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Anjali Sharma’s New Song SAJNA Takes The Internet By Storm Goes Viral Overnight...

In a remarkable turn of events, a newly released song by artist AB Rockstar featuring Bollywood actress Anjali Sharma has taken the music world by storm, quickly becoming a viral sensation. The catchy tune, which showcases the diva’s quick moves, has captured the hearts of listeners across the globe.

Within hours of its release, the song began spreading like wildfire on social media platforms, captivating listeners with its infectious melodies and thought-provoking lyrics. Fans and music enthusiasts alike were instantly drawn to the artist’s distinctive sound, creating a buzz that quickly transformed into a viral phenomenon.

The song’s popularity has skyrocketed, amassing amazing views, shares, and downloads across various streaming platforms. Listeners have flooded comment sections, expressing their admiration for the artist’s exceptional musical abilities and praising the song’s relatability and emotional depth.

Anjali Sharma, whose rise to prominence has been meteoric, has undoubtedly solidified her position as an artist to be reckoned with in the showbiz. Her unique style, combined with their ability to connect with audiences on a profound level, has garnered widespread acclaim and attention from both fans and industry professionals.

Music insiders predict that the viral success of this latest release will open doors for Anjali and present numerous opportunities for collaboration, live performances, and even potential record deals. Industry executives have taken note of her remarkable talent and are eagerly watching as the song continues to climb charts and gain international recognition.

As the song continues to go viral, it’s clear that Anjali Sharma has cemented their place among the industry’s brightest stars. Fans and industry professionals eagerly await the artist’s next move, eager to see how they will build upon this incredible success and further leave their mark on the music world.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CtWT9EjK2di/

  

Anjali Sharma’s New Song SAJNA Takes The Internet By Storm  Goes Viral Overnight

Basu Chatterjee – Remembering Bollywood’s God of Small Things...

———-Sundeep Bhutoria

By the end of the 1960s, Hindi cinema was poised for a change. The decade had largely been about escapist cinema, and though some of these had great songs, there was little that was creative and path-breaking by way of content. The odd exceptions – Bandini, Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam, Anupama and Teesri Kasam – only proved the rule about a decade that replaced the artistic aspirations of the 1950s with what has in effect come to define ‘Bollywood song-and-dance’ cinema.

The advent of the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) in 1962 played an important part in this change, with its first batches beginning to enter the industry, bringing in a change in aesthetics. The year 1969 was to be a watershed in the history of Hindi cinema, with three films that proved instrumental in ushering in a new language, heralding the New Wave in Hindi cinema: Mrinal Sen’s Bhuvan Shome, Mani Kaul’s Uski Roti and Basu Chatterjee’s Sara Akash (all three were shot by K.K. Mahajan, who had graduated from the FTII in 1966, and who became synonymous with the New Wave and with the cinema of Basu Chatterjee).

Of these three film-makers, Mrinal Sen remained rooted largely to Bengali films and Mani Kaul carved a space for a personal cinema free of commercial considerations. It was Basu Chatterjee who, in conjunction with the films of Hrishikesh Mukherjee and Gulzar, provided an alternative to the big-budget extravaganza of mainstream films of the era (the Manmohan Desais and Prakash Mehras) and the spare aesthetics of arthouse cinema (driven by Shyam Benegal).

The importance of Basu Chatterjee lies in the kind of cinema he popularised when juxtaposed against the cinema that ruled the box office at the time. The 1970s was the decade of the big blockbuster – Yaadon Ki Baaraat, Deewaar, Sholay, Amar Akbar Anthony. Yash Chopra and Ramesh Sippy, Nasir Hussain and Shakti Samanta were the dream merchants. Amitabh Bachchan and Dharmendra, Rishi Kapoor and Rajesh Khanna were the role models for the filmy hero, while Zeenat Aman and Hema Malini set a million young hearts aflutter. The aesthetic of Hindi cinema was larger-than-life.

