Mugdha Godse explore her love for cooking

Actress Mugdha Godse says staying indoors during lockdown sparked her interest in cooking.

“I always wanted to learn cooking but I haven’t found the time to put into it. I had the time during the lockdown. I wanted to learn a lot of stuff. I started with learning a lot of Indian cuisines, understanding the flavors and the right amount of them. The magic is in the masala and the right amount of time that it’s flamed. It grows on you and I have been almost inseparable from the kitchen,” the actress tells IANS.

The actress says that she was self-motivated in order to cook daily, and not go out of touch with her new skill set.

“I try and cook at least one meal a day and that has really made me good in cooking. We should try and put the time in hand on things that we always wanted to do. We would not have so much time ever and it’s a good time to rejuvenate and put the time in things like yoga, learning a new skill, and investing time in art,” she says.

‘Ghanchakkar’ turns 8, Namit Das posts a nostalgic note

Actor Namit Das says his character in “Ghanchakkar” was the “first meaty role” to come his way. As the film completes eight years of release on Monday, the actor walked down memory lane.

Namit played a thief who carries out a heist with his accomplices in Rajkumar Gupta-directed black comedy starring Vidya Balan and Emraan Hashmi.

“It doesn’t feel like it has been eight years since the film released. At the time I remember I was confused and overwhelmed because I was to perform in front of such senior actors, and I was cast in such an important role,” the actor tells an interview.

He adds: “Truth be told, ‘Ghanchakkar’ was the first meaty role I got. The role was very big and when there is a lot to munch on there is always a lot of homework that is to be done towards bringing the character to life. All the actors made me feel at home and I learned how to conduct myself on a set and be focused on my job.”

Namit will next be seen in “Arafat-E-Ishq”.

Shahid Kapoor flaunts beefed-up physique

Bollywood actor Shahid Kapoor flaunts pumped-up biceps in his social media post on Monday.

The picture on Instagram shows the actor in a beige vest and black baseball cap. He sports a beard and standing close to the camera to showcase his beefed-up body.

“Getting back to the #pump,” he wrote as the caption. His picture on the photo-sharing website has garnered over 190K likes.

Shahid will be seen next in the film “Jersey”, which also features his father Pankaj Kapur and Mrunal Thakur. He will also make his digital debut with a series directed by Raj and DK.

Adhvik Mahajan: Society is breaking taboo surrounding mental health

Television actor Adhvik Mahajan is happy that the taboo surrounding mental health is gradually breaking.

Talking about the impact of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic on people’s mental health, Adhvik told IANS: “I agree that a lot of people are battling mental health issues arising due to the impact of the pandemic but the positive thing out of all of this is that society is reciprocating to this concern and breaking the whole taboo surrounding mental health.”

Revealing how he has achieved strength of mind over the years, the actor added: “Even I feel low at times but it is more out of regular routine than the pandemic. All through the struggles of my career, my optimism kept me going and all that I have faced back then has given me the courage to pace myself for whatever is set to come. I am able to fight the biggest of problems now and have managed to become mentally strong.”

Adhvik is currently winning hearts for his performance as Jogi in the daily soap “Teri Meri Ikk Jindri”, but there was a time when he felt nervous even before signing a show!

Quizzed about the same, the Jalandhar boy smiled. “Thank you so much, I will take this as a compliment. God has been kind to me. When I was signing up for this show, I was nervous. While Jogi brought different flavours to the table, there was a fear in my mind that the character might come out as ‘chhichhora’ to some. But the character has been written well and a lot of hard work has gone in the last six to eight months and it is paying off really well,” he replied.

No matter how much precaution is taken on set, an actor always has to remove his/her mask before the shot. Does that scare him?

“Yes, there is always a fear hidden within but as they say, the show must go on. There are families and livelihoods dependent on the success of this show. Moreover, as actors, I believe our duty is to entertain the audience even during these times,” Adhvik replied.

The actor’s fans identify as Adhvikians. “After having struggled for so many years on a professional front, I have managed to garner a small fan base that I fondly call as Adhvikians. It’s a name that they have chosen for themselves and I am blessed to be able to get that love from them. At times their affection overwhelms but it feels great to be in this space. Without their support I don’t think Adhvik Mahajan would have an identity as an actor and a performer,” said Adhvik, whose show “Teri Meri Ikk Jindri” airs on Zee TV.

