The British Council, Indian High Commission and UK government named 2017 the ‘UK India Year of Culture’, which was launched by the Queen. The year it was held was significant as it marked 70 years of Indian Independence from the British Raj. Its aim was to celebrate the relationship between the two nations through cultural events, exhibitions and activities organised in both countries throughout the year. The Nehru Centre is the cultural wing of the High Commission of India in the UK which was established in 1992.
Cuisine is regarded as a British national dish.
Indian cuisine is extremely popular in the United Kingdom. The first exclusively Indian restaurant was the
Hindoostanee Coffee House which opened in 1810. Curry gained popularity in the UK in the 1940s and 1950s.
Veeraswamy, located on
Regent Street in
London, is the oldest surviving Indian restaurant in the UK, having opened in 1926. Veeraswamy is believed to be the origin of combining a curry and a pint of beer. Seven Indian restaurants have a Michelin Star - six of which are located in London including Veeraswamey, with the only Michelin rated restaurant outside of London based in Birmingham - Opheem.
Film at the British Indian Awards in 2019 Notable British Indian films include
Bend It Like Beckham, whose story revolves around British Indian life, and
Slumdog Millionaire, a British drama film set in
Mumbai starring British Indian actor
Dev Patel in the lead role. The latter has won four
Golden Globes, seven
BAFTA Awards and
eight Academy Awards.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, a British film set in India, was nominated for two
Golden Globes and one
BAFTA, grossing US$31 million at the end of the UK run. Besides British-produced Indian-based films, there are many
Bollywood productions which have been filmed in the UK, including
Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge,
Yaadein,
Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham and
Jab Tak Hai Jaan. The following is a partial list of films based on British Indian life, British films shot in India or with an Indian theme or has British Indian actors:
Music Indian influence on
British popular music dates back to the development of
raga rock by British
rock bands such as
The Beatles and
The Rolling Stones; several Beatles songs (such as "
Within You Without You") also featured London-based Indian musicians. Today, British Indian musicians exist in almost every field and genre. Notable British Indian Bhangra acts include
Panjabi MC,
Rishi Rich,
Juggy D,
Jay Sean,
DCS,
Bally Sagoo and
Sukshinder Shinda. World-famous award-winning singer-songwriter
Freddie Mercury (a former member of the rock band
Queen) was born on the island of
Zanzibar to
Parsi parents, originally from the
Gujarat area of India. Mercury (born Farrokh Bulsara) and his family fled when he was 17 years old due to the
Zanzibar Revolution; he remains not only one of the most famous British Indian musicians of all time, but one of the most famous British musicians. Other world-famous British Indian musicians include
Biddu, who produced a number of worldwide
disco hits such as "
Kung Fu Fighting", one of the
best-selling singles of all time having sold eleven million records worldwide, and
Apache Indian, who also had worldwide hits such as "
Boom Shack-A-Lak". Jay Sean, whose parents immigrated to the United Kingdom from the Punjab region, is the first solo British Asian artist to reach the #1 spot on the
Billboard Hot 100 with his single "
Down" selling more than four million copies in the United States, making him "the most successful male UK urban artist in US chart history." Other contemporary British Indian singers include S-Endz and
BRIT Award-nominated
Nerina Pallot.
Literature British Indians have also contributed to British literature. Well known examples include author
Salman Rushdie who won the
Booker Prize in 1981. More contemporary contributions come from authors including
Nikesh Shukla who is the editor of the 2016 collection of essays
The Good Immigrant, which explores the experience of immigrant and ethnic minority life in the United Kingdom from their perspective, including contributions from other British Indians
Nish Kumar and
Himesh Patel. The
Harry Potter series, by British author
JK Rowling, also features two notable characters who are presumed to be of Indian Marathi descent - Padma and Parvati Patil.
Art British Artist
F. N. Souza was one of the first Indian artists to work in Britain after the war. Together with
Avinash Chandra they were the first British Indian artists to be included in the national collection at the Tate. In 1962, the
Festival of India - a six-month celebration of Indian culture and art - was held across a number of prestigious galleries and museums in London and was called "most comprehensive collection of Indian painting and sculpture ever assembled anywhere" by the New York Times. The Indian Painters Collective (IPC) was formed in London in 1963. They created the first artistic body of its kind outside of India and achieve the first group showing of Indian artists in the UK. In 1978 IPC was renamed Indian Artists UK (IAUK) with the desire to establish an Indian Academy of Visual Arts in Britain. Sir
Anish Kapoor is a British sculptor who came to prominence in the 1980s and later went onto win the
Turner Prize in 2002.
Fashion Neelam Gill is the first British Indian model to feature as a high fashion model.
Supriya Lele is a British Indian fashion designer who blends her heritage into her work.
Priya Ahluwalia is a British designer of Nigerian and Indian descent and the founder of menswear brand Ahluwalia and was given the Queen Elizabeth II Award for British Design. In March 2020, Ahluwalia was featured in the Forbes 30 under 30 European Arts and Culture list. Mandeep and Hardeep Chohan, twin sisters of Indian origin jointly own fashion label, Nom de Mode, which draws inspiration from their roots.
Sports Cricket is one of the main sports played by British Indians, due to its prominent heritage in both the UK and India. Over twice as many British South Asians play football rather than cricket, however. There is also a minor presence of
traditional Indian games in the community.
Television Long-running British soap operas such as
Coronation Street,
EastEnders,
Emmerdale and
Hollyoaks have all had significant numbers of Indian characters, while shorter British series such as
The Jewel in the Crown and
Skins also feature British Indian characters. By far the most notable British Indian television shows are
Goodness Gracious Me and
The Kumars at No. 42, a talk show that stars many famous British Indian actors including
Sanjeev Bhaskar,
Meera Syal, Indira Joshi and
Vincent Ebrahim which originally aired on the BBC. British Indian actors not only have a strong presence in the UK, but also in the
United States, where
Parminder Nagra,
Naveen Andrews and
Kunal Nayyar (who are all Britons of Indian origin) have found fame in
ER,
Lost,
The Big Bang Theory and
Desperate Housewives respectively, though Nagra is the only one to portray an actual British citizen of Indian descent.
Dr Ranj is a British Indian TV host best known as a celebrity dancer on
Strictly Come Dancing, and co-creating and presenting the CBeebies show
Get Well Soon. There are dozens of TV channels aimed at the British Indian community available on Satellite and Cable, which include:
Radio The
BBC Asian Network is a radio station available across the United Kingdom which is aimed predominantly at Britons of
South Asian origin under 35 years of age. Besides this popular station there are only a few other national radio stations for or run by the British Indian community — including
Sunrise and
Yarr Radios. Regional British Indian stations include
Asian Sound of Manchester,
Hindu Sanskar and
Sabras Radios of Leicester,
Kismat Radio of London,
Radio XL of Birmingham and
Sunrise Radio Yorkshire based in Bradford (which itself has a much larger Pakistani than Indian community). ==Achievements ==