Actor Parineeti Chopra will be reuniting with her The Girl on The Train director Ribhu Dasgupta for an action-thriller in which she will play the role of an undercover agent. The yet-untitled film revolves around a covert rescue operation of Indian agents, led by Chopra’s protagonist. “It is not (set in) an India-Pakistan backdrop. The film has Parineeti as a covert agent, she is leading the operation. The film is also about her personal journey and her revenge,” a source close to the film’s team told PTI.
According to the insider, the film’s ensemble cast also features Rajit Kapur, Kay Kay Menon, Dibyendu Bhattacharya and Hardy Sandhu, among others.
The project, scheduled to go on floors in March, is produced by Reliance Entertainment.
The makers are in the process of scouting locations and getting permissions to shoot amid the coronavirus pandemic. Chopra, 32, and Dasgupta, known for directing Te3n and Netflix series Bard of Blood, are currently awaiting the release of their Hindi remake of 2016 Hollywood blockbuster The Girl on The Train. The original American movie, featuring Emily Blunt, was based on Paula Hawkins’ 2015 best-selling novel of the same name. Set in the UK, the Hindi version also stars Aditi Rao Hydari, Kirti Kulhari and Avinash Tiwary. The Girl on The Train was slated to hit theatres countrywide on May 8 this year, but the release got delayed in the wake of the pandemic.
Bollywood actors Disha Patani and Tiger Shroff have shared stunning pictures as they vacation in the Maldvies, as per reports. The two, who have shied away from acknowledging their relationship, had left for the holiday together but have not posted any photos in which they feature together. The MS Dhoni: The Untold Story actor hopped on to Instagram and shared a gorgeous photograph in which she is seen sporting a yellow bikini. Sporting a chunky pair of shades, the Malang star looks breathtakingly beautiful while she stands on a board amid a mesmerising location. The cloudy sky and a crystal-clear sea view seemed captivating. Captioning the photograph in reference to Hollywood star Jason Momoa’s action thriller Aquaman, Patani captioned the post as “Aquaman feels.” In awe of the beautiful picture, fans left red heart and lovestruck emoticons in the comments section.
Disha and Tiger had earlier holidayed in the Maldives but the destination seems to be a clear favourite for both of them. In other photos that Disha shared on her Instagram Stories, she can be seen chilling by the beach. While she gave us a glimpse of the exotic location she is at, she also shared stunning selfies, rocking an orange off-shoulder outfit. Her hair was done with soft curls and she went with a no-makeup look.
Salman Khan movies are guaranteed blockbusters at the box-office. Even if the film is panned by the critics, the film smoothly makes its way to 100 crore-club at least. No wonder his movies are sold at a whopping amount and even during the pandemic, when the market is little tight, a Salman Khan film is sold at a high rate.
According to a report on an online portal, Salman Khan has sold the rights of Radhe: Your Most Wanted Bhai to Zee Studios for Rs 230 crores. A source tells the online portal more about this deal, “Salman has sold the satellite, theatrical (India + Overseas), digital and music rights of Radhe – Your Most Wanted Bhai to Zee Studios for Rs. 230 crores, which is the biggest deal in Covid times.” The source further adds, “It’s a reasonable deal that has led to a table profit for Salman whereas Zee, too, doesn’t have much risk involved given that Salman’s films command a great return value in terms of digital and satellite viewing side by side music streaming on various platforms.” The report also points out that the deal is a blanket deal, as Salman Khan’s other production titled Kaagaz starring Pankaj Tripathi is also premiered on Zee 5. His last few releases like Race 3 and Dabangg 3 have premiered on television on Zee channels. Surely this is a new collaboration in b-town and one of the most successful ones we are sure.
As cinema halls were shut down during the Coronavirus-induced lockdown, people turned to OTT platforms for entertainment. Some of the movies and web series on streaming platforms created a buzz. Here is a look at the most entertaining films and web series in 2020.
Money Heist (La Casa De Papel)
The Spanish drama series made ‘Bella Ciao’ the anthem of 2020 lockdown. The show’s fifth season became one of the most viral shows in 2020. Money Heist had a gripping storyline that would keep you on the edge of your seats. Enough to make people go bonkers. The many cliff-hangers after each episode were noteworthy and people were intrigued to know what happens next and the end was as overwhelming as the entire journey. Ursula Corbero, Alvaro Morte, Itziar Ituno and others won many hearts with their performances.
Paatal Lok
Released on Amazon Prime Video, the series featuring Jaideep Ahlawat in the lead role was quick to impress the audience with its engaging storyline and stellar cast. The story of ‘Paatal Lok’ revolves around a cop who has to swim against all odds to get to the bottom of a murder attempt.
The Crown: Season 4
Olivia Colman as the Queen, Gillian Anderson’s as Margaret Thatcher, and Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana made The Crown a show worth watching! In the past we all have seen many documentaries and shows about the monarchy. They get stale and boring but The Crown managed to pick up popularly. People were hooked to see what happens next and they sure unwrapped Season 4 the royal way.
Tiger King: Murder, Madness and Mayhem
Tiger King starred John Reinke, Kelci Saffery, John Finlay in key roles. It is the tale of Joseph Maldonado-Passage (better known as Joe Exotic), Carole Baskin, and Doc Antle and their life as cat owners. The seven-episode docu-series took the audience into the strange world of big cat owners and by the end of it you have seen a murder, an alligator explosion, a three-way marriage and a lot of suspense.
‘Bulbbul’
‘Bulbbul’ stars Tripti Dimri in the lead role. Other actors are Avinash Tiwary, Paoli Dam, Rahul Bose and Parambrata Chattopadhyay. Tripti Dimri was praised in many reviews. The Netflix film which is set in a backdrop of 1880’s Bengal presidency, revolves around a child-bride and her journey from innocence to strength.
Special Ops
The show Special Ops starring Kay Kay Menon, Karan Tacker, Vinay Pathak, Divya Dutta, Meher Vij among others was instantly loved by the audience. It follows Menon as Himmat Singh who is a ‘RAW’ agent who believes that there is a single entity behind all the major terrorist attacks.
During the lockdown, several new web series created a wave and movies that were scheduled for theatrical release were launched on OTT platforms. Here’s a list of some of the movies that ruled the waves:
Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior
‘Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior’ essays the life of the fierce Maratha warrior, Tanhaji Malusare essayed by Ajay Devgn, who was one of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s closest aides and a military leader. It focuses on the famous Battle of Sinhagad, which saw Tanhaji take on Udaybhan, a Rajput who fought for Aurangzeb against the Marathas.
Gulabo Sitabo
Set in Lucknow, the Amitabh Bachchan and Ayushmann Khurrana starrer film is a light-hearted comedy-drama that captures impeccable camaraderie with a tenant and was loved by the audience.
Gunjan Saxena: The Kargil Girl
A biographical drama film based on the life and journey of Indian Air Force pilot Gunjan Saxena. It starred Janhvi Kapoor as one of the first Indian female air-force pilots in combat. The movie also featured Pankaj Tripathi and Angad Bedi in supporting roles.
Dil Bechara
The remake of 2014 romantic-drama ‘The fault in our stars’, ‘Dil Bechara’ is the last movie of late actor Sushant Singh Rajput. As the tragic death of Rajput left people in shock, the film was made accessible without subscription in India and a selected few countries on Hotstar. The critics praised the running time, the performances of Rajput and Sanjana Sanghi, story, characterisations, and soundtrack.
Angrezi Medium
The last film of Irrfan Khan, ‘Angrezi medium’ is the story of a hardworking Rajasthani businessman (Irrfan), whose daughter (Radhika Madaan) decides to pursue further studies in London, and despite having insufficient resources, he does everything in his power to make her dream come true. Irrfan and Kareena Kapoor Khan paired up for the spin-off to the 2017 comedy ‘Hindi Medium’
Panga
Featuring Kangana Ranaut and Punjabi singer Jassie Gill in the lead role, the movie depicted the life of kabaddi player Jaya Nigam (essayed by Kangana) and the hardships she went through during her journey.
This year will remain as one of the most unforgettable one for multiple reasons. During the lockdown, celebrities shared pictures and videos and gave fans an insight into their quarantine period. From doing house chores to learning a new skill and staying in touch with their loved ones through video calls, this year was eventful in many ways. While several celebrities tied the knot and began their new journey, there are some actors who stepped their foot into parenthood. Some even announced that they are all set to become parents. On the other side, this year, Bollywood, as well as, Hollywood lost many great and talented celebrities. The news of every celebrity death left everyone in shock. From Kobe Bryant, Rishi Kapoor, Irrfan Khan, Saroj Khan, Sean Connery and Chadwick Boseman, many celebrities left the world and left us heartbroken. As this year comes to an end, take a look at this list of celebrities who bid us goodbye.
Rishi Kapoor
The news of Rishi Kapoor’s death broke many hearts. The late actor passed away on April 30 after battling leukemia for two years.
Irrfan
The Angrezi Medium actor, who not only achieved success in Bollywood but also in the West, passed away at the age of 53 after battling for months with cancer.