Ayushmann: Pandemic, lockdowns made us more opinionated than before

Actor Ayushmann Khurrana feels the pandemic and lockdowns have made people more opinionated than before, adding that only superlative content would bring the audience back to theatres post-pandemic.

Ayushmann, whose film “Article 15” completed two years of release on Monday, said: “Article 15 is a special film in my filmography and I can’t thank (director) Anubhav Sinha sir for giving me one of the most cherished films of my career.

“It was an eye-opening film for me and helped me see things from a different lens. We will need films like Article 15 with its superlative content to pull people back to theatres.”

Talking about going back to the theatres, Ayushmann said: “We will need to be disruptive and present fresh content for people to enjoy, engage and discuss.

“I’m a firm believer that the pandemic and lockdowns have made us more opinionated than before and people would only want to invest time and energy on things that are unique and different. They would want to have community experiences that are worthwhile.”

Ayushmann is a firm believer that fresh, unique, and disruptive cinema will manage to restart the theatrical business in India.

“Cinema will provide them with that option but we will have to produce the best content that we have ever produced. People will want to be entertained with films that celebrate new ideas. The scale of the film will be immaterial because the content will take precedence in a whole new world,” is Ayushmann’s opinion.

The actor added that people have already been exposed to brilliant content from across the world. “So, for them to step out to a theatre to watch a film they need a huge incentive and content will play this crucial role. People will want to watch brilliant films.”

Ayushmann will soon be seen in “Chandigarh Kare Aashiqui” directed by Abhishek Kapoor, “Anek” directed by Anubhav Sinha, and “Doctor G” directed by Anubhuti Kashyap.

Janhvi Kapoor is ‘cinnamon gurl’

Bollywood actress Janhvi Kapoor shared a picture on social media and tagged herself as a “cinnamon girl”.

Janhvi posted the picture on Instagram on Sunday. It seems the actress has resumed working as she is seen getting her hair done.

In the image, Janhvi is dressed in a white bathrobe. A person in the background can be seen doing her hair, while she poses for the camera.

“Cinnamon gurl,” Janhvi captioned the image.

Meanwhile, Janhvi is gearing up for the release of her film “Dostana 2”.

The actress finished the shoot for her film “Good Luck Jerry” earlier this year. She had taken to Instagram to share this news with her fans.

After the completion of the shoot, she had jetted off to the US to spend time with her sister Khushi.

The actress recently traveled to the Maldives and Udaipur.

Amy Poehler enjoyed her surprise visit to ‘tired’ sex club

Actress and funny woman Amy Poehler revealed that she once accidentally visited a tired sex club but found it was her kind of scene.

The actress started her career with the Second City improvisational comedy troupe in Chicago, when the cast members were once on tour in Texas, they “stumbled” on an unusual nightspot, reports aceshowbiz.com.

“I love Texas, I love Texans because they tell it like it is and they like to party and they like to have a good time. We just stumbled across a weird place one night, and when I say stumbled, I have no memory of how we got there or who told us about it,” Poehler shared on “The Kelly Clarkson Show”.

The actress said that the club was “tired”.

“It was an S&M (sadism and masochism) club but everyone was a little tired. So there was a really nice like, older lady, smoking a cigarette, kind of very lazily hitting some guy with a whip,” he added.

After she got over the initial shock of finding herself at a raunchy venue, the actress felt that the place wasn’t so bad.

She quipped: “It was my kind of scene. Everybody looked like they had had a long day but they were so nice.”

The actress’s latest movie is a comedy-drama called “Moxie”.

Bhumi Pednekar is in ‘mood’ for some fries

Bollywood actress Bhumi Pednekar on Sunday shared a post saying that she has been thinking about French fries.

Bhumi shared her mood on Instagram.

In the image, she is seen posing for the lens. She looks at the camera dressed in a floral outfit and is flaunting a nude make-up look.

“Thinking about (fries emoji) #sunday #mood #love,” she wrote as the caption.

The actress recently announced she would star alongside Akshay Kumar in the upcoming film, “Raksha Bandhan”. The film is directed by Aanand L. Rai.

She also has “Badhaai Do” with Rajkummar Rao and “Mr. Lele” with Vicky Kaushal lined up for release.

Swwapnil Joshi: Marathi content among finest in India, just needs wider audience

Actor Swwapnil Joshi, who soon reprises his role as Kumar Mahajan in the Marathi web series “Samantar 2”, says the particular streaming platform on which a project gets released plays a huge role in the show’s success. He adds that the Marathi industry has lately been producing some of the finest content, in cinema as well as OTT, and just needs a wider audience.

