flower of East Orange alongside Ellen Burstyn at New York's Public Theater, directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman.