Two goals, one petition: a green card and a family reunion
Manasa N is an Indian classical dancer who had built a serious performance career in India. Her husband was already in the United States on a work visa, and she wanted to join him — without giving up her professional ambitions. The EB-1A route was the right fit: it doesn’t require an employer sponsor, and it rewards demonstrated achievement in a field. The challenge was proving that a classical dancer from India meets the threshold of extraordinary ability as defined by USCIS.
Proving extraordinary ability in a field USCIS rarely evaluates
EB-1A adjudicators are comfortable with scientists, engineers, and researchers. Classical dance is less charted territory. The application had to translate Manasa’s career — performances, institutional affiliations, awards, recognition from the dance community — into evidence that mapped cleanly to the EB-1A criteria. Vague claims about passion and dedication would not move the needle. The petition needed specifics, documentation, and external validation from credible voices.
A case built on performance record, institutional recognition, and expert testimony
Write Wing Media worked directly with Manasa to map her full career against the EB-1A criteria. The petition documented her extensive performance background and her recognition from prestigious Indian organisations in the classical arts. It also addressed her command of multiple dance forms — a marker of depth that distinguishes professional-level practitioners from hobbyists.
The second layer was testimony. Write Wing Media gathered statements from respected dance instructors, choreographers, and industry professionals who could speak to Manasa’s standing with authority. These weren’t generic endorsements — each letter was structured to speak to specific criteria and to establish the credibility of the person writing it.
Approved — and the whole family was covered
USCIS issued a Request for Evidence, which Write Wing Media addressed with additional documentation and context. The petition was approved after the RFE response. Manasa reunited with her husband in the United States and continued her dance career as a permanent resident. Her husband received his green card as a derivative beneficiary. Their two daughters — now aged 5 and 3 — were born in the US during the process and are American citizens. Four family members sorted from a single petition and a single filing fee.
Four people. One petition. The most efficient immigration outcome possible.
Manasa’s case shows what happens when a petition is built around genuine achievement rather than inflated claims. It also illustrates something prospective applicants rarely think about at the outset: the derivative benefits. A successful EB-1A petition covers the primary applicant’s spouse as a derivative beneficiary. Children born in the US during the process are citizens by birth. Manasa came in trying to secure her own status. She left with her husband’s green card included and two daughters who are American citizens. Write Wing Media found what was in her career, framed it under scrutiny, and the petition produced an outcome that covered the entire family.



