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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Lifestyle
Vicky Jessop

Who is Varada Sethu, the Andor star set to be a new Doctor Who companion?

In April Doctor Who fans were thrilled to find out that a second companion is joining Ncuti Gatwa’s Time Lord in next year’s fifteenth season of the show.

For months there had been rumours that British actor Varada Sethu would be replacing Millie Gibson in the companion role – but this wasn’t quite right.

As confirmed by the BBC, the 31-year-old is in fact coming onboard the Tardis in 2025, alongside Gibson and Gatwa.

"Right now in the studio, shooting for 2025, we've got Ncuti, Millie and Varada fighting side by side – we need all three, because the stakes are higher than ever!” said Russell T Davies on social media.

In an interview Gibson explained: “It was a little bit of a misunderstanding. But I’m very much in season two [of Gatwa’s Doctor Who].”With excitement about Doctor Who currently at fever pitch – the brand new, fourteenth season is set to land on BBC iPlayer and Disney+ in just a few days, on May 11 – we can’t help but think about the future of the show.

So who is Varada Sethu? Here’s all we know about the Doctor’s soon-to-be companion.

Born in India, raised in Newcastle

Sethu was born in 1992 in Kerala, India. Her parents are both doctors, and she has a twin sister called Abhaya. When she was young, her family moved to the North-East, and she grew up in Benton, near Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

As a teenager, Sethu was interested in acting: she was a member of the National Youth Theatre and won the 2010 Miss Newcastle competition in her final year of sixth form. She’s also a longtime practitioner of Bharatanatyam and Mohiniyattam, forms of Indian traditional dance.

Despite her theatre background, she studied veterinary medicine at Bristol University, later switching to physiology, before going onto study at the Identity School of Acting in London.

She’s appeared in Doctor Foster and Annika

Varada Sethu (Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

Sethu’s onscreen career started slowly. She made an appearance in the 2010 short film Impressions as Samena, and then appeared in Malayam-language film English: An Autumn in London in 2012.

“I really enjoyed it,” she told The Hindu about the experience. “I didn’t struggle as my character was born and brought up in the UK and did not have any lines in Malayalam. I can’t really read Malayalam. But it was great to be working in a set where everyone spoke my language and had great Indian food. It felt like a family.”

After that, she appeared as Peaseblossom in a 2016 film adaptation of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and also featured in Now You See Me 2, opposite Michael Caine and Daniel Radcliffe – as well as the blockbuster Jurassic World: Dominion. More recently, she starred as Aisha in two episodes of the Suranne Jones thriller Doctor Foster, and as DS Harper Weston in the 2022 BBC show Annika.

Though she’s currently working in the UK, Sethu has also expressed an interest in returning to Malayam-language parts, “If it’s a good role and script... but I can’t straddle both worlds, and right now I know the career that I want to build is in the British and American market. It is impossible to do a film elsewhere without taking time away from this.”

Her big break was in Andor

In 2022, Sethu played rebel Cinta Kaz in Disney+ series Andor: her character is one of the people who helps execute the rebel heist on the planet of Aldhani, opposite Diego Luna’s Cassian Andor.

“She was written as someone who doesn’t speak a lot, but when she does, she holds a presence,” Sethu said of her character. “I think Vel (Faye Marsay) was described in the script as someone who is physically powerful and commanding, and Cinta is the one who looks meek, and may not be capable of violence. So it’s a shock when people see her in action.”

She also spoke about her character’s romantic relationship with Marsay’s Vel, a woman. “I loved that it’s not made a big deal of. It’s just like something that exists, and other team members just accept them,” she said.

“I expected there to be loads of people picking up on it, and there really wasn’t. That’s actually even more beautiful because, ideally, it shouldn’t be a big deal at all.”

Her Doctor Who character

Not much has been revealed about Sethu’s character yet, but we do know that she’s been a hit on set: A BBC source told The Mirror that “Varada is a real gem, Russell was just blown away by her talent. The cast and crew have really warmed to her and he’s sure the fans will too.”

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