In her work with children’s media, Koyalee Chanda ’92 creates relatable content with representation in mind
For much of her 20-year career as a television director and producer, Koyalee Chanda was often 鈥渢he only person of color in the room,鈥 she recalls. Today, as vice president for kids and animation at Hello Sunshine, the award-winning production company founded in 2016 by Reese Witherspoon, she is embracing the opportunity to open doors for other storytellers, while 鈥渄ismantling the preconceived boxes鈥 that limit the complexity of characters in children鈥檚 television.听
Hello Sunshine, the mission-driven company behind hits such as 鈥淏ig Little Lies,鈥 鈥淭he Morning Show,鈥 and 鈥淟ittle Fires Everywhere,鈥 creates programming with 鈥渨omen at the center of the story,鈥 explains Chanda, who joined the company in January. 鈥淪o we are now keying off that to do the same for girls鈥攆inding stories where the main female characters have agency and are empowered. These are, ideally, highly entertaining series for kids that also push the needle.鈥听
That desire to shape media and society, in part, reflects Chanda鈥檚 own experiences at 91大神. A day student from Holyoke and the daughter of a prominent obstetrician, she followed her older brother to the school and let her outgoing personality shine, especially in the theater. 鈥淚 would audition for every play, and I would never get a role, but that didn鈥檛 deter me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 would do whatever I could to be involved in other ways. I would make props. I would paint the set. I would stage manage if I could. I worked part time in the theater office under Ellis Baker. I found my love of theater at Willison.鈥听
But when the school held tryouts for a Tennessee Williams play, Chanda was told that the production had too many racial undertones and there just wasn鈥檛 a part for her, she recalls. 鈥淚t was explicitly told to me that I did not fit the bill racially to be cast,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o I just didn鈥檛 work on that particular production. And that was a moment of real clarity for me.鈥听
Chanda didn鈥檛 give up on the theater program and now sees that experience as a mobilizing moment for her, and an illustration of how the decisions of show creators can have broad impact. 鈥淭he plays that were chosen had these racial specificities that I think boxed the casting in, in a way that was unfortunately exclusionary to people who didn鈥檛 fit into one of those boxes,鈥 she says, adding with a laugh that she knows she鈥檚 鈥渁 terrible actor鈥 and may not have gotten a part anyway. 鈥淏ut definitely the idea of wanting more representation and inclusion in casting, and even the choice of content, became very central to my career.鈥听
That career took off right after Chanda鈥檚 graduation from Wesleyan University, where she majored in theater (she also holds a director鈥檚 certificate from New York University). Hired on to what was then a fledgling children鈥檚 program called 鈥淏lue鈥檚 Clues,鈥 she began as a production coordinator (and the voice of Blue鈥檚 friend Magenta) but within a year was directing. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anybody realized how big it was going to become,鈥 says Chanda, who would eventually direct some 30 episodes as the show became an international phenomenon. 鈥淚t was such an amazing training ground for me in terms of how to communicate with kids.鈥听
From there, Chanda formed her own production company, creating content for Sesame Street Workshop, PBS Kids, Nickelodeon, and others. She was the voice director for Nickelodeon鈥檚 鈥淏ackyardigans,鈥 produced the pilot for PBS鈥檚 鈥淥dd Squad,鈥 and was co-executive producer of Nickelodeon鈥檚 hit series 鈥淲allykazam!鈥 In 2018, she produced the family podcast 鈥淭his Podcast Has Fleas,鈥 an audio cartoon about a dog and cat with competing podcasts. After moving to Los Angeles to work in creative development at Apple, she was hired by 鈥淒oc McStuffins鈥 creator Chris Nee to work on Netflix programming, then made the move to Hello Sunshine. Over the years, her work has been nominated for seven Emmy awards.听
Now living in Culver City with her husband and two daughters, ages 7 and 12, Chanda looks back at her time at 91大神 as an important period in her life. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all formative and really incredibly valuable,鈥 she says. She recalls how there was just one other South Asian girl on campus, who looked and acted nothing like her, and yet teachers often confused the two of them. Still, she says, she stayed close to the faculty in the theater department, 鈥渁nd I got an opportunity to assistant direct my senior year, which was amazing.鈥听
Her experiences continue to inform her work today with Hello Sunshine, where she has a number of animated children鈥檚 shows in the pipeline. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 work in kids鈥 content and not have a really keen sense of how much impact you can have over your audience,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ur goal is to make content that all kids can enjoy, but really be focused on making sure those girl characters are complex and funny and engaging and smart and empowered.鈥听
Speaking in August in a livestream discussion titled Talking About Race With Children: How Storytellers can Facilitate Important Conversations, she offered this broader assessment of being a content creator for a young audience: 鈥淣ot only do you need to make sure you are creating content that is really engaging, you have to do right by them. And do right by this world鈥. We may not have all the tools at this moment to tell all the exact right stories to rise to this challenge, but we are certainly going to try. And we are always looking for people to help us do that in the best and most authentic way possible. So bring it on!鈥听