EVENTIVE EVENTS
Eventive, a Lahore based event management company, offers a wide range of events services from personalised favours to invitations. They arrange unique and memorable thematic events, including birthdays, anniversaries, bridal showers, upscale dinners, lunches and much more.
SCANDINAVIAN DESIGNS
Scandinavian designs have always been extremely popular due to their simple yet elegant nature. Swedish brand, Scandinavian Homes exhibited furniture at the Nishat Hotel, Lahore on the 10th & 11th December. For upcoming designs & product enquiries: contact@scandinavianhomes.se, www.scandinavianhomes.se
MIAASA CROSSOVERS
We love these comfy yet stylish Miaasa crossovers. Order from their facebook page.
CELEBRATE FREEDOM WITH NISHAT LINEN
Celebrate Freedom with Nishat Linen’s latest winter collection. These soft, luxurious and chic shawls are perfect to keep you warm and are available at all Nishat outlets across Pakistan.
 Be a go-getter, go get a gadget
BY FATIMA SHEIKH
The latest nifty gadgets are one way people proclaim their status as well as stay au courant. Quench your thirst for innovation and stay updated by checking out the best buys the tech world has to offer
TWEEXYÂ Â
This invention is a necessity for girls. It makes putting nail polish on easier than ever. I always end up painting my nails in the car and many times the polish drips. Hallelujah! My prayers have been heard. Tweexy is available in four colours. It’s an elegant looking bucket that is efficient and productive to boot. It can fit every kind of nail polish bottle; it fits all sizes of fingers; and it’s only £15. A smart gadget like this is well worth the buy.
RHINO SHIELDÂ
This £18 protector saves us from the mini heart-attacks we get when we drop our phones and crack the screen. This is a guaranteed solution and is just 0.029cm thick. It prevents air bubbles and has a smooth screen. For a clumsy person like me, this phone protector is a must.
ZEROUND SMARTWATCH
If you are not a fan of the Apple watch, then try this. This $100 smart watch has a built-in microphone and speaker, which allows you to take calls directly from your wrist. You can pair it with your IOS 8+ or android using Bluetooth. It offers Siri and Google voice. It has an app which you can control from your phone and manually set information you need to be dis-played on your wrist. The battery time is 2.5 hours but 3 days on stand-by with a magnetic charger and USB cable this watch is more than just to see the time, but a complete phone on your wrist. It’s elegant and productive.
VIDEO GAMES IN JANUARY:
All you game lover, take a look at the fresh games releasing in January.
- Hatsune Miku: Project Diva Future Tone (PS4) – January 10
- Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 (PS4) – January 12
- Rise & Shine (PC, Xbox One) – January 13
- Pit People (PC, Xbox One) early access – January 13
- Fate/EXTELLA: The Umbral Star (PS4, Vita) – January 17
- Gravity Rush 2 (PS4) – January 18 (EU), January 20 (US)
- Dragon Quest 8: Journey of the Cursed King (3DS) – January 20
- Tales of Berseria (PC, PS4) – January 24/27
- Resident Evil 7 (PC, PS4, PSVR, Xbox One) – January 24
- Memoranda (PC) – January 25
- Conan Exiles – Steam Early Access (PC) – January 31
- Disgaea 2 (PC) – January 31
- Dynasty Warriors: Godseekers (PS4, Vita) – January 31
- Divide (PS4) – January 31
- Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare Sabotage DLC (PS4) (30 days early) – January 31
- Hitman: The Complete First Season (PC, PS4, Xbox One) –
- January 31
- Yakuza 0 (PS4) – January 2017
- Dual Universe (PC) – alpha in January 2017
DANGAL
Aamir Khan’s latest movie Dangal is all set to take the box office by storm. With the return of Bollywood to Pakistani cinemas, this movie should pack the punch needed to get people back into the queue for cin-ema tickets. This biographical sports drama follows the life of Mahavir Singh Phogat (played by Aamir Khan) who taught his daughters Geeta and Babita wrestling. The two daughters went on to win many an accolade in their careers, putting in gold-winning performances at the 2010 Commonwealth
Games. Most remark- able about the production process is the astounding transformation Aamir Khan went through to play the part of Mahavir. He gained 30 kg to play the lead in his mid-life, and then lost that excess and honed his body into a wrestler’s dream to play Mahavir in his youth. A perfectionist, mand one of the few method actors in Indian cinema, it remains to be seen whether all the hard work and toil pays off for the bottom line.