“It is the platform that gives you (the audience) the first cue on how they feel about the show. If a platform is hesitant in backing a show, then as a viewer you are going to be hesitant in watching it. If the platform is aggressive in marketing it and you see they are putting all their power in pushing it ahead, you know they are confident about the show and you would consume it faster. The platform, right marketing, and mounting play key roles going forward,” the actor tells IANS.

Swwapnil, who has been part of various Marathi films and shows in the past, is of the opinion that the industry has churned out great content over the past couple of years.

“I think Marathi cinema has grown many folds in the last couple of years. Marathi cinema has really come of age. We have reached the Oscars, we have broken the Rs 100-crore barrier and continue to do that every passing day,” shares the actor.

Swwapnil is still remembered for his role as a child artiste when he appeared as Lord Krishna in Ramanand Sagar’s show “Krishna”. Growing up, he made a name for himself in Hindi and Marathi shows.

The actor feels that Marathi’s content should strengthen its reach.

“I think Marathi content, be it cinema or OTT needs to be accessible to people. At the cost of sounding immodest, as far as content is concerned, I really feel that we are making some of the finest content in India. Now the job is to reach a bigger and wider audience,” he says.

“Samantar 2”, which also stars Nitish Bharadwaj, is the second part of the hit Marathi series of the same name and will stream on MX Player. Swapnil plays Kumar Mahajan, a man who falls into unending series of events in order to satiate his curiosity about his future.

Is the actor curious about his future in personal life, too? “I am definitely curious about my future but I am not paranoid about it. If someone says that they can read my palm, I would be interested. But I will not get addicted to it,” says the actor, who will soon be seen in the Marathi horror film “Bali”.

Kashmiri actress Shaylee Krishen: Being a refugee in our own country, cinema was the only escape

Born and brought up in a Kashmiri Pandit family, a major part of her childhood was spent moving from one refugee camp to another until they managed to find a space they could call home. For young actress Shaylee Krishen, there was no sense of permanence about where she lived, and the TV set and radio that offered films and songs were her only constant source of entertainment, escape and happiness.

Today, Shaylee belongs to that world of entertainment. She recently appeared in the OTT series “The Last Hour”, and has a couple of Malayalam films — “Bermuda” and “Malayalam” — lined up.

She gets nostalgic recalling her first introduction to the 70mm screen, as an audience when she was 13. “I went to Bengaluru to meet my brother and he took me to a cinema theatre, and we watched a Malayalam film! I am a Kashmiri, watching a film, in which the language is totally unknown. But I remember how engrossed I was because of that cinematic experience. It was a Santosh Sivan directorial,” Shaylee tells an interview.

As fate would have it, she has now worked with Sivan in the upcoming thriller “Jack N Jill”, as well as another film, “Moha”.

“I know it sounds surreal but what is real and what is unreal? In fact, the reality is very different for me because being born into a Kashmiri Pandit family, we all know how for the last 30 years, our community has been living as a refugee in our own land. There was no sense of permanence, as children, me and my siblings would always live in fear. But wherever we shifted, my only constant was listening to the radio and watching films on TV every Sunday. I would visualize the song and dance in front of the mirror and try and enact them after watching films. The rest of the reality that we all Kashmiri Pandits faced, everyone knows, was quite gloomy. Acting and storytelling were the escape I always wanted to hold onto,” Shaylee says.

She was always interested in performance-oriented characters — like her favorite Sridevi in “Sadma” and Manisha Koirala in “Khamoshi”.

While her portrayal of Pari Singh in “The Last Hour” was intense, was it possible because of OTT platforms?

“I think when it comes to budding actors, getting good performance-oriented roles is possible now because of good casting and vision of the director. We know how some legendary film directors used to work with non-actors and extract brilliant performances from them. A director has to have that strong vision and be good with his craft to bring out the best actor from them. That is how directors used to be star makers,” says Shaylee.

She sums up: “Santosh sir and (‘The Last Hour’ creator) Amit (Kumar) sir are people who discover a new side of an actor that nobody has seen before, and there comes the vision of a director for his actor. I think it has nothing to do with whether the medium is web series, films, or TV shows, but it has to do with the vision of a director.”

Shaylee’s latest work “The Last Hour” streams on Amazon Prime Video.