Lisa Ray

Lisa Ray Wiki

Celebs NameLisa Ray
GenderFemale
BirthdateApril 4, 1972
DayApril 04
Year1972
NationalityCanada
Age48 years
Birth SignAries
Body Stats
Height5 feet 8 inches
WeightNot Available
MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available
Feet SizeNot Available
Dress SizeNot Available
Net Worth$20 Million

Explore about the Famous Model Lisa Ray, who was born in Canada on April 4, 1972. Analyze Lisa Ray’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Lisa Ray dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Lisa Ray?

Lisa Ray Birthday Countdown

0 0 0
Days
:
0 0
Hours
:
0 0
Minutes
:
0 0
Seconds

Lisa Ray Biography

Actress, model and philanthropist who, in 2002, was voted Star of the Future at the Toronto International Film Festival. She was also honored with the Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2013.

She began her modeling career at 16 after being discovered while on vacation with her family.

In 2013, she was named one of Canada’s 50 Most Beautiful Stars in Hello Canada magazine.

She married Jason Dehni in 2012.

She shared the screen with Woody Harrelson in the 2009 film Defendor.

Ray has since worked in productions from Canada, Europe, and the United States. Past roles include a farm girl in All Hat, a school teacher in A Stone’s Throw, and a housewife in 1950s-apartheid South Africa in The World Unseen. In 2008 Ray starred, alongside Sheetal Sheth and Amber Rose Revah, in the Shamim Sarif directed British romantic comedy I Can’t Think Straight that went on to win awards in queer film festivals worldwide, including Dallas OUT TAKES, Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, and Tampa International Gay and Lesbian Film festival.

Lisa Rani Ray (born 4 April 1972) is an Indian Canadian actor, author, columnist, model, performer, philanthropist, social activist, television and theater personality. Ray begun her modelling career in the early 1990s, appearing for leading Indian brands like Bombay Dyeing and Lakmé. Alongside, she made her acting debut in 1996 in the Tamil film Nethaji. Her first Bollywood appearance was in 2001, in the offbeat romantic thriller Kasoor. Through her acting career, Ray has demonstrated a penchant for issue-oriented portrayals, most notably in the 2005 Oscar nominated Canadian film Water and the award-winning South African feature The World Unseen, described by a reviewer as “one of the best-conceived queer films of the past year.”

After turning down a number of roles, Ray made her Indian Film Industry debut in 2001 with the Hindi film Kasoor, opposite Aftab Shivdasani, in which her voice was dubbed by Divya Dutta, because she could not speak Hindi. In spite of that, her performance received positive reviews. Her work in the film also caught the eye of Deepa Mehta, who cast her in the romantic Indian-Canadian romp Bollywood/Hollywood in 2002.

After graduation, Ray based herself out of Milan, Paris, and New York from 2004–2008, returning to Toronto upon her mother’s death in late 2008. In 2007, Ray completed filming for Kill Kill Faster Faster, which is a contemporary film noir inspired by the critically acclaimed novel of the same name, by Joel Rose. She guest-starred in a 2009 episode of the USA Network series Psych, and appeared in Woody Harrelson starrer Canadian-American superhero film Defendor. Also in 2009, she starred in the Deepa and Dilip Mehta comedy Cooking with Stella.

Realising that acting was something that she wanted to pursue more seriously, Ray moved to London to concentrate on a career in the performing arts. While there, Ray studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama, the London Centre for Theatre Studies, the Desmond Jones school of Physical Theatre, and BADA. She graduated from the Academy of Live and Recorded Arts (ALRA), in 2004, with a post-graduate degree in acting. While studying, Ray made a conscious effort to not accept any film offers until she had graduated. However, while still at ALRA, she received another call from Deepa Mehta, who made her an offer she simply could not refuse—the lead role of Kalyani in Mehta’s much-anticipated, and eventually highly controversial, feature, Water. In the film, Lisa spoke her lines in Hindi, although her voice was dubbed in the final cut. Water released in 2005 to both national and global critical acclaim, with the venerable Roger Ebert describing it as “lovely in the way Satyajit Ray’s films are lovely,”

On 23 June 2009, Ray was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a cancer of the white blood cells known as plasma cells, which produce antibodies. It is a rare disease. In April 2010, she announced that she was cancer-free, after a stem cell transplant. As multiple myeloma is an incurable disease, Ray is not completely cured of the disease.

After her multiple myeloma diagnosis in 2009, Ray began The Yellow Diaries, a chronicle of her days with cancer. Right from the first entry on September 6, 2009, her writing struck a chord with readers, receiving more than 2000 comments in the first two weeks alone. Most of them were from fans she had never met, offering support and encouragement. Ray told CTV News she was “a little stunned” from the overwhelming response. “I’m putting a lot of energy into it because there’s this community and support system out there, and this strange and wonderful phenomenon of people sharing and being really open,” Ray told Canada AM in 2009.

On Christmas in 2009, Ray received a stem cell transplant to treat her rare cancer. In April 2010, she announced she was cancer-free due to the transplant. She gave a candid interview on her personal cancer trauma and surviving it, appearing on the cover of the 2010 anniversary issue of the Indian men’s luxury magazine The Man.

Appearing at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival in support of the film, Ray revealed that she had been diagnosed with multiple myeloma.