Sushant Singh Rajput
The news of Sushant Singh Rajput’s death left many in shock. The Dil Bechara actor died by suicide at his residence on June 14th.
Wendell Rodricks
Famous fashion designer Wendell Rodricks passed away at his home in Goa.
Asif Basra
Asif Basra, who is known for his performances in movies like Jab We Met, Kai Po Che and more, died by suicide in his apartment in Dharmshala, Himachal Pradesh.
Samir Sharma
This year, we also lost Yeh Rishtey Hai Pyaar Ke actor Samir Sharma, who died by suicide at his house in Malad.
Divya Bhatnagar
TV’s popular actress Divya Bhatnagar was diagnosed with COVID-19 and was battling with it. Unfortunately, she left for her heavenly abode after having succumbed to Coronavirus.S. P. Balasubrahmanyam
Legendary singer S. P. Balasubrahmanyam left for his heavenly abode on September 25.
Saroj Khan
Legendary Bollywood choreographer Saroj Khan passed away on July 3. Several celebrities paid tribute by recalling their happy moments with her.
Nishikant Kamat
This year, we also lost popular filmmaker Nishikant Kamat.
Wajid Khan
Wajid Khan of Sajid-Wajid fame had tested positive for COVID-19, and died of cardiac arrest.
Chadwick Boseman
Chadwick Boseman, best known for his film Black Panther, lost his battle to cancer, at the age of 43. The news of his death left everyone heartbroken.
Sean Connery
Sean Connery, who played the iconic James Bond character passed away the age of 90 due to pneumonia and heart failure.
Caroline Flack
Harry Styles’ ex-girlfriend Caroline Flack died by suicide at the age of 40, in her east London home.
Naya Rivera
Naya Rivera was found dead on July 13, after the actress went missing while boating with her son. (Source: Pinkvilla)
DIR: Karishma Dev Dube l USA / India l 2020 l Doc l 17m
WINNER: Student Academy Award
Film based on an infamous school poisoning in India
“BITTU” is a film about the close friendship between two girls which is eclipsed by an accidental poisoning at school.
In 2013, at least 23 students died, and dozens more fell ill at a primary school in India after eating lunch contaminated with pesticide. The incident was a moment of mundane carelessness that resulted in horrific consequences. Karishma Dev Dube’s “BITTU” was shot in the foothills of the Himalayas and is based on this tragic event. This important film recently won a Student Academy Award.
BITTU has also been screened at The Mosaic International South Asian Film Festival (Canada).
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MAKING THE CASE
DIR: Jennifer Callhan l USA l 2020 l Doc Short l 10m
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for whom legal arguments are daily currency, examines her handbags, revealing a corner of a mind that has argued and won historic cases.
EDDY’S WORLD
DIR: Lyn Goldfarb l USA l 2020 l Doc Short l 18m
Eddy Goldfarb with his creations (Photo / Courtesy Museum of Tolerance)
“Eddy World,” is a portrait of a 98-year-old working toy inventor, Eddy Goldfarb. Best known for the iconic “chattering teeth” and 800 classic toys, he shares his passion for creativity and his philosophies of life and aging. Eddy lives in a retirement community. He works on new models in his garage, writes short stories, creates lithophane portraits with his 3D printer, and exercises. Eddy began designing toys on the Batfish Submarine during World War II. He is an endearing storyteller who believes that optimism and new ideas keep him young.
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FEATURE
ONCE UPON A TIME IN VENEZUELA
DIR: Anabel Rodríguez Ríos l Venezuela l 2020 l Spanish w / Eng subs l 1h 39m
OFFICIAL OSCAR SUBMISSION
RELEASING BY ‘TOPIC’ STREAMING SERVICE
U.S. AND CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31
scene from “Once Upon A Time In Venezuela” Photo / Spiraleye Productions, et. al
“Once Upon A Time In Venezuela”is a film about Venezuela’s deteriorating economic situation. With the world’s largest crude reserves at Lake Maracaibo not far from Congo Mirador, Venezuela was one of Latin America’s richest countries through the 1990s. The lake’s namesake city was even referred to as “Venezuela’s Saudi Arabia.”
But inequality was high, and the boom time wasn’t to last.
In 1999, Hugo Chavez took power and launched the Bolivarian Revolution, centralizing power to the state, redistributing wealth and nationalizing industries including oil and banking. His socialist political reforms put him at odds with the United States, and a hostile relationship lasted until his death in 2013.
His successor, Nicolas Maduro, continued Chavez’s legacy, but by 2016, oil prices had fallen by more than 70 percent, plunging the country into a humanitarian crisis.
In addition, the Trump administration put sanctions on Venezuela and refused to recognize Maduro’s presidency after highly disputed elections in 2018. Suffering from hyperinflation, environmental degradation, and shortage of food and basic necessities, over 4 million Venezuelans left the country in the past few years, and many millions more are expected to continue to flee in what will be the world’s worst refugee crisis of modern times…
To learn more, visit www.onceuponatimeinvenezuela.com
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TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL 2021
20TH ANNIVERSARY
June 9-20
SUBMISSIONS OPEN
NEW PODCAST SECTION FOR 20TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
New Juried Awards Granted for Fiction and Nonfiction Audio Storytelling
The Tribeca Film Festival (tribecafilm.com), introduces Tribeca Podcasts, a new vertical dedicated to audio storytelling timed to its 20th anniversary. This is the latest Tribeca initiative to connect storytellers from different mediums with audiences, industry, and fellow creators. The 2021 Tribeca Film Festival will take place June 9-20.
The new section will include world premieres and sneak peeks of highly anticipated podcasts, talks with renowned audio creators, and live recordings in front of audiences during the Festival. Details will be announced at a later date.
For the first time, submissions will open for Official Selection consideration in fiction and narrative nonfiction audio stories and podcasts. Selections will be available on Tribeca’s website and in-person listening stations at select venues, pending COVID-19 safety protocols. For the first time, juried awards will be granted to one fiction project and one narrative nonfiction project.
Tribeca has a history of supporting audio storytelling. The six-episode science fiction podcast “Earth Break: A Few Suggestions For Survival, With Additional Hints and Tips About How to Make Yourself More Comfortable During the Alien Apocalypse,” featuring a voice performance by Jenny Slate, made its world premiere at the 2019 Festival. Tribeca also hosted a panel for ESPN’s 30 for 30 podcasts in 2017, and launched the “Tribeca Talks” podcast series this summer, which includes intimate conversations with actors and filmmakers recorded live at previous editions of the Festival.
Submissions for fiction and narrative nonfiction audio stories and podcasts are open with an initial deadline of January 13th, and a final deadline of January 29th.
Submissions are now open for all categories: feature and short films, episodic storytelling, immersive, branded entertainment, and a newly added section dedicated to online premieres. For the first time this year, submissions are open for the Tribeca Games section. The late deadline for these sections is January 13th.
Submission Details for Tribeca Podcasts
Deadline: January 13th
Final Deadline: January 29th
Submission rules, regulations, and information on eligibility for the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival will be available at tribecafilm.com/festival/submissions. For any questions, contact entries@tribecafilm.com
Twitter: @Tribeca
Instagram: @tribeca
Facebook: facebook.com/Tribeca
Hashtag: #Tribeca2021
About the Tribeca Film Festival
The Tribeca Film Festival brings artists and diverse audiences together to celebrate storytelling in all its forms, including film, TV, VR, gaming, music, and online work. With strong roots in independent film, Tribeca is a platform for creative expression and immersive entertainment. Tribeca champions emerging and established voices; discovers award-winning filmmakers and creators; curates innovative experiences; and introduces new technology and ideas through premieres, exhibitions, talks, and live performances.
The Festival was founded by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, and Craig Hatkoff in 2001 to spur the economic and cultural revitalization of lower Manhattan following the attacks on the World Trade Center. Tribeca celebrates its 20th year: June 9 – 20, 2021. tribecafilm.com/festival
(Mabel Pais writes on Social Issues, The Arts and Entertainment, Spirituality, and Health & Wellness)
Bollywood actress Jacqueline Fernandez flaunts a toned midriff in a new picture she shared on social media, and fans are thrilled. Along with the picture, she has shared some quick pop philosophy about human nature, too.
Jacqueline posted the picture on Instagram, where she is seen dressed in black gym wear. A huge mirror catches her reflection.
“They tell you to be yourself and then they judge you,” she wrote alongside the image.
Jacqueline will be seen in in films such as Bhoot Police, Bachchan Pandey and Kick 2.
She recently completed a long outdoor schedule for the horror comedy Bhoot Comedy in locations across Himachal Pradesh, along with the rest of the cast including co-stars Saif Ali Khan, Yami Gautam and Arjun Kapoor.
Veteran actor Alfred Molina is set to reprise his role as the antagonist Doctor Octopus in Spider-Man 3, with Tom Holland in the title role.
Sources told The Hollywood Reporter, Molina has joined the cast as Otto Octavius, a path-breaking scientist-turned-eight-limbed villain who challenged Tobey Maguire’s Spider-Man in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 2, which was released as the 2004 sequel to the director’s 2002 movie.