They were not heroes and heroines, but the man and woman next door

Basu Chatterjee provided an alternative. His debut, Sara Akash, belonged firmly to the New Wave school of spare film-making. He however jettisoned this soon, opting for a middle road between this and the big-budget extravaganza. In doing so he made ‘small’ beautiful and commercially viable. With Rajnigandha (1974), he revolutionised Hindi cinema, casting rank newcomers in a literary classic by Mannu Bhandari. The film, unlike any other film of the time (a runtime of approximately two hours, no lip-synched songs, no fights, no flashy clothes and make-up for its actors who looked nothing like Greek gods) broke all records at the box office. He had already shown a penchant for a different approach to the cinema of the city in Piya Ka Ghar (1971), dealing with a couple finding their way to love and domesticity in the confined spaces of a one-room tenement in Mumbai shared by the extended family. While the latter starred Jaya Bhaduri (in one of her early roles) and Anil Dhawan (fresh from the FTII), Rajnigandha made stars of the unlikely duo of Amol Palekar and Vidya Sinha.

Over the next few films, Basu Chatterjee made his school of cinema an audience favourite. Chhoti Si Baat and Chitchor, both 1976, starred Amol Palekar, who soon came to be termed ‘the Amitabh Bachchan of middle-of-the-road cinema’. In Vidya Sinha, the director gave Hindi cinema the very antithesis of the ’70s heroine. His characters epitomised the Everyman. They were not heroes and heroines, but the man and woman next door. The men were not macho style icons. They were often gentle, hesitant and even lacking in ambition. The women were down to earth and real, not coy and simpering. And their world consisted of humble middle-class drawing rooms, local bus stops and trains, and office corners. Even when he cast superstars like Amitabh Bachchan (Manzil, inspired by Mrinal Sen’s Akash Kusum) and Dharmendra (Dillagi, with Hema Malini), the stars willingly shed their starry mannerisms to play everyday characters.

His spotlight was on literary classics, communities and women

No one brought alive particular communities as lovingly as he did in his films like Khatta Meetha (the Parsis) and Baaton Baaton Mein (the Christians in Mumbai). And few film-makers of the time were as adept at adapting literary classics as he was – Sara Akash (from a novel by Rajendra Yadav), Piya Ka Ghar (Vasant Kale, or Va Pu), Rajnigandha (based on a short story by Mannu Bhandari), Ratnadeep (Prabhat Mukhopadhyay), Swami and Apne Paraye (based on novels by Saratchandra Chattopadhyay) – giving his cinema a unique literary sensibility.

One of the most revolutionary aspects of his cinema lay in the woman his films portrayed. Right from Malti in Piya Ka Ghar, they were independent women with a mind of their own. They were determined, focused and unwilling to bow down to convention just because society demanded it. Vidya Sinha’s Deepa in Rajnigandha is revolutionary in the way she is shown as unable to make up her mind about the two men she is dating. Zarina Wahab’s Geeta in Chitchor decides to follow her heart in the face of family opposition. In Swami, the woman reads Thomas Hardy and is torn between the man she thinks is her intellectual equal and her ‘simple’ husband. These women challenged the existing tropes on the portrayal of women in Hindi cinema.

Wah, what songs! ‘Yeh jeevan hai’ to ‘Kai baar yunhi dekha hai’ to ‘Rimjhim gire sawan’

This ability to carve out a different cinema was visible in the songs in his films as well. From ‘Yeh jeevan hai’ in Piya Ka Ghar to ‘Rajnigandha phool tumhare’ in Rajnigandha (‘Kai baar yunhi dekha hai’ from the same film won a National Award) to the evergreen songs of Chitchor to ‘Rimjhim gire sawan’ (arguably the finest rain song in Hindi cinema) in Manzil, the cinema of Basu Chatterjee provided Hindi cinema with some of its most loved and enduring classics.

