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His Breakthrough Year: Kumail Nanjiani of ‘The Big Sick' Marching Into Awards Season

What started as a deeply personal, indie love story, co-written by Nanjiani and his wife Emily Gordon, became the must-see romantic comedy of the summer

"The Big Sick" star Kumail Nanjiani is heading into awards season with a mix of fear and excitement.

After grossing nearly $43 million at the box office, the charming crowd-pleaser picked up two Film Independent Spirit Award nominations and is considered a front-runner for Academy Award nods.

"It's very scary. It's not something that we had really considered at all," said Nanjiani of his film's Oscar buzz. "It's cool to be in the conversation with so many great movies."

What started as a deeply personal, indie love story, co-written by Nanjiani and his wife Emily Gordon, became the must-see romantic comedy of the summer.

"It has certainly exceeded expectations," said Nanjiani during a recent interview at his Los Angeles home. "It's been a lovely surprise."

Set in Chicago, "The Big Sick," which also earned two Screen Actors Guild nominations, follows the couple's unique courtship through cultural conflicts, family ties and sickness. Nanjiani stars alongside Zoe Kazan in the Michael Showalter-directed film.

"When we were showing it at Sundance, we were sitting next to each other at the first screening and she (Gordon) was like, 'This is the last time it will be our story,'" he recalled. "Definitely, you can't take it back. You know, we meet strangers and they think they know us because they do kind of know us."

Fans also know his family, who can be seen lovingly portrayed on the big screen — and possibly in real life at a theater near you.

"I get these tweets from people being like, 'I saw the movie and then there was like this older Pakistani couple that was like, 'Did you like it? That was our son!' So they've been like paying to go see it over and over," he said.

Nanjiani is now back to work filming season five of HBO's "Silicon Valley" as he and Gordon plot their next move.

"There's a feeling of confidence. There's also pressure. I don't know how to follow this," he said with a bulletin board of colorful post-it notes bearing plot points and character ideas looming nearby.

"It's going to be hopefully funny and hopefully serious, but it's a totally different genre," said Nanjiani, who is careful not to divulge too much just yet. "I don't think we can write another lady-going-into-a-coma movie for a little while."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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