The actor, whose credits include films Frida, The Da Vinci Code and Feud: Bette and Joan series, was first rumored to be part of the upcoming Marvel-Sony film late last month, when GWW reported the actor had been spotted on set.
Apart from Molina, Jamie Foxx is also coming as Electro after playing the role in 2014’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which starred Andrew Garfield as the web-slinger. In October, Foxx hinted in a since-deleted Instagram post that three different Spider-Men could appear in the movie.
Spider-Man 3 will see Holland return in the lead along with director Jon Watts, who helmed Spider-Man: Homecoming and Spider-Man: Far From Home. Sony Pictures is slated to release the film on December 17, 2021.
Benedict Cumberbatch will also reprise his Doctor Strange role and returning Spider-Man franchise stars are expected to include Zendaya, Marisa Tomei, Jacob Batalon and Tony Revolori.
Bollywood actor Sonu Sood, who helped thousands of stranded migrant workers get back home during the coronavirus-induced lockdown, has now mortgaged his properties in Mumbai to raise Rs 10 crore to help the underprivileged, migrant workers and patients who suffer from serious diseases.
A source close to the actor told indianexpress.com that Sood has mortgaged two shops and six flats located in Mumbai’s Juhu area. The source added, “Sonu Sood has always believed in helping the needy and the cause is very close to his heart. He wanted to do more for people who have been affected the most by the pandemic. Sonu has also started helping patients who are suffering from serious diseases and need help for treatment.”
Sonu Sood’s humanitarian efforts and experiences during the coronavirus crisis have been documented in his autobiography, I Am No Messiah, which releases on December 15.
After having spent a good time in Los Angeles with her family amid COVID 19 pandemic, Sunny Leone returned to India in November. She has been on a roll after her return. The Jism 2 actress, who has some interesting projects in her kitty, has been busy shooting for her upcoming horror-comedy film Koka Kola. Amid this, she has also been very active on social media and often treats her fans with stunning pictures. To note, she is among those celebs whose pictures go viral in no time.
Keeping up with this trajectory, the actress has dropped her amazing throwback picture that seems to be taken from a shoot. In the photo, the diva can be seen standing while wearing a white robe. She looks beautiful in the click as she poses with utmost perfection. Going by her photo, it looks like she is giving some shot for a film. Alongside it, she writes, “Lost in time…. ?? #throwback.” Her latest post has left netizens in awe as they are all praises for it. One of the users comments, “Beautiful” while another writes, “Wah.”
Sunny had earlier talked about returning to the sets after a long time and said she is very excited to face the camera again. She also added that she has been working on some really interesting projects which she cannot wait to share with all. The diva told ETimes , “I have been waiting to be on a set for the longest time. I do have a packed schedule ahead, but I am not complaining. I am so excited to face the camera because that is where I truly belong.” She will soon be featuring in a music video titled Dope Video.
Stepping out of his comfort zone after nine months, Hrithik Roshan is gearing up to finally begin shooting on a set. While the actor has been filming from his Juhu residence for various projects, this is the first time he will be working with a crew for an advertisement in Film City.
Director-choreographer Farah Khan, who was rumoured to initially direct Roshan in the remake of Satte Pe Satta, will be helming the ad shoot. During the pandemic, the Om Shanti Om director shot for Khatron Ka Khiladi, Bigg Boss, and did a cameo in a movie. “Both Hrithik and Farah have been extremely cautious about shooting during the pandemic. He is particular that all safety measures be followed stringently. Everyone will be tested a day prior to the shoot and be given PPE suits. Despite the minimal staff, Hrithik will wrap up the shoot in a day,” informs a source.
Khan and Roshan have collaborated for dance routines before. “Farah gave him his signature step in the song Ek pal ka jeena [Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai, 2000] and was also responsible for the chartbuster Idhar chala, main udhar chala, [Koi Mil Gaya, 2003], but this will be the first time she directs Hrithik for an ad,” adds the source.
NEW YORK (TIP): Children’s Hope India, a 501c3 nonprofit organization dedicated to lifting children from poverty to prosperity in India and the United States, announced, November 28, the honorees for its first-ever Gratitude Awards, recognizing individuals who have made bold civic and charitable contributions in a particularly challenging year.
CHI co-founder, board member and journalist, Lavina Melwani, hosted the virtual event on Thanksgiving Day. “In these uncertain times of the pandemic, we may be isolated from our loved ones and unable to share the joy of a Thanksgiving meal in person but we can still warm ourselves by sharing thanks,” Melwani said.
Children’s Hope India’s inaugural Gratitude Awards honored the heroes around the world who contributed to helping the community weather such uncertain times. Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was honored for being the voice of comfort, reason and science.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta, host of the CNN show Sanjay Gupta MD and co-host with Anderson Cooper of global town halls throughout the pandemic, for coming into our homes and giving us wisdom and truth. Follow him on Twitter @drsanjaygupta.
Deepika Padukone, actress, producer and founder of The Live Love Laugh Foundation, for her bold and courageous championship around mental health issues. Follow her on Twitter @deepikapadukone.
Chandrika Tandon, Grammy-nominated artist, humanitarian, and business leader, for her calming chants and dedication to helping children succeed. Follow her on Facebook @chandrikatandon.
Hindu Singh Sodha, Rajasthan-based activist working on refugee rights, conflict resolution and peace movements, and founder of the Universal Just Action Society, for his passionate advocacy and support of the refugee communities in Jodhpur, providing them hope for a new life. Follow him on Twitter @HinduSinghSodh1.
Dina Pahlajani, Cofounder and President of Children’s Hope India added that this year’s awards were also dedicated to, “the braveheart children of Children’s Hope India for adapting in such difficult times and staying committed to learning despite the challenges of the pandemic.”
Children’s Hope India launched the Gratitude Awards to showcase the work of individuals around the world who give what they can–whether a monetary contribution, a helping hand or a kind word. The Gratitude Awards will take place annually to recognize the many that truly make our world better and safer, and empower us all to be stronger individuals. In honor of this year’s awards, Children’s Hope India donated gift certificates, turkeys and Thanksgiving meals to families and individuals in Manhattan, Queens and Long Island.
About Children’s Hope India
Children’s Hope India was founded in 1992 when a group of professional women in New York gathered to make a difference in the lives of children. Now, as then, the mission of Children’s Hope India is to lift children from poverty to prosperity through education. This is accomplished with a whole child approach that seeks to ensure that each child is healthy, safe, supported, engaged and challenged with comprehensive programming including informal learning and vocational training, critical medical support, and nutrition.
Today, Children’s Hope India supports more than 20 projects and 300,000 children across India and the United States to improve children’s health and education prospects. To learn more, please visit www.childrenshopeindia.org.
Singer Aditya Narayan and actress Shweta Agarwal tied the knot on Tuesday, Dec 1, in a small temple ceremony. The wedding took place on groom’s singer-father Udit Narayan’s birthday.
The newly-wed couple were dressed in shades of beige and pink for their big day. The bride dazzled in a glittering, embellished lehenga, and the groom opted for a classic sherwani. According to a report by Mumbai Mirror, the couple had a packed weekend of pre-wedding festivities – Tilak on Saturday, Mehendi on Sunday and Haldi on Monday. Narayan Sr, along with the groom’s friends, sang ‘ Mehndi Laga Ke Rakhna’ and ‘ Bole Chudiyaan’ for Mehendi ceremony. While Haldi ceremony was a family affair, Narayan had informed that the wedding will be at a small temple with just 50 guests in attendance, followed by a reception. “I’ve invited Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Amitabh Bachchan, Shatrughan Sinhaji, Dharmendraji, Ranveer Singh, Deepika Padukone and Madhuri Dixit, but with Covid-19 cases on the rise, I don’t know if they will be able to attend,” he told Mumbai Mirror.
Actress Chitrangda Singh has revealed that she has faced discrimination in the industry owing to her skin colour. In an interview with Bombay Times, Chitrangda said that she “faced biases” while growing up and also when she entered showbiz as she lost out on modelling assignments due to her complexion. “I know the feeling of living life as a girl with dusky complexion. This is not something that people will say directly to your face. You can only sense it. I have been through the biases, especially while growing up in the north,” she said.
Of her recent Instagram post in which she mentioned about being “brown and happy”, the 44-year-old actress said, “With my post, I just wanted to say that one needs to feel beautiful in their own skin.” Furthermore, Chitrangda spoke about the struggles in her early years in the industry. “I did lose out on modeling assignments. In fact, when I lost out on one ad in the initial days of my career, I was specifically told the reason as it had come down to selecting between two people for the part. Luckily, the audition that I did for a product was seen by Gulzar saab, who got me on board for his music video. I realized that not everybody goes out looking for white-skinned people here,” she said.
Varun Dhawan and Kiara Advani will play lead roles in Karan Johar’s Jug Jugg Jeeyo. The actors shared their first look from the film today. In the pictures, Kiara and Varun are seen twining in shirts and blue jeans. The two are playing husband and wife in the film. Varun shared their first look saying, “#JUGJUGGJEEYO. Happy Wife Happy Life! 2021.” Kiara shared the same pictures and wrote, “#JUGJUGGJEEYO. Happy Husband, Happy Life!”Jug Jugg Jeeyo also stars Neetu Kapoor and Anil Kapoor in lead roles. Earlier, Neetu shared a picture of herself from the sets of the film. In the caption, Neetu mentioned that she misses Rishi Kapoor as she begins shooting after a long gap.