The dream of 1969 was to prove short-lived. By the end of the 1970s, the cinema of the Basu Chatterjee-Hrishikesh Mukherjee-Gulzar School was shutting shop. Driven by a changing demographic, the onslaught of video piracy, some indifferent films by the film-makers themselves, and the advent of TV as a popular medium, kitschy commercial films were making a comeback in a big way and the next decade would witness a new low for Hindi films.

Basu Chatterjee, of course, led the first wave of top-notch and popular content in television with serials like RajaniByomkesh BakshiDarpan and Kakaji Kahin proving to be trailblazers. His legacy lives on in the cinema of every filmmaker who explores the life and world of the Everyman.

Basu Chatterjee – Remembering Bollywood’s God of Small Things

Neha Bansal Announced The Biopic Of Dadasaheb Phalke On His Birthday...

Bollywood actress and film producer Neha Bansal’s birthday was celebrated with much fanfare on 8th June.

Many Bollywood stars were present on the occasion of her birthday and wished her on her birthday. On this grand occasion, Neha Bansal launched the poster of her film Fart Fata Fat – evolution of think and also announced her new film.

Announcing the making of a film on the life of Dadasaheb Phalke, actress and producer Neha Bansal said that in the film industry only awards have been distributed in the name of Dadasaheb Phalke, which doesn’t do justice to the image of Dadasaheb. In fact, paying true tribute to Dada Saheb will be considered meaningful only when a full film is made on his life and today I am very happy to announce the biopic of Dadasaheb Phalke.

Neha Bansal said that it is an honor to make a film on Dadasaheb Phalke. I hope that these films will get international recognition and this film will bring Oscar award. After cutting the birthday cake, Neha Bansal while addressing the media in front of the big TV actors and Bollywood stars present there said that she is going to make a big announcement very soon after the completion of this project.It is a surprise and it will be revealed soon in an event. Neha Bansal has also created a world record for making the thinnest henna in the world.

Neha Bansal’s birthday party was organized at a hotel in Oshiwara, Mumbai. The team of Bhabi Ji Ghar Par Hain, a popular TV show aired on &TV, was also present on the occasion of the birthday, apart from Arun Bakshi, Rakesh Bedi, Gulshan Pandey, Kishan Bhan, Pankaj Raina, Vishu Soni, Jeetu Gupta, Ali Khan, Kishore Bhanushali, Producers Vimal, Kallu, Kali Ram Tomar, Parwana, Saurabh Sinha, Gautam Parikh, Ronak Tomar, Armaan Tahil were also present to grace the event.

   

Neha Bansal Announced The Biopic Of Dadasaheb Phalke On His Birthday

MLA Dr Bharati Tai Lavekar Inaugurated KAK’S SALON...

WEE-Mumbai Member Kakoli Meghani, owner of “Kak’s Salon” – a premium beauty and Spa opened her another branch at Four Bunglows Signal , Andheri West in presence of the Chief Guest MLA Dr. Bharati Tai Lavekar, Guest of Honors Shri Yogiraj Dabhadkar (Corporator Ward 60) and Chaitali Chatterjee (Chairperson of WEE – Women Entrepreneurs Enclave and Founder of ShrOM Communications and Solutions)

Other WEE members who attended the event were Jane Rodrigues, Neena Shetty, Rekha Kalra, Sangeeta Mishra, Anvitaa Malhotra, Preeti Alok Sharma, Bindu Masurkar, Rahila Hasan Gazi, Harmeet Kaur, Debjani Salvi, Vanee Jaisingh, Rajkunwar Rane, Silky Kapoor, Aparajita Bir and Sapna Upadhyay

Contact us for appointment:

kaksalonspa@gmail.com

+91 98212 45565

https://instagram.com/kaks_salon?igshid=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

https://fb.watch/kT0diCFpwD/?mibextid=RUbZ1f

MLA Dr  Bharati Tai Lavekar Inaugurated KAK’S SALON



रोमानिया के अनुभव के साथ मारवाह स्टूडियो में विश्व पर्यावरण दिवस मनाया गया...

