Shahana Goswami was born in New Delhi. Her father is an
economist and mother an editorial consultant. Her elder brother and
sister-in-law are physicists.She attended Sardar Patel Vidyalaya, Delhi
and Sophia College, Mumbai. Goswami was the house captain and sports
champion in her school. She secured second position at the National
Artificial Wall Climbing Competition and has represented her school in
athletics, badminton, basketball and volleyball at the zonal level.She
also trained in Odissi for 10 years under Guru Padmashri Kiran Segal
and has travelled and performed extensively with her dance troupe.
Shahana had a single-minded focus on professional acting since
childhood. She moved to Mumbai to complete her graduation and to
explore the possibility of taking up acting as a career. In Mumbai, her
first steps in acting were at Jaimini Pathak's theatre group Working
Title. There, she started off as a production assistant and then acted
in their productions Seagull and Arabian Nights.
Through her theater circle she met talent consultant Shaanu Sharma who
asked her to audition for a role in Naseeruddin Shah's directorial
debut Yun Hota Toh Kya Hota. Subsequently, she stumbled upon the small
role of Boman Irani's daughter in Reema Katgi's Honeymoon Travels Pvt.
Ltd., when she visited the production house for some other work.
Meanwhile, a cinematographer who noticed her work in Yun Hota Toh Kya
Hota recommended her and she auditioned for the lead role in Percept
Picture Company's Ru Ba Ru, directed by Arjun Bali, with Randeep Hooda
as her co-star. For Goswami, Ru Ba Ru happened while she was still in
college completing her graduation. She gave her first shot for the film
in Bangkok, much before she was signed on for Rock On.
Her friends Shaanu Sharma and Simran, who were in the middle of casting
for Rock On, at that time suggested her name to Abhishek Kapoor
(director of Rock On). Later, she auditioned for the film and got the
big break in the role of Debbie. Her performance not only secured her a
prominent spot on the Bollywood map, but also fetched her many awards,
the most prestigious of them being the Filmfare Best Actress (Critics)
award, which no supporting actress had won until then.
She then appeared in the music video for Dido's "Let's Do the Things We
Normally Do" as a taxi driver in Mumbai. The video was shot by
Siddharth Sikand. In between, she also featured in a Fevicol commercial
set in a village in Rajasthan.
Goswami's first international project is Deepa Mehta's Winds of Change,
an adaptation of Salman Rushdie's Booker Prize winning novel Midnight's
Children. The film is expected to release in spring 2012.