Ajay Devgn will once again go behind the camera as a director for a film titled ‘Mayday’ co-starring megastar Amitabh Bachchan. The film will bring together the senior star and Ajay after many years. And now, a latest report confirms that Rakul Preet Singh also has come on board to play an important role in the film. The actress reportedly will play the role of Ajay’s co-pilot in the film.
Confirming the news, Rakul told Mid-day that when she became an actor, she also had a dream like all other actors to work with Amitabh Bachchan someday. She claimed that Mayday will make this dream come true. Further, she was excited to work with Ajay in the film again. She mentioned that she is ‘thrilled’ to have him as her co-actor as well as the director this time. The report further claimed that Ajay may kick off shoot in December in Hyderabad in a start to finish schedule.
Talking about coming on board, Rakul said, “When I decided to be an actor, I — like all other aspiring actors — dreamt of working with Mr Bachchan some day. I am glad that this film will help me realise my dream. I am thrilled to work with Ajay sir again, who will not only be my co-star but also my director.”
Actress Sushmita Sen says she cannot live with the idea of spending big amounts of money on clothes or shoes just to be photographed once in it, and that is why she likes to repeat what she wears.
“As many have come to see the way I dress, I am hardly conscious about the fashion critics while picking my outfits. Whether it is with heels or clothing, comfort is my top priority,” Sushmita told IANS, while talking about how fashion has evolved for her.
“I may not always get the praise from the fashion police, but my fashion is for me and I am very comfortable with it. I also repeat my clothes and my shoes as I cannot live with the idea of spending big amounts of money just to be photographed once in it,” she added.
After her appearance in the 2015 Bengali film “Nirbaak”, Sushmita made a comeback earlier this year in the web series “Aarya”. At the moment, she is judging a digital reality fashion show.
“Jo abr yahāñ se uTThegā vo saare jahāñ par barsegā”
Zafar Iqbal
WASHINGTON (TIP): The Aligarh Alumni Association, Washington DC (AAA-DC) organized an international mushaira of legendary poets to celebrate the centenary of the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) on 31st October 2020. The Mushaira is a literary symposium where poets gather to recite their poetry and it is part of the culture of the Subcontinent. The AAA-DC started the tradition of holding Mushaira more than four decades ago and it is the oldest South-Asian cultural event in Washington. Starting with a humble beginning, it has achieved international fame. As the Tarana of the AMU, written by the famous poet Majaz Lakhnavi, says “Jo abr yahāñ se uTThegā vo saare jahāñ par barsegā, har shahr-e-tarab par garjegā har qasr-e-tarab par kaḌkegā,” this mushaira tradition initiated by the AAA-DC has now become the most sought after annual literary event in North America. During the last four decades, almost all renowned and stalwart poets from the Subcontinent have participated in this annual event organized by the AAA-DC. Every year 5-6 poets from India, Pakistan, and other countries are invited to participate in the mushaira. A significant virtue of this year’s mushaira was the cooperation of 25 Aligarh Alumni and AMU Old Boys Associations (Atlanta, GA; Birmingham, AL; Chicago, Chicago, IL; Cleveland, OH; Delhi, Dubai, Karachi; Kuwait; Qatar; Riyadh; Northern California; and Washington DC) and Urdu literary organizations around the globe (APPNA, Cincinnati, OH; Mohibban-e-Urdu, NA; Jashn-e-Urdu, Dubai; Bazm-e-Alig, Qatar; Urdu Academy MD; Taqdees-e-Adab, Houston; Urdu Markaz, FL; Urdu Markaz Int, LA; Ashiyana Contracting, Dubai; Hindustanyat Int, UK; MNK Interiors, Dubai; Aligarh Education Endowment Fund, CA; and Global Organization of People of Indian Origin, DC.) cooperated in it.
Because of the COVID-19 situation, this program was conducted using Jashn-e-Urdu StreamYard live streaming technology and it was simultaneously broadcast on YouTube, and Facebook. Despite it being an online Mushaira, the program did not err on the usual formalities, grace, and adaab of a traditional Mushaira, which is much appreciated. This year’s program was unique as six stalwart poets (Amjad Islam Amjad, Javed Akhtar, Iftikhar Arif, Zehra Nigah, Pirzada Qasim, and Munibur Rahman) with many decades of literary experience participated in it. Famous TV programs writer Anwar Maqsood also recited a couplet from Daagh Dehlvi. The nizamat was done by Dr. A. Abdullah in his usual marvelous professional style. Several thousand literary enthusiasts enjoyed the event, and many encouraging and positive comments were posted on the media.
Samples of the poetry recited by poets:
Professor Pirzada Qasim is a neuroscientist by training who became an educationist and a vice-chancellor of 3 different universities.
ye asr-e-nau kī chitāoñ meñ aag kaisī hai
ki ruuh raakh huī aur badan jalā bhī nahīñ
tamām umr ajab vaz.a-dāriyoñ meñ kaTī
use aziiz rakhā jo hamārā thā bhī nahīñ
Amjad Islam Amjad. In addition to his poetry, he is well-known as a writer of dramas and serial plays for Pakistan TV.
Kuchh vazahat na iltijaa keejiye Sach kaha hai to hausla keejiye
Hum ne mana ki moatbar hai dimagh Dil na maane agar to kiya keejiye
Aeene TooT kar nahiN juRte DostoN ko yun na khafa keejiye
JhooT se bhi bura hai aadha sach Is se behtar hai chup raha keejiye
Iftikhar Husain Arif, scholar, litterateur and former head Pakistan Academy of Letters and National Language Authority. He emotionally reminiscent the early life he spent at Lucknow.
inhīñ meñ jiite, inhīñ bastiyoñ meñ mar rahte ;
ye chāhte the magar kis ke naam par rahte
payambaroñ se zamīneñ vafā nahīñ kartīñ ;
ham aise kaun ḳhudā the ki apne ghar rahte
Javed Akhtar is a political activist, poet, lyricist, and screenwriter. He is a recipient of the Padma Bhushan Award, Sahitya Akademi Award as well as five National Film Awards. He was also a member of Rajya Sabha. Recently he was chosen as a recipient for the Richard Dawkins Award.
ye nayā shahar to hai ḳhuub basāyā tum ne
kyuuñ purānā huā vīrān zarā dekh to lo
kal jahāñ dīvār thī hai aaj ik dar dekhiye ,
kyā samā.ī thī bhalā dīvāne ke sar dekhiye
pur-sukūñ lagtī hai kitnī jhiil ke paanī pe bat
pairoñ kī be-tābiyāñ paanī ke andar dekhiye
Zehra Nigah is a poet and scriptwriter and is one of two female poets to gain prominence in the 1950s when the scene was dominated by men. She was the Guest of Honor at this event.
sunā hai jañgaloñ kā bhī koī dastūr hotā hai
sunā hai sher kā jab peT bhar jaa.e to vo hamla nahīñ kartā
daraḳhtoñ kī ghanī chhāñv meñ jā kar leT jaatā hai
havā ke tez jhoñke jab daraḳhtoñ ko hilāte haiñ
to mainā apne bachche chhoḌ kar
kavve ke anDoñ ko paroñ se thaam letī hai
ḳhudāvandā! jalīl o mo’tabar! daanā o biinā munsif o akbar!
mire is shahr meñ ab jañgaloñ hī kā koī qānūn nāfiz kar!
koī dastūr nāfiz kar!
Prominent modernist poet and a celebrated scholar of Persian, Professor Munibur Rahman presided over the event. He is deeply interested in the classical literature of Persian and is the modernist voice of Persian poetry. His books of Urdu poetry that bear his modernist mark include Baazdeed, Shahr-e-Gumnaam, and Nuqta-i-Mauhoom.
Timtimate haiN teri yaad mein yun dil ke chiragh;
Jaise basti ka nishaN dete haiN ssahil ke chiragh
Pehle se hi dilkash hai tasavur tera
Door se kitne bhale lagte haiN chiraagh
Us se milne ki kashish baad muddat mujhe laee thi
Lekin aah mujhe ehsaas na tha beech mein waqt ki khaee thi.
A recording of the event is now available on YouTube channel — https://youtu.be/i3p388-UcSA and Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AligarhAlumniAssociationOfDC/videos/2487046914930672/?vh=e.
(Report prepared by Zafar Iqbal, PhD (240-328-0162; raabta.india@gmail.com)
“I believe that if we can generate empathy for others it becomes exceedingly difficult to create barriers. I call this approach ‘Humanitarian Cinema’ and focused my next two films on studying the global refugee and displaced persons crisis with a cinematic eye and rendering films capable of eliciting empathy for the burgeoning refugee and IDP (internally displaced person) community.” – Skye Fitzgerald, Director
A refugee child. (Photo Credit/Spin Films, et al)
“HUNGER WARD”, filmed from inside two of the most active therapeutic feeding centers in Yemen, documents two women health care workers fighting to thwart the spread of starvation against the backdrop of a forgotten war. The film provides an unflinching portrait of Dr. Aida Alsadeeq and Nurse Mekkia Mahdi as they try to save the lives of hunger-stricken children within a population on the brink of famine.
