Renu Desai is set to return to the silver screen

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The other day some media reports came that actress Renu Desai is set to return to the silverscreen and she has reportedly signed a film under Mahesh Babu’s production ‘Major.’ But neither the team nor Renu has spoken about so far and here comes the clarification.

Renu revealed that there is no truth in those reports and has no clue from where they started making headlines. “I haven’t signed any film but have been receiving a lot of calls that I’m being approached for a role in the film ‘Major.’ I would like to make it clear there are absolutely false,” said Renu.

On her comeback, Renu further said ‘If I sign any film, I would reveal all the things all by my own and it’s true that I want to act in films. Hope this settles the dust now’.Coming to ‘Major,’ the film stars Adivi Sesh, Shobita and is being directed by Sashi Kiran Tikka.

Mary J. Blige enters wine business

Actress Mary J. Blige has entered the liquor business with the launch of an exclusive collection of limited-edition wines.

The actress has partnered with Fantinel Winery to launch Sun Goddess Wines, reports hollywoodreporter.com. The edition is named Sun Goddess as a nod to Blige’s childhood memories with her mother and a love for “the warmth and energy of the sun”.

“A dear friend introduced me to Marco Fantinel referring to him as the producer of the best pinot grigio in the world. After walking through the vineyards and tasting with the Fantinel family, I felt extremely connected to the place, and more importantly, the people,” Blige said.

“At that moment, I felt the same magical energy I have long tried to capture from the sun and knew this was an incredible opportunity to partner with someone who shared that passion and together we could try to create something that evoked that feeling,” she added

Aamir’s staff tests Covid positive, actor assures he is safe

Bollywood actor Aamir Khan on Tuesday sent out a statement announcing some of his staff had tested positive and immediately quarantined.

The actor also assured that the “rest of us”, which includes him, “have all been tested and found negative”. He also mentioned he was taking his mother for testing since she “is the last person in the loop”.

Here is Aamir’s statement: “Hello everyone, this is to inform you that some of my staff have tested positive. They were immediately quarantined, and BMC officials were very prompt and efficient in taking them to a medical facility. I would like to thank the BMC for taking such good care of them, and for fumigating and sterilizing the entire society.

“The rest of us have all been tested and found negative.

“Right now I am taking my mother to get her tested. She is the last person in the loop. Please pray that she is negative.

“I would, once again, like to thank the BMC for the prompt, professional, and caring manner in which they helped us.

“And a big thank you to Kokilaben Hospital and the doctors, nurses, and staff there. They were very caring and professional with the testing process. God bless and stay safe. Love. Aamir.”

The actor has been busy shooting his upcoming film “Laal Singh Chaddha”, a recreation of the Hollywood hit “Forrest Gump”, over the past few months.

Anushka Sharma: I’ve tried to have a distinct voice in cinema

Actress-producer Anushka Sharma says she has tried to be a disruptive storyteller with the projects she has bankrolled and added that in all her career she has tried to have a distinct voice in cinema.

“We have tried to be disruptive storytellers who would give audiences something new that they would have never seen before. It comes organically to both (brother and production house partner) Karnesh and me and I’m glad people are loving our edgy attempts aimed at breaking the content clutter in India,” Anushka said.

The actress, who is currently riding on the positive response to her latest projects “Pataal Lok” and “Bulbul”, says the content she is producing is an extension of the kind of scripts she would make.

“All my career, I have tried to have a distinct voice in cinema through my choice of films and roles and the content I am producing with Karnesh at Clean Slate Filmz is only an extension to the kind of script choices I would make otherwise. We were sure that our production house would need to stand apart with projects that audiences would not find any earlier reference point.”

She added: “We take pride in the content that we have produced so far because we have backed originality of ideas and we want to keep it this way. It’s the only way we know we could operate.”

Anushka’s brother Karnesh says he is thankful to the audiences for loving their work.

“Anushka, I and the entire team of ‘Bulbul’ and ‘Pataal Lok’ are delighted with the audience’s reactions to our projects. We always believed in the content we were creating to be different so it gives us a huge sense of accomplishment to see the feeling resonating with audiences too,” he added.

Anya Singh: Being a budding actor, uncertainty scares me

Budding actress Anya Singh, who appeared as the female lead in the web series titled “Never Kiss Your Best Friend”, says the uncertain time post-COVID-19 makes her nervous, but she is being positive.

“Establishing myself in any field is a tough task and of course it will be tougher for new actors like us. I am scared of the uncertainty that we have to go through. We know that things will be normal, but the question is when. It is actually such a unique situation that the more we think, the more we get into a dark zone. So I am trying to spend a day with productivity. If we are productive, we feel positive. I am taking master classes and working on my craft. I am reading more because it helps to keep my mind positive. I really do not want to feel the uncertain, unstable situation in my mind,” Anya told IANS.

The actress made her Bollywood debut in Habib Faisal’s directorial “Qaidi Band” in 2017. She has also appeared in the Telugu film “Ninu Veedani Needanu Nene”.