विश्व पर्यावरण दिवस की काफी अच्छी शुरुआत हुई जब इंडो-रोमानिया फिल्म एंड कल्चरल फोरम ने इंटरनेशनल चैंबर ऑफ मीडिया एंड एंटरटेनमेंट इंडस्ट्री और रोमानिया के दूतावास के सहयोग से विश्व पर्यावरण दिवस मारवाह स्टूडियो में एक बेहतरीन डॉक्यूमेंट्री फ़िल्म “अंटेम्ड रोमानिया” की विशेष स्क्रीनिंग के साथ मनाया।

दर्शकों को मंत्रमुग्ध करने वाली इस फिल्म का उद्घाटन एच.ई. डेनियल टेन, भारत में रोमानिया के राजदूत, और मारवाह स्टूडियो के अध्यक्ष संदीप मारवाह, और इनके अलावा कुछ विशिष्ट अतिथियों एच.ई. जेवियर पॉल्निच भारत में पेरू के राजदूत, एच.ई. तियोदोरो माल्दोनोडो भारत में इक्वाडर के राजदूत और लेफ्टिनेंट जनरल अनिल मलिक (सेवानिवृत्त) द्वारा किया गया।

“अंटेम्ड रोमानिया” एक असाधारण सिनेमाई रचना है जो रोमानिया की लुभावनी सुंदरता और विविध वन्य जीवन को प्रदर्शित करती है। फिल्म मेकर का समर्पण सराहनीय है, क्योंकि 400 घंटे से अधिक के फुटेज को 90 मिनट की एक शानदार डॉक्यूमेंट्री में तैयार किया गया है, जो रोमानिया के हलचल भरे शहरों से परे छिपी अदम्य दुनिया में एक झलक पेश करता है। राजसी पहाड़ों से लेकर प्राचीन जंगलों तक, यह फिल्म दर्शकों को उन स्थानों में ले जाती है जहां प्रतिष्ठित जीव पनपते हैं,” संदीप मारवाह ने गर्व के साथ कहा।

स्क्रीनिंग के बाद, पर्यावरण के मुद्दों पर एक विचारोत्तेजक चर्चा आयोजित की गई, जिसमें प्रमुख पर्यावरणविद् अजीत कुमार और रंजू मिन्हास शामिल थे। उनकी बातों ने हमारे पर्यावरण की सुरक्षा के महत्वपूर्ण पहलुओं पर प्रकाश डाला।

“अंटेम्ड रोमानिया” का प्रभाव केवल दर्शकों तक ही सीमित नहीं था; इसने उपस्थित फिल्म निर्माताओं पर भी एक स्थायी छाप छोड़ी। इसकी उत्कृष्टता की मान्यता में, एशियन एकेडमी ऑफ फिल्म एंड टेलीविजन के इंटरनेशनल फिल्म एंड टेलीविजन क्लब के द्वारा “अंटेम्ड रोमानिया” को प्रतिष्ठित पुरस्कार प्रदान करते हुए खुशी हो रही है।” डॉ. संदीप मारवाह ने यह घोषित किया।

यह विश्व पर्यावरण दिवस कार्यक्रम हमारे ग्रह के प्राकृतिक आश्चर्यों के बारे में जागरूकता बढ़ाने और उनकी रक्षा करने की तत्काल आवश्यकता में सिनेमा की ताकत को दर्शाता है। अंटेम्ड रोमानिया” मनुष्य और प्रकृति के बीच सामंजस्यपूर्ण सह-अस्तित्व के एक चमकदार उदाहरण के रूप में खड़ा है, जो हमें भविष्य की पीढ़ियों के लिए पृथ्वी को संरक्षित करने की हमारी जिम्मेदारी की याद दिलाता है। अब हर ओर हरियाली है!

रोमानिया के अनुभव के साथ मारवाह स्टूडियो में विश्व पर्यावरण दिवस मनाया गया