THE HUMANITARIAN TRILOGY
“50 Feet from Syria” and “LIFEBOAT” were the first two films of this Humanitarian Cinema trilogy. In 2015 the film team produced “50 Feet from Syria” – focused on the civilian impact of the Syrian conflict. This, the first of a trilogy of films focused on one of the great humanitarian crises of our time – the plight of refugees and IDPs (internally displaced persons) in a global and interconnected world. They embraced a small-team, nimble production paradigm designed to prioritize intimate access from the heart of a crisis.
The second film of the trilogy, “LIFEBOAT” bears witness to refugees and migrants desperate enough to risk their lives in rubber boats leaving Libya in the middle of the night, despite a high probability of drowning. “LIFEBOAT” puts a human face on the refugee crisis and provides a spark of hope surrounding how civil society can intervene in a meaningful way. The third film of the trilogy is “HUNGER WARD”. Focused on the plight of starving and displaced civilians at the mercy of a forgotten war in Yemen, the film utilizes the same, nimble production paradigm to create an intimate, yet cinematic film intended to engender empathy for those most deeply impacted by the world’s greatest humanitarian crisis.
Key Credits
Director/Co-Producer: Skye Fitzgerald
Editor: Dan Sadowsky
Director of Photography: Jeffrey Ball
Original Score: William Campbell
HUNGERWARD:
https://www.hungerward.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spinfilm
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/spin_film
Twitter: https://twitter.com/spin_film
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SAUL & RUBY’S HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR BAND
DIR/PROD/WRIT: TOD LENDING l 2020 l USA l Eng l Doc l 1h 21m
ON VOD AND STREAMING PLATFORMS NOVEMBER 24, 2020
“Saul & Ruby’s Holocaust Survivor Band” is a unique and compelling story about having the courage to live one’s dreams, finding purpose and meaning in life at any age, the transcendent power of music, and the importance of speaking out against anti-Semitism and bigotry.
Holocaust Survivor Band (Photo Credit : Samuel Goldwyn Films)
The film is about a klezmer band started by Saul Dreier & Ruby Sosnowicz. Like many survivors of the Holocaust, after World War II, Saul and Ruby moved to America, started families and careers, grew old, and retired to South Florida.
For them, retirement could have been the last chapter in their story. But then they decided to start a klezmer band, named the “Holocaust Survivor Band”. The band summons the bittersweet memories of childhood in Poland, but more than that, it is a celebration of life.
In this utterly heart-affecting and enthralling film, we follow Saul and Ruby’s musical journey, which begins in total obscurity, playing in residential homes for the elderly and small Jewish community organizations, to being invited to perform at venues across the country, including a coveted performance at the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage.
Films on VOD, DVD and other Streaming Platforms
REPRESENT: Democracy On Her Terms
DIR/CINE/EDIT: HILLARY BACHELDER l 2020 l USA l Doc l 1h 34m
“These women are connected in their desires to change their communities and restore faith in democracy….what “Represent” does make clear is that without firm reinforcements, the system will continue celebrating cliches, like ‘Year of the Woman,’ instead of permanently changing.” – The New York Times
“With a film titled ‘Represent,’ it felt like my responsibility to ask big questions about the true power of representation. Yes, the demographics of elected officials are important, and gender identity, race, and sexual orientation on their own can be powerful symbols. But even more significant is a candidate stepping into a space that wasn’t built for them and still unapologetically bringing their whole selves into the spotlight with them.”
HILLARY BACHELDER DIRECTOR/CINEMATOGRAPHER/EDITOR
“REPRESENT” follows three women on both sides of the aisle who share the singular goal of improving their community through public service. Myya Jones attempts to spark a youth movement and unseat the incumbent mayor of Detroit; Bryn Bird, a farmer and working mother in Granville, OH, runs for township trustee; and Julie Cho walks a tightrope between her identities as a Korean immigrant and Republican candidate for State Representative in a liberal Chicago suburb. To learn more, visit thefilmrepresent.com
SIBYL
DIR: JUSTINE TRIET l 2019 l France, Belgium l Dramedy l 1h 41m
“SIBYL” is a sly, sultry character study from filmmaker Justine Triet. The film follows a psychotherapist (Virginie Efira) who decides to quit her practice and return to writing instead. As Sibyl starts dropping patients, she begins to struggle with excess time and a lack of inspiration – until she gets a call from Margot (Adèle Exarchopoulos), a young actress wrapped up in a dramatic affair with her costar, Igor (Gaspard Ulliel), who happens to be married to the film’s director (Sandra Hüller). Becoming further enmeshed in Margot’s life, Sibyl starts to blur past and present, fiction with reality, and the personal with the professional, as she begins to use Margot’s life as source material for her novel. To learn more, visit musicboxfilms.com/film/sibyl
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NOMAD: In The Footsteps Of Bruce Chatwin
DIR/WRIT/NARR: WERNER HERZOG l 2019 l Doc, Bio l 1h 25m
“All my life, I have searched for the nature of human restlessness.” – Bruce Chatwin
“A poignant testament to two friends’ shared curiosity about the world” – The Hollywood Reporter
“NOMAD” tells about director Werner Herzog’s decades-long friendship with the late travel writer Bruce Chatwin, a kindred spirit whose quest for ecstatic truth carried him to all corners of the globe. Herzog’s deeply personal portrait of Chatwin, illustrated with archival discoveries, film clips, and a mound of “brontosaurus skin,” encompasses their shared interest in aboriginal cultures, ancient rituals, and the mysteries stitching together life on earth. To learn more, visit musicboxfilms.com/film/nomad-in-the-footsteps-of-bruce-chatwin
(Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Spirituality, and Health & Wellness)
Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan is elated that much before he could come on the big screen, he featured on the world’s “biggest screen”, Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, on the occasion of his 55th birthday. SRK, who is Dubai’s ambassador since 2016, took to social media to share a picture of himself posing in front of the world’s tallest building, which flashed “Happy Birthday Shah Rukh Khan.” The superstar wrote that while he loved this gesture, his kids were “mighty impressed” too.
“It’s nice to see myself on the biggest and tallest screen in the world. My friend #MohamedAlabbar has me on the biggest screen even before my next film. Thanks & love u all @burjkhalifa & @emaardubai. Being my own guest in Dubai… my kids mighty impressed and me is loving it,” the Zero actor posted. Shah Rukh Khan’s friend, filmmaker Karan Johar also took to Instagram to share a video of the moment. In the video, K Jo is heard telling SRK to face the camera even as the actor is busy “admiring himself” on Burj Khalifa.
Actress Karishma Tanna, who made her Bollywood debut in the year 2005, recently featured in her first-ever dance number, titled Basanti, in the upcoming film Suraj Pe Mangal Bhari along with Manoj Bajpayee. Shot in the 90s style with satirical lyrics, the song has been praised for Karishma’s energetic dancing and expressions and Manoj Bajpayee’s funny acting and dance.
The track is Karishma’s first-ever dance number in a Bollywood song. Dressed in a shimmery red gown, the popular Television actress looks drop-dead gorgeous. Speaking of working with the legendary Manoj Bajpayee in her first-ever dance number in Bollywood, Karishma said, “I consider it my honour and blessing to share screen space, even if it’s just for a dance number, with the multi-talented Manoj sir. It was an outstanding experience of working with him, better than what I imagined it to be. There is so much to learn from him, he is so full of talent, it’s unbelievable. The reasons I did the song were, one for the melody of the song and two, for Manoj sir.”
The song has been choreographed by Vijay Ganguly which features a lot of quirks, impromptu high-voltage steps, and funny expressions just like the trailer of the film. The song written by Danish Sabri, sung by Javed-Mohsin, Payal Dev, and Danish, and composed by Javed-Mohsin, is a fun number that will make it certainly make it to every party playlist this Diwali.
NJSO Musicians playing Bollywood tunes Photo/Courtesy NJSO
“The Spectacular Bollywood,” October 24, 2020, 7 PM EDT “Best of Bollywood,” November 6, 2020, 7 PM EDT
Join the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) String Quartet for a pair of virtual musical journeys inspired by Bollywood, the Hindi-language Indian film industry. The Oct 24 concert is presented by New Jersey City University (NJCU) and the Nov 6 performance is presented by Metuchen Arts Council (MAC).
Explore historical influences on the growth of Bollywood and hear insights into signature music and lyrics of the genre. Listen for themes from the Oscar-winning movie Slumdog Millionaire! This interactive virtual event will include a Q&A with NJSO musicians. The program explores historical influences on the growth of Bollywood and offers insights into signature music and lyrics of the genre. Famed works include themes from the Oscar-winning movie “Slumdog Millionaire”.
These interactive virtual events—co-hosted by Archana Athalye and James Musto—will include a Q&A with NJSO musicians. The programs feature NJSO violinists Wendy Chen and James Tsao, violist David Blinn, cellist Sarah Seiver and percussionist James Musto.
