India Today Group Online
 


September 4 Issue




COVER
 

Green Berets
A few single-minded crusaders fight for India's wildlife-or what's left of it environment.

 
ECONOMY
 

Perform Or Perish
Rich states protest against the precedence to poverty over performance in allocation of funds.

 
THE NATION
 

Whimsical Goodbye
Uma Bharati's reckless streak shows up again, this time making her quit the Lok Sabha.

 
Columns
 

Fifth Column
by Tavleen Singh
Rewarding The Brats

 
 

Kautilya
by Jairam Ramesh
Naidu's Wrong

 
 

Right Angle
by Swapan Dasgupta
Shoring Up Our Nerves

 
 

Politically Correct
by P. Chidambaram
Let The Market Decide

 
Other stories
  The Nation  
  Sports  
  Neighbours  
  Lifestyle  
  Obituary  
  Cinema  
  Entertainment  
NewsNotes
 

Language Barrier
These are nightmarish days for officials and other staff at Parivahan Bhavan...

 
  Dwelling On Correctness
Politicians are normally not known to vacate government premises...


 
 

Yielding Place To New
The day the Jharkhand is officially created, Raj Bhawan in Patna will have a new occupant...

more...

 
 



 
  Home  
 

ENTERTAINMENT: CINEMA

Did You Know
Karan Johar's forthcoming film, Kabhi Kushi, Kabhi Gham is being co-scripted by Sheena Parikh, a thirty-something Harvard MBA.

Lady In Waiting

In Deewane, she looks longingly at Ajay Devgan--who's in a double role--as the Devgans romance Urmila Matondkar. In Dhadkan, she looks longingly at Sunil Shetty while he is obsessive about Shilpa Shetty. Mahima Choudhary seems to have become Bollywood's favourite unrequited lover. Lately, it seems that she's always the bridesmaid, never the bride. "It's just a coincidence," she says. "Both my special appearance films released on the same day. In all my other films, I'm playing the lead. I'm definitely not going to repeat the same type of roles again." Next time around, Mahima gets the guy.

Q & A: Kashmira Shah
"I want to do roles nobody else can do"
Her name is Shah, Kashmira Shah. She's Bollywood's hottest bad-girl. But make no mistake. Shah, last seen in Ram Gopal Varma's Jungle, is no bimbo. Shah on roles, vamps and why she does theatre:

Box Office

DHADKAN
Weeks in release: 1
Collections: Rs 53,55,652
Dharmesh Darshan's attempt at a Yash Chopra-style flick gets a mixed response.
Verdict: Losing to average

DEEWANE
Weeks in release: 1
Collections: Rs 33,73,086
Even two Ajay Devgans, a Mahima Choudhary and Urmila Matondkar can't shore up this sinking ship.
Verdict: Flop

HAR DIL JO PYAR KAREGA
Weeks in release: 2
Collections: Rs 64,09,202
The candy floss love story finds takers in Mumbai and the south.
Verdict: Above average to hit

(Mumbai collections only)

Q. Are you a vamp?
A. Actually, I prefer to call myself a negative heroine. Simply because I have so much to do in my films. Besides, I'm working hard on not being slotted. I want to shock people. I want to do roles that nobody else can do. Like Rishi Kapoor or Kamal Haasan, you can't slot them at all.

Q. You also do theatre?
A. I've done two plays with Makrand Deshpande called Meena Kumari and Laila. I am not a bimbo. But the industry doesn't look beyond my body. Very few people like Ram Gopal Varma offer you the opportunity to be pushed as an actress.

Q. But you must have fun playing a baddie?
A. I'm having fun more than making money. After Jungle, people have realised that I'm not just a sex symbol. So I'm choosing my roles very carefully. But I think that there are too many heroines. It's so easy to do that. It's harder to do something else and still steal the limelight. Which is what I really love to do.

On the mommy track
Just when you thought you'd never see them again, they are back. This time as moms. Check out the mommy-brigade:


Padmini Kapila

Used to be: Vamp
Now is: Kareena Kapoor's mother in Refugee.
Rating: It is a chest-heaving melodrama all the way.

Sharmila Tagore
Used to be: Glam-doll heroine.
Now is: Sunil Shetty's mother in Dhadkan.
Rating: Histrionics are over the top but the dimples are matchless.

Kamini Kaushal
Used to be: A-list heroine in the '50s.
Now is: Rani Mukherjee's grandmother in Har Dil Jo Pyar Karega.
Rating: Perfect old-school dadi ma, all smiles and warmth. And absolutely adorable.

Top

 
 
 
     METRO TODAY
  MetroScape  
   


Taste Buddies
Some Googlies at a food quiz for Taj Bengal hotel's Ladies Club...
more...

Looking Glass
Delhi:
Home Store
Restaurant


Mumbai:
Ayurveda centre

Bangalore:
Restaurant
Shop

 
    Web Exclusives

COLUMN  



The stock markets are humming, and it's feel-good time once again, writes INDIA TODAY Associate Editor V. Shankar Aiyar in
Au Contraiyar.

 
DESPATCHES  


Her Majesty's tongue is becoming a rage in Maharashtra schools, despite Thackeray's edict against it. INDIA TODAY Principal Correspondent Farah Baria captures the trend in Despatches.

 
EXTRAS

Full coverages
with columns, infographics, audio reports.

» 1971: The Untold Story
» Veerappan Strikes Again
» The Tiger Catastrophe
» The SriLankan crisis
» The Kashmir jigsaw
»The Nepal Gameplan

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