Coming off successful roles in the Apple+ sci-fi drama See and SBS crime thriller Dead Lucky, Mojean Aria returned from his professional base in the U.S. to his hometown of Sydney with another film under his belt (the upcoming Reminiscence with Hugh Jackman) and a thriving career.
That’s when The Australian Institute for Performing Arts, called. They asked Aria, 28, to teach a multi-day masterclass at the place where he and peers Eliza Scanlen, Danielle Macdonald and Liv Hewson honed their craft. “It means a lot,” Aria says. “AIPA has been a massive part of my foundation, especially in creating a gateway to go to Los Angeles, which initially felt unrealistic and they made it feasible.”
But Aria had one wish before he committed to the gig — a chance to see someone like him amongst his students. So he worked with the Institute’s director of logistics, Marg Haynes, to create a scholarship specifically for Middle Eastern and North African youth that would cover tuition, room and board for the six-day, five-night residential program happening mid-December in Stanwell Tops, just south of Sydney.
“AIPA has always been a safe place for all to train,” he says, “but the issue, I think, is that a lot of these immigrant and first-generation communities in Australia don't believe film, arts or entertainment is even an option for them, or that they would feel safe in those teaching environments.
“I know first-hand as I have two films happening here with very diverse casts that we have a strong need for Australian actors from all backgrounds,” Aria adds, “but we aren't developing them at the same rate. My hope is that word about this scholarship can spread and won’t just give one lucky person the scholarship, but that it will inspire other people to come to the arts.”
The son of Iranian immigrants, Aria channeled his rebellious childhood energy into acting and discovered that he had an aptitude and deep interest in the craft. However, being the only person of colour amongst his peers “built barriers that were hard to break through,” he admits. “As soon as someone asked me where my name was from, and I'd say, ‘Iran,’ I could feel how the energy often shifted. It mainly came from ignorance, of course, as the same things they feared about Iran, so did I!”
While he studied diligently in classes at NIDA and Metro Screen and learned to make friends, Aria could not find roles that interested him in Australia, nor did casting directors seem ready to take a chance on him. “I wasn't going to fit the mould,” he says. “I was, and still am, inspired by American actors like Robert De Niro and Al Pacino who could weave their ethnicities into something global and dynamic.”
He moved to Los Angeles in his late teens. Aria’s early work in theatre and short films would gain acclaim, leading to his receiving the 2017 Heath Ledger Scholarship from the Australians in Film foundation. Further industry support allowed him access to top management and a longstanding kinship with an acting legend.
“I’ve kept in touch with Kim, Heath’s father, to let him know that, ‘Hey, I’ve booked this role,’ or, ‘Hey, I might do this film,’ or, ‘Hey, I’m here, or I’m there,’” Aria says. “I feel it’s important. He has put his soul and his work on the line to give me an opportunity and I should let him know of any opportunity that I can, that it is not for nothing and that I am representing that legacy to the best of my ability and I will hold true to my promises.”