Both online events are free. Registration is required; audiences can register at www.njsymphony.org/neighborhood
Tickets
The Orchestra’s online hub for free NJSO Virtual 20–21 content is njsymphony.org/virtual
Tickets for paid events are available via phone at 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or at njsymphony.org
NJSO LAUNCHES 20–21 VIRTUAL EXPERIENCES
The NJSO announces NJSO Virtual 20–21, a season of free digital experiences, from broadcasts of virtual orchestral concerts led by Music Director Xian Zhang at NJPAC to solo and chamber performances in iconic New Jersey locations to collaborations with fellow New Jersey arts organizations. Season launch highlights include the world premiere of a new commission by Daniel Bernard Roumain and a virtual event with Newark community leaders for the release of selections from Michael Raphael’s “Emmett Till” oratorio with Trilogy: An Opera Company, facilitated by Trilogy founder and bass Kevin Maynor.
The Orchestra celebrates the launch of NJSO Virtual 20–21 with an at-home performance of the finale of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, with music director Zhang conducting from home. The video premieres on October 29 on the NJSO’s YouTube and social channels and at njsymphony.org
Connect with NJSO: Website: njsymphony.org Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @NJSymphony YouTube: @NewJerseySymphony Email: information@njsymphony.org
“While in-person teaching remains critical and an important component of all of our education programs, the online environment is also creating new opportunities that definitely will expand the footprint of all of our offerings.” – Peter H. Gistelinck, Exec. Dir – NJYS
The New Jersey Youth Symphony (NJYS) opens its 2020-21 season with a wealth of digital programming for its existing community and beyond, featuring guest artists who are not only excellent musicians but also important voices surrounding the role of the arts as a unifying force.
The NJYS, a program of the Wharton Institute for the Performing Arts (WIPA), will open the 2020-21 season with new and compelling online education programs that include 15 master classes and 12 webinars with world-renowned guest artists and educators.
With a hybrid schedule of both online and socially distant outdoor rehearsals, students will also participate in over 30 online classes weekly ranging from music theory, composition, and ear training to jazz history, video editing, how to improve sight-reading skills, and fiddling in an unprecedented elevation of both the quantity and breadth of educational programming. Following the U.S. Youth Orchestras eFestival on September 20 with fellow programs from Chicago, Hawaii, Los Angeles, and Texas, live performances at venues around the state of New Jersey will be replaced with a digital format that has opened new doors of artistic collaborations for the NJYS, now in its 42nd season. “Recordings of the young musicians’ solo performances at home will be compiled into a digital concert and sent to nursing homes and assisted living facilities for residents to enjoy as a calming respite during this time of social distancing,” said Helen H. Cha-Pyo, Artistic Director & Principal Conductor. The Monday Master Class Series launches this fall and imbues the essence of the NJYS’s originally scheduled season, including artists, genres, and diversity, and offers its students a rare touchpoint with professional symphony orchestra musicians and leaders in today’s world of performing arts education. The digital series, expanding the limits of what would have been possible to present in person due to the cost and logistics, features a wide variety of acclaimed instrumentalists. The series kicked off on September 14 with newly appointed Oberlin Conservatory faculty member and French hornist Jeffrey Scott and includes Cleveland Orchestra Principal Clarinet Afendi Yusuf on November 2, the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) Principal Bass Ha Young Jung on November 9, and Seattle Symphony Principal Flute Demarre McGill on December 7, as well as instructors from The Juilliard School, University of Massachusetts, and Jazz at Lincoln Center. The Monday Master Class Series takes place weekly from 7:00-8:15 p.m. EST through December 14. Viewing for this online series is free via Zoom.
Friday Webinars at Wharton Arts is a series dedicated to making authentic connections between art and life through the sharing of stories, expertise, and creations by guest artists of varied disciplines. Friday Webinars at Wharton Arts take place weekly from 7:00-8:00 p.m. EST through December 11. Viewing for this online series is free via Zoom or on WhartonArts.tv.
For more information on the Monday Master Class Series and Friday Webinars at NJYS as well as the full line-up of guest artists, visit NJYS.org.
To learn more about NJYS, visit NJYS.org. To learn more about WIPA, visit WIPA.org
NJYS – FREE OUTDOOR CONCERT
NJYS Outdoor Community Concert Photo / Courtesy WIPA/NJYS
“For the past seven months, the pandemic has prevented us from performing together in-person. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to share live music with our community here in New Providence,” said Helen H. Cha-Pyo.
The (NJYS), a program of the WIPA, presents a free outdoor community concert on Sunday, October 25 at 3:00 p.m. The concert will take place at the New Providence Centennial Park located on Academy Street in New Providence. Performances by the NJYS Youth Symphony Brass and Percussion, Youth Orchestra Brass, Youth Symphony Winds, NJYS CL4tet, NJYS Percussion Quartet, and NJYS Mingus Jazz Combo will bring a message of hope to the community through the sounds of young musicians performing works by Joan Tower, Valerie Coleman, Charlie Parker, George Gershwin, and Aaron Copland, among others. The ensemble directors are Mesia Austin, Julius Tolentino, and Bryan Rudderow. The live concert will be conducted by Artistic Director and Principal Conductor Helen H. Cha-Pyo. For more information about the outdoor community concert, visit NJYS.org.
PMP HOSTS ‘BUILDING HARMONY’ BREAKFAST
The Paterson Music Project (PMP), a program of the Wharton Institute for the Performing Arts (WIPA), hosts the 2020 Building Harmony Breakfast on Thursday, October 29 at 10:00 a.m. EST via Zoom. This free, one-hour virtual fundraising breakfast to benefit PMP will help provide over 250 students with instrumental music in grades 1 – 10 across the city of Paterson.
The virtual gathering will bring together local business leaders, elected officials, and civic and community leaders and culminate with performances by PMP students as well as a new video showcasing the program’s tremendous growth and imprint on the community since its inception in 2013. The event hopes to raise nearly $200,000 in donations and pledges to sustain the after-school music program over the next five years.
The event is FREE and open to the public. For more information and to register for the event, visit PatersonMusicProject.org
(Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Spirituality, and Health & Wellness)
In 1986, when director Mira Nair was scouting for her film Salaam Bombay! at the National School of Drama in New Delhi, she fixed her gaze on a young man from Jaipur. “I noticed his focus, his intensity, his very remarkable look—his hooded eyes,” she later recalled of seeing Irrfan Khan. Though she cast him, she soon decided that he was too towering at more than six feet, that he seemed too well fed to convincingly play a malnourished child. To Khan’s dismay, Nair pared his role down to scraps. “I remember sobbing all night when Mira told me that my part was reduced to merely nothing,” the actor told the Indian magazine Openin 2015. “But it changed something within me. I was prepared for anything after that.”
The actor died Wednesday in Mumbai, two years after being diagnosed with neuroendocrine cancer. On Wednesday when Irrfan breathed his last, his last words reflected how much he missed his mother. “See, amma has come. She is sitting next to me. Amma has come to take me,” was Irrfan Khan’s last words. He then adds, “But what is the choice apart from being positive in tough situations. We have made this film with the same positivity. And I hope this film will teach you, make you laugh, make you cry and then make you laugh again. Enjoy the trailer and be kind to each other…And yes wait for me”.
Khan’s final movie, Angrezi Medium, was the last Bollywood film released in theaters before the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a nationwide lockdown. Irrfan recorded an audio message for his fans during the trailer release of Angrezi Medium. His last message played along with a promotional clip of his film. “There is a saying… ‘When life gives you lemons, you make lemonades out of it. It sounds good. But when life actually puts lemon in your hands, it becomes really tough to make lemonade,” Irrfan says.
Irrfan with friend and wife Sutapa. “If I get to live, I want to live for her. She is the reason for me to keep at it still,” he said towards the dusk of his life.
The film ended up being the bookend to a singular body of work that had begun in 1988 with Salaam Bombay! After that movie, Khan spent more than a decade appearing in television serials and supporting roles on film, before breaking through with his dynamic lead performance as a feudal soldier in Asif Kapadia’s The Warrior (2001). That performance kick-started a career that has no precedent in Indian film history.
Khan’s featherlight touch made the job look simple, distracting you from the fact that acting is, at its core, work. He could play the romantic lead with flushed ardor, as he did in Shoojit Sircar’s Piku (2015), but he knew how to cede the spotlight as a supporting player too. His style was free of the vanity or self-consciousness that could’ve made him seem larger than life. As his fame grew, he retained the essential quality that endeared him to viewers: a sense of relatability. Khan was an everyman who, improbably, became a star.
He was born Sahabzade Irfan Ali Khan—just one R—to a middle-class Muslim family in the city of Jaipur, Rajasthan, in 1967. A shy and gentle kid, he’d wanted to be an actor since he was small, according to a recent biography by the writer Aseem Chhabra. Khan’s immediate family didn’t watch many movies, though, forcing him to nurture his dreams in secret. He understood that his physical attributes, including his darker complexion, could be professional limitations, but he went on to attend the National School of Drama, where he arrived as a bundle of raw potential.