The ZEE5 show “Never Kiss Your Best Friend” has given her a positive response from the audience and Anya sees digital entertainment as a space for constant opportunity.

“I also sense that all OTT platforms will show interest to make a lot more original content, once the full-fledged shooting starts. We have been shifting to home entertainment for a while. Even when normalcy returns, initially we will only prefer to go out for essential work and not for entertainment to the cinema halls. But content making will continue so projects will be lined up for digital entertainment,” she reasoned.

Shilpa Shetty Kundra: This time with my son and newborn daughter is so precious

Bollywood actress and entrepreneur Shilpa Shetty Kundra finds the current time of staying home precious as she can spend many more moments with her son Viaan and her newborn daughter Samisha, whom she welcomed via surrogacy in February.

“I couldn’t have timed it better. It’s God’s grace, it worked perfectly in my scheme of things. This time is so precious with my son and with my newborn. I can only be thankful and have the utmost gratitude for the way things have panned out,” Shilpa told IANS.

However, she shared that despite being caught up with work she ensures that she makes time for her family.

“Despite being busy, I would still make time for family, but not like this. I just feel that it’s really what I wanted so badly and I feel in a way I manifested it,” she said.

What has this pandemic taught Shilpa? “The universe knows how to reset, to teach us patience and value for what we have. Hope we learn from this experience and come out stronger,” she told IANS.

On the film front, Shilpa is all set to make her comeback as an actress with roles in the upcoming films, “Nikamma” and “Hungama 2”.

Film is dead: Filmmaker Q

India’s most subversive filmmaker Q is planning something different this time. Not a film, but a form he is experimenting with that will thematically emerge from the changing conditions in the country where people are aspiring — even if not for normalcy, at least a way that can be deciphered.

“We are facing a sociopolitical and a health crisis, not just in India but across the world. There seems to be a pattern, like a writer Arundhati Roy says, that the pandemic is a portal, an opportunity because the consciousness that existed pre-COVID 19 was something that was rooted in the hierarchical order of things. Now, every little factor of human existence will have to be questioned. The change will have to be pivotal and architectural. We need changes from the ground-up. Why not research on the fact that for the last 10 years many people have been talking about a pandemic?” said the director whose controversial first film ‘Gandu’ premiered at Berlinale and was screened at 60 festivals worldwide.

Stressing that what he wants to say now cannot be through a film, Q adds that for a person like him, it makes very little sense to make a movie now. “The OTT finally killed the movie. Our company’s ‘Oddjoint’ was making films because we were protesting and had immense success abroad by positioning ourselves when there was no reference point. But that was an exercise purely in understanding different artistic and technical drives. We were the first ones to shoot with a DSLR, first to proclaim that distribution will be digital,” said the director whose film ‘Brahman Naman’ was the first Asian original to be acquired by Netflix.

Q, three of whose films are now on an OTT platform (uncensored) and who received a National Award for ‘Love in India’, says that digital platforms have become completely industrial now. Insisting that they have their integrity intact everywhere else, but in India, he adds that either one can get depressed about it or understand that this was bound to happen.

“In our industry, we don’t make new stuff, just recycle. Somebody else applies the mind, does the research and development, and we reproduce. As a filmmaker, I have always tried to mesh the different forms that existed within cinema.”

Stating that there is historical evidence that whenever any new kind of new distribution pipeline arrives, and technological breakthroughs happen, we eventually hand it over to the powers that be, he said that no one wants to change the equilibrium and disturb the status quo. “The mainstreaming of OTT is a perfect example,” he said.

For him, despite a rich history of political filmmaking in India, of late the plot seems to have been completely lost, thanks to the complete dependence on the market.

“Our promoters never saw the merit in developing a parallel market. Even Japan has a pop culture driven by the market, but that has not stopped its cinema to function in various ways — smaller studios and a diverse distribution system. Here, if you are attempting something different, you don’t have to make only films but an entire pipeline.”

Adding that in India, all social dynamics in art and culture have been systematically eradicated, the filmmaker, a strong supporter of the idea of co-production says that it is sad that it remains unheard of in the country.

“That is the way the whole of Europe has made cinema over the last 40 years. They don’t believe in placing something in the marketplace as a product when it is obviously not one. Sadly, we believe in the dynastic system and are convinced that a small number of people should get the benefit of the system.”

For someone whose films are released in some of the best theatres across the world doesn’t really miss releases in India. “The people who are watching there are real cinephiles. Watching a movie with them is very different from the pop culture theater experience here, which I was never fond of. I have trained myself by watching films that were not evenly distributed in the country — through pirated DVD copies and VHS. I have seen them for free, and my films have been seen for free in India — cool, we are even now.”

Stressing that his greatest “political achievement” has been that his films can’t be bought, he adds that If one wants to watch his films — it can either be on Netflix or at a festival.

“Therefore I am not part of the market place and can’t be looked at as a commodity supplier. As a company, it’s our greatest achievement — we have been able to exist in this hostile environment even as the immediate marketplace can’t even place our movies on the shelves.”