Books:
CHRONICLE OF A CHRONICLE OF A
—BY GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZÂ
Chronicle of a Death Foretold is a pseudo-journalistic reconstruction of the murder of Santiago Nasar by the Vicario brothers. This crime fiction is a real page-turner, condensing a remarkable drama within a short 120 pages. The Nobel Laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez works magic with his words.

The novel follows a non-linear narrative, starting with the day of the murder. When her husband rejects Angela on the day of her wedding having discovered that she has shared a bed with a man before, her brothers avenge their family honour by killing her former lover Santiago. The story was inspired by an actual family that the author knew.An extremely relevant story for a culture such as ours, where sto-ries such as these can be found in the newspapers far too often.
Music:

TOP 5 SONGS
| # Song | Artist |
| 1 Black Beatles | Rae Sremmurd Feat. Gucci Mane |
| 2 Starboy | The Weeknd Feat. Daft Punk |
| 3 Closer | The Chainsmokers Feat. Halsey |
| 4 24K Magic | Bruno Mars |
| 5 Side to Side | Ariana Grande Feat. Nicki Minaj |
Â
Television Shows:
THE MINDY PROJECTÂ
If you are ever feeling low, something that comes hand-in-hand with the drop in temperature cou-pled with shorter days, this is the show for you. The series follows OBGYN Mindy Lahiri (Mindy Kaling) as she tries to balance her per-sonal and professional life. Surrounded by quirky colleagues, thestar of the hit TV Series The Office is at once the actor/writer/director/creator of the show. Her larger than life, slightly self-obsessed personality will bring a smile to your face no matter how hard the day has been. The show ran for three seasons after it was can-celled by FOX, only to be picked up by HULU. Picked up for Season 5, if you have never watched it I suggest you buckle down over a weekend and binge through. With a South-Asian face as the lead, we all might find something or the other in common with Mindy as she galli-vants around the big apple.
L’ORÉAL PARIS EXCELLENCE CRÈME PARTNERS WITH RENOWNED FASHION COUTURIER HSY FOR
THE EXCELLENCE REDS COLLECTION
FOR THIS MONTH’S STYLE ME UP, GT COLLABORATES WITH EOS, THE BRAINCHILD OF SYED SOHAIB AMJAD. THE LABEL TAKES ITS NAME FROM A GREEK GODDESS AND THE CLOTHES LIVE UPTO THEIR UNIQUE AND RESPLENDENT TITLE. AYESHA PLAYS DRESS UP FOR GT WITH THREE SPLENDID ENSEMBLES IN A VARIETY OF HUES
LOOK 2:
Ayesha is all set for a wedding in this pastel green, glittering ensemble. The metallic silver clutch and crystal earrings add abit more bling. The charmeuse trousers are loosely cut and elongate her body.
LOOK 3:
This royal blue skirt has just the right amount of volume to create a standout look. Ayesha pairs a pretty deep orange choli and kundan earrings with her get-up
BY AFSHAN SHAFI
There’s nothing quite so fiercely glamorous as an animal print coat. A perennial classic, gracing the shoulders of Hollywood starlets and French ITgirls alike, this trend should find its way into every wardrobe. Available in various high street and high end versions, the animal print coat instantly lends an air of mystery, glamour and sultriness to its wearer.
2017 fashion is inspired by nature. From the colourful birds with multi hued wings, fragrant blooms bursting with colour and animals clad in their personal plush fur coats to the verdant green of leaves, inspiration is everywhere. Hence, the trendiest IN colour of 2017 as announced by the Pantone Colour Institute is directly taken from the wonders of nature and is called Greenery. It represents the awakening of spring, growth and freshness, embodying a new beginning. A zesty mixture of green and yellow, this shade is sprouting up everywhere. We should thank the green apples, centipedes, grapes and grass itself for this particular shade. This year, this fresh colour is not only found on runways, but in our homes too. A piece of furniture or a home accessory coloured Greenery effortlessly brings the outdoors inside.