On-screen, Khan’s most vital instrument may have been that pair of soulful eyes that captured Nair’s imagination three decades ago. They could exude menace or innocence, depending on the role. His eyes helped him bring sensual urgency to his early performance as Rahul, a young musician who has an affair with a married woman named Sandhya (played by Dimple Kapadia) in Govind Nihalani’s Drishti (1990). When the two lovers lock gazes, whatever’s transpiring between them feels electric. The film offers Khan just a few short scenes before he more or less evaporates from the narrative, yet the memory of his character lingers long after he’s gone. That role was just a preview of the great work Khan would deliver after the turn of the millennium. Trying to pick highlights from this era is a fool’s errand. He shone in bigger releases such as Vishal Bhardwaj’s Maqbool (2003), a riff on Macbeth set in the Mumbai underworld, and Anurag Basu’s Life in a Metro (2007), a collage of intersecting tales.
“An incredible talent, a gracious colleague, a prolific contributor to the World of Cinema … left us too soon,” Bachchan tweeted.
When it comes to independent cinema, Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox (2013) features one of his most moving performances. The film, which documents an epistolary bond between two lonely souls, gives Khan a role that bears amusing parallels to his Salaam Bombay! character. He plays a widower named Saajan who marches through each day listlessly. Yet he forges a connection with a stranger, an equally forlorn housewife named Ila (Nimrat Kaur), when they begin exchanging letters by accident. The correspondence seems to awaken Saajan, and Khan makes the character’s decision to gradually let his guard down feel organic. Much of the performance depends on voice-over, and Khan was blessed with a honeyed voice that recalls the tired maxim about an actor being able to recite the phone book without sacrificing a viewer’s attention.
His talents would ferry him to American and British cinema in the late aughts. These films mostly cast Khan in supporting roles, such as his wordless cameo as a villager in Wes Anderson’s The Darjeeling Limited (2007) or his part as a scientist in The Amazing Spider-Man (2012), that only suggested the depth of his talent. (Television, in contrast, gave him a rich showcase in Season 3 of HBO’s In Treatment, where he once again played a widower, this time an immigrant from Kolkata.) These movies didn’t deserve him, but Khan dignified them with his presence, refusing to sink with the flimsy material he was given.
Unlike those works, Nair’s The Namesake, a 2006 film adaptation of Jhumpa Lahiri’s novel of the same name, gave his skills more breathing room. As the professor Ashoke Ganguli, Khan embodies an ideal of the Bengali immigrant father in the eyes of his son, Gogol (Kal Penn). He is at once a figment of memory and a person whose struggles and desires feel achingly real. Ashoke is a specific kind of person, a Bengali intellectual who adapts to life in America after a rough period of adjustment. The eventual tragedy at the heart of the narrative—Ashoke’s sudden death—is piercing because of how vividly Khan portrays this man.
Who could’ve predicted that Khan would, like his character in that film, leave us young and without much warning? It’s tempting to wonder what characters Khan would’ve introduced us to as he eased into old age, as his hair began to gray. That viewers are deprived of knowing feels like theft. Among The Namesake’s most arresting moments is a scene in which Ashoke narrates the story of how he named his son. The sequence plays on Khan’s strongest devices: You see those eyes glimmer with pain and pride, and Khan’s voice shepherds you through this man’s past. His is a love you recognize as human, but Khan expresses the sentiment with restraint. It’s a kind of beauty, in other words, that you only see in movies.
The Bollywood superstar wrote this open letter that was published by Times of India before starting his treatment for cancer in 2018.
“It’s been quite some time now since I have been diagnosed with a high-grade neuroendocrine cancer. This new name in my vocabulary, I got to know, was rare, and due to fewer study cases, and less information comparatively, the unpredictability of the treatment was more. I was part of a trial-and-error game.
I had been in a different game, I was travelling on a speedy train ride, had dreams, plans, aspirations, goals, was fully engaged in them. And suddenly someone taps on my shoulder and I turn to see. It’s the TC: “Your destination is about to come. Please get down.” I am confused: No, no. My destination hasn’t come. No, this is it. This is how it is sometimes.
The suddenness made me realise how you are just a cork floating in the ocean with unpredictable currents! And you are desperately trying to control it.
In this chaos, shocked, afraid and in panic, while on one of the terrifying hospital visits, I blabber to my son, ‘The only thing I expect from ME is not to face this crisis in this present state. I desperately need my feet. Fear and panic should not overrule me and make me miserable’.
That was my intention. And then the pain hit. As if all this while, you were just getting to know pain, and now you know his nature and his intensity. Nothing was working; no consolation, no motivation.”
Irrfan also wrote about finding peace during this painful time and said the only thing certain is the uncertainty.
“The charisma you brought to everything you did was pure magic,” tweeted Indian actor and model Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
“As I was entering the hospital, drained, exhausted, listless, I hardly realised my hospital was on the opposite side of Lord’s, the stadium. The Mecca of my childhood dream. Amidst the pain, I saw a poster of a smiling Vivian Richards. Nothing happened, as if that world didn’t ever belong to me.
This hospital also had a coma ward right above me. Once, while standing on the balcony of my hospital room, the peculiarity jolted me. Between the game of life and the game of death, there is just a road. On one side, a hospital, on the other, a stadium. As if one isn’t part of anything which might claim certainty – neither the hospital, nor the stadium. That hit me hard.
I was left with this immense effect of the enormous power and intelligence of the cosmos. The peculiarity of MY hospital’s location – it HIT me. The only thing certain was the uncertainty. All I could do was to realise my strength and play my game better.
This realisation made me submit, surrender and trust, irrespective of the outcome, irrespective of where this takes me, eight months from now, or four months from now, or two years. The concerns took a back seat and started to fade and kind of went out of my mind space.
For the first time, I felt what ‘freedom’ truly means. It felt like an accomplishment. As if I was tasting life for the first time, the magical side of it. My confidence in the intelligence of the cosmos became absolute. I feel as if it has entered every cell of mine.
Time will tell if it stays, but that is how I feel as of now.”
Irrfan also talked about his well-wishers and those praying for him across the world.
“Throughout my journey, people have been wishing me well, praying for me, from all over the world. People I know, people I don’t even know. They were praying from different places, different time zones, and I feel all their prayers become ONE. One big force, like a force of current, which got inside me through the end of my spine and has germinated through the crown of my head.
It’s germinating – sometimes a bud, a leaf, a twig, a shoot. I keep relishing and looking at it. Each flower, each twig, each leaf which has come from the cumulative prayers, each fills me with wonder, happiness and curiosity. A realisation that the cork doesn’t need to control the current. That you are being gently rocked in the cradle of nature.”
In his recent interview to Mumbai Mirror, Irrfan said “It’s been a roller-coaster ride, a memorable one. Happy moments were underlined because of the inherent uncertainty. We cried a little and laughed a lot. We became one huge body,” he said.
Khan went on to talk about how crucial it was for him keep his thoughts from wandering. “You screen out noises. You are selective about what you want to filter in. I have gone through tremendous anxiety but have somehow managed to control it, then, let go. You are playing hopscotch all the time,” he said.
On the subject of his wife Sutapa, Khan called her “the reason” he’s still able to power through. “What to say about Sutapa (wife)? She is there 24/7. She has evolved in care-giving and if I get to live, I want to live for her. She is the reason for me to keep at it still,” he said.
Sutapa had previously written a post on Facebook where she discussed the family’s year long struggle with Khan’s cancer. “Longest year of our life . Time was never measured with pain and hope at the same time ever. While we take our baby steps back to work, to life I am submerged in prayers wishes and faith from friends ,relatives, strangers and a connection with universe which gives us a small chance for this new start.”
She added, “It seems unbelievable never ever I realized the meaning of the word unpredictable so well never ever I could feel peoples wishes on my bones my breath my heartbeat which helped me to stay focused and kicking.. I can’t take names because there are names and there are names I don’t even know who played angels. Sorry for not been able to answer individually but I know what you mean to us.”
He leaves behind a wife and two children.
“You fought and fought and fought. I will always be proud of you.. we shall meet again” Tweeted Award-winning filmmaker Shoojit Sircar
The whole world, it appears, is mourning the loss of Irrfan Khan. In New York, many, already cooped in their homes because of lockdown, watched Irrfan’s movies over and over again, as if they wanted neve to be separated from the man.
“Irrfan Khan’s demise is a loss to the world of cinema and theatre,” tweeted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. “He will be remembered for his versatile performances across different mediums. My thoughts are with his family, friends and admirers.”
Other prominent politicians, like Home Minister Amit Shah and former Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, also shared their condolences online.
“The charisma you brought to everything you did was pure magic,” tweeted Indian actor and model Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
Award-winning filmmaker Shoojit Sircar also posted a tribute on Twitter, writing,“You fought and fought and fought. I will always be proud of you.. we shall meet again.”
Amitabh Bachchan, another Bollywood icon, said in a tweet that Khan’s death created “a huge vacuum.”
“An incredible talent, a gracious colleague, a prolific contributor to the World of Cinema … left us too soon,” Bachchan tweeted.
“Irrfan Khan’s demise is a loss to the world of cinema and theatre,” tweeted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. “He will be remembered for his versatile performances across different mediums. My thoughts are with his family, friends and admirers.”