In 2009, Ray was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, an incurable form of blood cancer. She began writing The Yellow Diaries, a blog about her experiences in living with cancer. Her writing and columns have since regularly appeared in multiple major publications. Ray remains an active advocate of stem-cell therapy and has participated in several successful fundraisers and cancer awareness campaigns.

In 2010, Ray attended the Estee Lauder Breast Cancer event to spread awareness about breast cancer. As a long-time yoga practitioner, Ray partnered with co-owners Paris and Annette, in 2011, to open Moksha Yoga Brampton.

In 2010, Ray was declared cancer-free after a stem cell transplant and she was approached by HarperCollins to write a memoir. Ray began writing it in late 2010, but after submitting the manuscript, had an “instinctive reaction” which made her withdraw it and return to the drawing board. “… this was not the book I wanted to write,” Ray said in a 2019 interview.

On 5 July 2010, Ray hosted an informal lunch for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip during their visit to Toronto.

2010 saw Ray in UniGlobe Entertainment’s cancer docu-drama titled 1 a Minute. The documentary was made by Namrata Singh Gujral and featured cancer survivors Olivia Newton-John, Diahann Carroll, Melissa Etheridge, Mumtaz, Bárbara Mori and Jaclyn Smith, as well as William Baldwin, Daniel Baldwin, and Priya Dutt, whose lives have been touched by cancer. The feature was narrated by Kelly McGillis.

Also in 2011, Ray became the face of jewellery brand Hillberg & Berk’s 2011 campaign, with the brand donating $25 from the sale of each necklace to Multiple Myeloma Canada.

Also in 2011, Ray appeared as host and travel guide on Oh My Gold, a five part series on Discovery Travel and Living, now TLC India.

She presented the 2011 IIFA Awards in Toronto, and was a co-presenter the 2011 Giller Prize along with singer-songwriter Nelly Furtado and roots rock guitar legend Robbie Robertson.

In 2011, Ray acted in the acclaimed stage play Taj, opposite Kabir Bedi at Luminato Festival, Toronto’s International Festival of Arts and Ideas. Written by celebrated Canadian playwright John Murrell, Taj combined poetry, music, theatre, and the Indian classical dance form kathak. The production was described by The Globe and Mail critic Deirdre Kelly “as luminous and poignant as the building that inspired it.”

In 2011, Ray began hosting a popular travel show on Discovery Channel India alongside appearing as host and judge in Food Network’s highest rated show, Top Chef Canada.

In February 2012, Ray announced her engagement to management consultant Jason Dehni. On 20 October 2012, Ray and Dehni (then a banking executive and philanthropist) were married in California’s Napa Valley.

In 2012, Ray initiated an effort to fund the Indian Innovation Research Centre (IIRC). The IIRC is a non-profit cancer research body that began with the ‘Living With Cancer’ program that was initiated by Ray the same year. Their mandate is to promote convergence of fundamental as well as translational cancer in India, it played an instrumental role in helping Lisa fight Multiple Myeloma and overcome a trying phase of her life.

In September 2012, Ray was named ambassador for Pantene Beautiful Lengths in Canada, a charity campaign that asks people to grow and donate their hair to make real-hair wigs for women battling cancer.

Speaking to The Telegraph in 2012, Ray remarked, ”I think every film that I’ve done so far has been a turning point because I experimented with each one and grew professionally. The movies I chose, dealt with a lot of thought-provoking subjects.

In 2012, Ray began hosting season two of Top Chef Canada, Food Network Canada’s highest rated series. The season premiered in March 2012.

Alongside, she continued working on her withdrawn manuscript, using the ongoing events of her life – including a cancer relapse, remission, marriage and the birth of her children – as a lens to revisit her earlier life.

Ray joined the Beauty Gives Back campaign, which launched in Canada in 2015. The campaign addresses the cancer blues- the emotional fallout from cancer and its treatment. While launching the campaign Ray commented, “The beauty gives back campaign helps and motivates women to overcome the shackles of cancer and the process of its treatment. It seeks to give them their lost confidence back so that they continue their fight against the deadly disease with a new belief and dignity. It was an absolute honor to be the part of such a worthy cause which works towards giving face value to the emotional fallout from cancer.”

Ray joined the Beauty Gives Back campaign, which launched in Canada in 2015. The campaign addresses the cancer blues- the emotional fallout from cancer and its treatment. While launching the campaign Ray commented, “The beauty gives back campaign helps and motivates women to overcome the shackles of cancer and the process of its treatment. It seeks to give them their lost confidence back so that they continue their fight against the deadly disease with a new belief and dignity. It was an absolute honor to be the part of such a worthy cause which works towards giving face value to the emotional fallout from cancer.”

Ray continues to write regularly for leading Indian and global publications such as Vogue India, Femina, Elle (India), and Harper’s Bazaar India. On January 16, 2015, Ray started her own column in the Indian daily Daily News and Analysis.

In 2016, Ray made news when she started an Instagram account dedicated to her own poetry.

In 2016, Ray starred in Ram Gopal Varma’s Veerappan. She also played a crucial supporting role in 2017’s Dobaara, the official Bollywood adaptation of supernatural horror film Oculus.

What's Lisa Ray Net Worth 2024

Net Worth (2024) $1 Million (Approx.)
Net Worth (2023) Under Review
Net Worth (2022) Under Review
Net Worth (2021) Under Review
Net Worth (2020) Under Review

Lisa Ray Family

Father's Name Not Available
Mother's Name Not Available
Siblings Not Available
Spouse Not Available
Childrens Not Available