Alia Bhatt: Would love to do investigative limited TV show

Actress Alia Bhatt is looking forward to making her digital debut with the premiere of her film “Sadak 2”, and says she is open to the idea of diving deep into the streaming platform.

She even shared the genre on her wishlist: An investigative limited TV show.

“Actors not only in the West but over here also are working directly on the OTT. (Web) has created a huge opportunity for actors to showcase their talent,” she said while using the recent success of web series like Sushmita Sen-starrer web series “Aarya” and “Special Ops” series to support her point.

“If I’m offered something that I connect with, I would love to do an investigative type limited TV show. It would be quite interesting,” she added.

Alia’s “Sadak 2” is skipping the traditional theatrical route, and going for a digital platform.

The film marks the return of Mahesh Bhatt as director after two decades and is a sequel of the 1991 hit “Sadak”, which featured Pooja Bhatt and Sanjay Dutt in the lead roles.

Without revealing much about the plot, the actress said that “Sadak 2” is not a recreation.

“The film has different love stories and also has (an element of) thrill. The villain is someone very different and totally unexpected,” Alia said.

“Sadak 2” also stars Aditya Roy Kapur.

The actress said that working on the film was a homecoming in its true sense.

“That the whole family is coming to make a film together. That emotion is of another level altogether… I always wanted to be picturized in a song from the Bhatt camp, which has been famous for its music,” she added.

Alia also released the first poster of the film, which showed Mount Kailash at the end of a long road. She also read out a message from her father, which explained the thought behind the poster.

“Mount Kailash, the ageless mountain, has the footprints of gods and sages. It is the abode of the god of all gods, Lord Shiva. So do we really need anything else or actors in that sacred space? Since the beginning of time humanity found its shelter in Kailash. This is a place where all search ends. ‘Sadak 2’ is the road to love,” she said.

On the personal front, the actress said she is spending her lockdown period by learning guitar and doing meditation.

“I thought learning guitar would be easy, but it is hard. I have also started taking meditation classes and helps me keep calm during this time.. I have also spent my time watching content on my TV,” she said.

“Sadak 2” will release on the streaming platform Disney+ Hotstar under Disney+ Hotstar Multiplex.

Rashmika Mandanna has surprised Mahesh Babu Family

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Rashmika Mandanna has surprised Mahesh Babu and family by sending them a special gift hamper. Rashmika has sent a basket full of delicious goodies including Avocados, Mango pickle and other organically grown foods. Along with the gift hamper, Rashmika has sent a hand-written note to the Superstar couple. This act of Rashmika is winning praise from Superstar’s fans.

None other than Mahesh Babu’s wife and former actress Namrata Shirodkar took to social media and revealed Rashmika’s gift hamper to Mahesh. Namrata has thanked Rashmika for sending such a beautiful gift all the way from Coorg where Rashmika is staying with her family. Namrata said this is the first gift hamper Mahesh Babu has received in COVID times. She also said she got such a lovely gift in this monsoon. Acknowledging the gift received, Namrata Shirodkar wrote, “Thank you for all the delicious goodies rashmika !! all the way from Coorg monsoon season mango pickle our first gift hamper in COVID times happy monsoons !! stay home stay safe”

It can be noted that Mahesh Babu is the first big star hero with whom Rashmika has acted. Rashmika got a big break after working with Mahesh Babu in Sarileru Neekevvaru. Rashmika is now paired up with Allu Arjun in Sukumar’s directorial Pushpa. Rashmika is pinning high hopes on Tollywood and is expecting to pair up with all the big stars in Telugu. Recently, she has turned down a movie alongside Nani as she didn’t want to play second fiddle to Sai Pallavi. Looks like Rashmika is making her moves well.

Kamya Panjabi talked about her break-up with Karan Patel

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Actress Kamya Panjabi talked about her break-up with actor Karan Patel in an interview with the Times of India and said that it took her two-and-a -half years to “get back to normal.” The actress, who is married to Delhi-based doctor Shalabh Dang, said that she slipped into depression after breaking-up with the Yeh Hai Mohabbatein actor in 2015.

“After Karan it took me two-and-a-half years to get back to a normal life. It is after two-and-a-half years that I started loving my life. I’m was eating, sleeping on time, talking to my friends and going to work and coming back. It took me two-and-a-half years. After the breakup, I had gone under a shell, I was not eating, sleeping. I didn’t feel like doing anything. I was into depression. I was undergoing counselling and there were lots of things happening.”

She also said that after the after she was finally “living life on her own terms,” she was not “ready to leave it for anyone.” He said, “And now, when I have started living my life, I am not ready to compromise or sacrifice for anyone or for anything. It felt like I was out of jail and I am not ready to go inside it again.”

Kamya Panjabi married Shalabh Dang in February 2020 after dating for seven months. She was married to businessman Bunty Negi from 2003 to 2013 and they have a daughter named Aara.

Kamya Panjabi has featured in soaps like Kehta Hai Dil, Astitva…Ek Prem Kahani and Banoo Main Teri Dulhann and Shakti – Astitva Ke Ehsaas Ki, among others.