Alvida Irrfan!! Cinema won’t be the same without you!
UNIONDALE, NY (TIP): India Association of Long Island celebrated Annual Fundraising Gala Dinner on June 30th, 2019 at Marriott, Long Island. The function was attended by about 270 guests. India Association of Long Island is a 41-year-old Non-Profit organization.
With more than 2300 members and still growing, IALI aims at preserving and promoting Indian Culture. IALI has a Women’s Forum, a Seniors Forum, a Kids Forum and a Youth Forum. Besides there are a Meditation forum.& a Sangeet Forum.
Khushi and Jigna Oza performed Ganesh Vandana. IALI President Lalit Aery in his address, extended a warm welcome to guests and association members, and appreciated his team for the great work they did to organize the fundraiser.
A Number of dignitaries graced the occasion which included Anna Kaplan and Kevin Thomas NYS senators. They presented citations to all five Honorees -Mrs. Indu Chhabra, Dr Vijay Rasquinha, Dr Gopal Kishore , Mr. Jasbir Jay Singh and Mrs. Anupam Goenka.
Also present were Human Rights Commission Chairman Mr. Bobby Kalotee and Mr. Zahid Syed, member of the commission.
IALI on the occasion introduced membership cards for IALI members. The project \h was sponsored by Mr. Gary Sikka (Mint Restaurant), Mr. Bansal (India Visa Center), Mr. Batra (Batra Travels) and Mr. Sumit Verma (Hicksville Optical). Mr. Naveen Shah and Madhu Pareek from Navika Group and all the Past Presidents of IALI were called on the stage to present cards to all officers of IALI. MC Indu Gajwani announced that all IALI members will get their cards at a later time.
Bollywood celebrity star Ms. Jinal Pandya was a special guest at Gala Dinner and she performed two dances and asked the audience to join on the dance floor. Vote of Thanks was given by the Secretary Mr. Govind Gupta
Association collected funds to have India Fest which is scheduled for September 22, 2019 at Hyatt in Long Island. For more information, visit www.ialinewyork.org
ATLANTA (TIP): Over 2,000 delegates from across the nation are attending the 37th annual convention organized by The American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) from July 3rd to July 7th, 2019 at the fabulous and world-famous Omni Atlanta at CNN Center and Georgia World Congress Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Dr. Naresh Parikh, President of AAPI, says, “The 37th Annual AAPI Convention & Scientific Assembly offers an intimate setting that facilitate our ability to convey cutting-edge research and CME, promote personal, professional and business relationships, and display ethnic items. The convention is filled with cutting-edge CMEs, product theaters, women’s forum, great entertainment from Bollywood and local talent and lot more.”
It’s a well-known fact that physicians of Indian origin excel in their respective areas of work and continue to play key roles in patient care, administration, academics and medical research. In order to cater to its diversity of medical specialties, AAPI continues to use a multi-disciplinary conference format.
Shankar Mahadevan, the popular award-winning Bollywood playback singer is all set to take the delegates by storm during the Convention. Shankar Mahadevan and his troupe will perform live at the much anticipated AAPI’s annual convention enthralling over 2,000 delegates from across the nation, who are expected to attend the Convention.
Golf With Cricket Star Kapil Dev is another major attraction. Kapil Dev, the popular cricket star who won India the World Cup will be the keynote speaker at the convention. In addition, he will play Gold with AAPI members and will sign a coffee table book on Sikhism – ‘WE THE SIKHS’, by the legendary cricket star.
Preity Zinta, the famous Bollywood actor will be the keynote speaker at the much-anticipated Women’s Forum, which has come to be a popular agenda item at every convention.
In addition, there will be, for the first time a Youth Public Speaking Competition and the much anticipated and appreciated “AAPI Has Got Talent” where the AAPI members showcase their talents before their colleagues.
The Organizing committeeContinuing Medical Education and non-CME seminars by experts in their fields will provide comprehensive and current reviews and guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of various disease states to reduce morbidity and mortality and achieve cost effective quality care outcomes. At the end of the activity, it is expected that attendees will gain an understanding of the causation, diagnosis and the best clinical practices for the management of the diverse group of diseases discussed during this program.
Dr. Hemant Yagnick, Academic Chair for the Convention, says, “Medical specialty representation includes pediatrics, psychiatry, anesthesiology/pain management, cardiology, family medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, oncology, gastroenterology pathology, endocrinology, nephrology, rheumatology along with many other fields.”
The annual convention this year is being organized by AAPI’s Atlanta Chapter, headed by Dr. Sreeni Gangasani. “The convention team is working incredibly hard to provide a delightful 4 days of events packed with educational CME credits, world-class entertainment, leadership seminars, networking opportunities, exhibits, and more,” Dr. Gangasani added. “This meeting offers a rich educational program featuring the latest scientific research and advances in clinical practice. In addition, physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country will convene to develop health policy agendas and encourage legislative priorities for the upcoming year.”
As though responding to the growing need: “Physician, heal thyself,” especially when there are growing signs of burn out among physicians, AAPI is focusing on themes such as how to take care of self and find satisfaction and happiness in the challenging situations they are in, while serving hundreds of patients everyday of their dedicated and noble profession.
“Many of the physicians who will attend this convention have excelled in different specialties and subspecialties and occupy high positions as faculty members of medical schools, heads of departments, and executives of hospital staff. The AAPI Convention offers an opportunity to meet directly with these physicians who are leaders in their fields and play an integral part in the decision-making process regarding new products and services,” Dr. Suresh Reddy, President-Elect of AAPI, added.
Dr. Raghu Lolabhattu, Co-Chair Convention and Convention Alumni Chair, said, “AAPI Convention is just around the corner, almost less than a month. As a Co-chair of the Convention, on behalf of our President Dr. Naresh Parikh, Convention Chair Dr. Sreeni Gangasani and our hard-working Convention team I would like to invite each and every one to the great gala. Our team is working relentlessly with a great enthusiasm to make this event a most successful one and I assure that you will have great time and would go home with wonderful memories.
The 37th annual AAPI Convention, while providing physicians of Indian origin an opportunity to come together in an atmosphere of collegiality, it will enable them to retrace and appreciate their common roots, culture and the bond that unites them as members of this large professional community. Giving them a platform to celebrate their accomplishments, the annual convention to be attended by nearly 2,000 physicians of Indian origin, it will also provide a forum to renew their professional commitment through continuing medical educations activities.
The annual convention this year is being organized by AAPI’s Atlanta Chapter. In addition to offering over 12 hours of cutting-edge CMEs to the physicians, CEOs Forum, fabulous entertainment, and women’s leadership forum. The convention will be addressed by senior world leaders, including US Senators, Presidential candidates, Nobel Laureates, Governors, Congressmen, and celebrities from the Hollywood and Bollywood world.
“Having Sadhguru at the Convention with his unique ability to make the ancient yogic sciences relevant to contemporary minds, and act as a bridge to the deeper dimensions of life, will make the convention and the delegates from across the nation richer, in so many ways,” said Dr. Anupama Gorimukala, Secretary of AAPI. “His approach does not ascribe to any belief system but offers methods for self-transformation that are both proven and powerful,” Dr. Anupama Gorimukala, Secretary of AAPI, added.
The convention venue is one of the best ever one has seen with tons of local attractions. Several sightseeing places like CNN tower, Coca-Cola museum, Mercedes Benz sports Arena and many other attractions are within five minutes’ walk.
“The 2019 AAPI Annual Convention & Scientific Assembly offers an exciting venue to interact with leading physicians, health professionals, academicians, and scientists of Indian origin,” says Dr. Sudhakar Jonnalagadda, Vice President of AAPI. “Physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country will convene and participate in the scholarly exchange of medical advances, to develop health policy agendas, and to encourage legislative priorities in the coming year.”
Dr. Manoj Shah, Convention Treasurer says, Guests will be treated to true Southern hospitality in one of the country’s fastest growing cities—bustling with restaurants, night life, shopping and more. We look forward to welcoming you and your family and thank you for your support in making this convention a great success.”
AAPI organization is a dynamic body, spearheading legislative agendas and influencing the advancement of medical care not only in the US, but internationally. AAPI’s impact is seen in areas such as advocating for the increasing physician work force, participating in national health initiatives such as obesity prevention, and investing in global health education. Whether practicing in medically underserved areas such as inner cities and rural communities or participating in cutting edge research & academics, Indian physicians form an impressive group.
Almost 10%-12% of medical students entering US schools are of Indian origin. Headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois, AAPI represents the interests of over nearly 100,000 physicians, medical students and residents of Indian heritage in the United States. It is the largest ethnic medical organization in the nation.
“The 2019 AAPI Annual Convention & Scientific Assembly offers an exciting venue to interact with leading physicians, health professionals, academicians, and scientists of Indian origin. Physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country will convene and participate in the scholarly exchange of medical advances, to develop health policy agendas, and to encourage legislative priorities in the coming year. We look forward to seeing you in Atlanta, GA!” says Dr. Naresh Parekh. For more details and registration for the convention, please visit: www.aapiconvention.org and www.aapiusa.org
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