Child rights Along with acting in theatre and films internationally, Nandana also promotes the cause of child protection. Nandana, who is the Child Protection Ambassador for Save the Children India, was Smile Ambassador for the global children's NGO
Operation Smile, UNICEF India's National Celebrity for Child Protection and against Gender Based Violence, and Cause Ambassador for RAHI (India's first organization to break the silence about child sexual abuse). She is a Director for the Women's Refuge Commission, New York, serving also on its Program and Advocacy Committee. She collaborates with the
National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) as a Child Rights Expert and Juror for Public Hearings. Nandana has been actively fighting to stop the crisis of child trafficking in India, both with organizations such as the NCPCR and the
Terre des hommes foundation as well as addressing this topic in cinema. She has been invited to speak on the cause of child protection in international conferences, including the Global Call to Action Summit for Child Survival and Development organized by USAID and the International Comprehensive Cleft Care Conference of 2013. Nandana Sen has combined her commitment to child rights with her acting work, including originating the role of the traumatized protagonist of the play "30 Days in September" (Prithvi Theatre) and the film "Chuppee/ The Silence" on Child Abuse (UNIFEM).
Cinema Sen has starred in over 20 feature films from various countries and in various languages. Her portrayal of Sugandha in
Rang Rasiya (2008) has been hailed by critics as "pitch-perfect," "superb," "divine, elegant, and enticing," "innocent and vulnerable," "fearless, uninhibited," "radiant in every frame", "poignant, lustrous", "stunning" and "as refined as it is bold". Sen's groundbreaking performance However, controversial acting choices, Best Actress Awards, and critical acclaim are not unique in Nandana Sen's unconventional career. Sen experienced her first taste of cinema acting while still a student when director
Goutam Ghose tapped her to play the lead in his dark and disturbing psychodrama
The Doll (
Gudia) as one of the targets of a middle-age man's sexual obsession, which premiered at the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival. Sen was first seen on Indian screens as
Rani Mukerji's younger sister in Sanjay Leela Bhasali's award-winning film
Black. Sen's portrayal of a vulnerable teenager was not only critically appreciated but also earned her a nomination for Breakthrough Performance of the Year (Stardust Awards, 2005). In the anti-war film
Tango Charlie, Sen played the female lead opposite
Ajay Devgan starring
Sanjay Dutt and
Bobby Deol and with
Anil Kapoor in ''
My Wife's Murder. Nandana followed this by signing lead roles opposite Salman Khan in the bilingual Hollywood-Bollywood film Marigold, and Vivek Oberoi in Prince, at the same time playing the protagonist in unconventional but acclaimed films such as Strangers
and The Forest''. The British television series
Sharpe increased her notability. The episode
Sharpe’s Peril featured Sen in a pivotal role. In 2007, Sen signed on to portray a young rebellious woman fleeing from law authorities in director
Shamim Sarif's lesbian-themed period drama
The World Unseen. In 2010, Nandana starred in the Bengali super-hit
Autograph, for which she was awarded the TeleCine Award for Best Actress and the Reliance BIG Bangla Rising Star Award. In theatre as in film, Sen has often played an artist's muse and has been critically appreciated each time, including the off-Broadway production "Modigliani", the Bengali blockbuster "Autograph", A favorite cover-girl of leading magazines for women as well as men, such as Femina, Savvy, FHM, Man's World and Maxim, Sen is known as much for her performances as for being comfortable with her sexuality and for speaking her mind: "My body is as much a part of my humanity as my brain, my morals, and my heart, and I will never be ashamed of expressing it with the dignity and self-respect it deserves."
Writing Sen, whose professional choices have included a tenure as a literary editor at
Houghton Mifflin Company, and as Princess Jasmine in Disneyland, is also a children's book author, a screenwriter, a maker of short films, and a published writer in multiple genres, including poetry, narrative non-fiction, and Op Eds. She has authored six children's books,
In My Heart (Penguin Random House India, 2019),
The Monkey Who Wanted to Fly (Italian: La scimmietta che voleva volare, Fetrinelli Kids, 2018),
Talky Tumble of Jumble Farm (Penguin Random House India, 2017),
Not Yet! (
Tulika Books, 2017),
Mambi and the Forest Fire (Puffin, 2016)and
Kangaroo Kisses (Otter-Barry Books, 2016)[https://www.amazon.com/Kangaroo-Kisses-Nandana-Dev-Sen/dp/1910959006. In addition, she has translated and edited a bilingual collection of Bengali poetry,
Make Up Your Mind: 25 Poems About Choice (iUniverse, 2013).In 2021,
Acrobat (Archipelago Books), a collection of her mother's poems translated from the Bengali into English, was published. Sen also writes a fiction series for
The Wire entitled
Youthquake[http://thewire.in/tag/youthquake/. Sen's first original screenplay to be made into a film was
Forever, funded by
Telefilm Canada. She was commissioned by Divani Films to adapt
R.K. Narayan’s novel
Waiting For the Mahatma into a film script, and by Big Bang Company to write an original script focusing on a father-daughter relationship. Currently Nandana is completing the next book in her bestselling Mambi the Marvel series. She is also working on a multigenerational memoir entitled
Mother Tongues, which grew from her essays "Shamelessly Female",. "Every Word a Lifelong Quest" (Lithub, 2021)[https://lithub.com/a-lifetime-of-luminous-poetry-nandana-dev-sen-on-translating-the-work-of-her-mother-nabaneeta/ and "Letter to Ma" (The Ink, 2021) ==Personal life==