Sunny Leone skips premiere of film on her life

TORONTO: Canadian-born, American-bred Bollywood actress Sunny Leone, the subject of a new documentary, has, in a sudden and strange twist, developed cold feet over certain aspects of the tell-all film.
“Mostly Sunny,” made by Toronto-based photojournalist and filmmaker Dilip Mehta, had its world premiere at the 41st Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), but Sunny chose to stay away from the event despite being in New York, only a short flight away.
“Days ahead of the premiere, she called me and demanded that I delete the stray topless clips that I have used from her adult films,” Mehta said.
“That is rather surprising coming from Sunny, who claims on camera that she does not give a damn about what people think of her past as an adult entertainer,” says the documentarian whose fiction debut, “Cooking With Stella “(2009), also premiered in TIFF.
“Sunny’s absence from TIFF has piqued everybody’s interest. I can understand why. Had she attended the premiere in a festival as big as this one, it would have only earned her a great deal of mileage,” Mehta said.
On hindsight, says Mehta, it is just as well that Sunny Leone isn’t here. “The focus is now entirely on the film,” he adds.
Mehta filmed the erstwhile porn diva over a period of two years in Canada, the US, India, London and Malaysia.
The “Mostly Sunny” shoot began – “in Chandigarh of all places,” says the director – when her film “Jackpot” bombed and the actress and her husband and business manager Daniel Weber were on the verge of packing up and returning to New York.
In the documentary, Sunny admits as much: “Jackpot sank like the Titanic, to the bottom of the ocean.”
“Bollywood offers dried up. But her luck turned in the nick of time with the ‘Baby Doll’ number (in ‘Ragini MMS 2’). She and her husband have since aggressively promoted the Sunny Leone brand and made much headway,” Mehta says.
And that is essentially the improbable story that “Mostly Sunny” narrates in a refreshingly non-judgmental and entertaining way.
“There is absolutely nothing exploitative in the film,” asserts Mehta. “If anything, ‘Mostly Sunny’ paints a portrait of a beautiful and intelligent woman who has lived life on her own terms.”
“Mostly Sunny” charts the life of Sunny Leone, born Karenjit Kaur Vohra in Sarnia, Ontario (a two-hour drive from Toronto), from her childhood in a conservative Sikh family to her shift to Los Angeles, her emergence as one of the biggest adult movie stars in the world and her subsequent mainstream movie career breakthroughs in Mumbai.