I HAVE STUMBLED UPON QUITE A FEW THINGS AND THEY ARE A TREAT TO LOOK AT
Nadia Ellahi, creative head of her eponymous bridal and wedding wear couture brand, advises Sana Zehra how to put together the perfect, timeless trousseau
What are the key trends for bridal and wedding wear for the upcoming season?
The best part about bridal couture fashion right now is that not just long and flowy but even short and straight shirts are in fashion. These can be worn with fuller ghararas and lehngas as well as mermaid cut lehngas, flowy pant ghararas, etc. It’s all a matter of choice now, one can and should select what would suit oneself and look flattering depending on body proportions and be age appropriate as well. In hand embroidery for bridals, dabka, kamdani, Swarovski crystals, multi-shaped stones and 3D flowers are greatly in vogue. Metallic pastel colors are a popular choice amongst brides these days. Red is and always shall remain a classic. For mehndi events, colorful lehnga cholis and dresses are trending.
What are classic silhouettes that flatter every woman?
One can never go wrong with a straight slightly below the knee shirt worn with straight pants. It’s a classic and would never go out of style, so it is perfect to include in a bridal trousseau. For brides, I’d say this shirt with a trailed lehnga/gharara is a style that is timeless and will not look dated, regardless when you re-wear it. I always try and create dresses, which even after 10 years one could wear and look stylish and contemporary.
What trends would you like to see die?
The tulip pants, especially in bridal trousseaus. Neither are they flattering nor are they classy. This is one trend that I didn’t even bother to create in my bridal trousseau line.
What trends would you like to see more women experiment with this season?
I would like to see more women in saris; I find saris to be exquisitely elegant. When draped and carried well, a sari looks absolutely glamorous.
What do you hope to see more of from designers in bridal and wedding wear this season?
I love everyone’s new collections; I think everyone is doing a fantastic job in their own way. However, I would like to see a bit more experimentation with the colour red since red is the classic and traditional colour for the Pakistani bride.
Saleha Abbas of Musawir has been designing finely crafted furniture for over two decades in Lahore. Known to furniture connoisseurs all over the country, she continues to  expand her line. Saleha speaks to Afshan Shafi and revealed her inspirations
Loves:
I adore Victoriana and would amass a trove of these if given a chance. I feel a few Victorian pieces lend any space depth and just a touch of grandeur and interest. I’m looking to add some generously proportioned armchairs, an open bookcase and a mahogany writing desk to my collection. I am also partial to Chinoserie or a good botanical wallpaper print. I adore the work of the Impressionists, particularly Claude Monet.
Loathes:
I don’t like heavy draped curtains needlessly adorned with an assortment of tassels. I feel they obstruct natural light and that for me is a big NO!
Favorite interior designers:
I love the work of Mario Buatta who was known as the Prince of Chintz. He loved a medley of objects and there was real feminine charm to all he did. He knew how to expertly stage English country style.
Favorite architects:
The work of Zaha Hadid is an eternal inspiration. Locally, I feel Fahim is outstanding in his variety, accuracy and perfectionism.
Inspirations:
I finde the work of Billy Baldwin, the cornucopia of Islamic architecture, and the unearthly wonders of Rome especially inspiring.
Dream Client:
I would have loved to design a room for the glamorous Elizabeth Taylor. I love all her movies.
Favourite pieces from your own line:
I feel our marquetry pieces are some of the most detailed out there. These are real heirloom, timeless pieces.
Favourite projects:
I truly enjoyed conceiving the design for our restaurant Buzkash. We serve authentic Central Asian cuisine so there are elements of the latter subtly scattered throughout.
Mood Board
A MEETING OF THE MINDS
By Mahlia Lone
“My childhood was spent in a commune,†Shabana Azmi, the renowned Indian actress, recounted in an interview. “My entry into this world — on September 18, 1950 in Hyderabad — was thanks to a blind dai (midwife). Soon, my family shifted to a semi-commune at Red Flag Hall in Bombay. My father Kaifi Azmi, a Communist Party of India (CPI) member, shared a flat with comrades such as Ali Sardar Jafri and Sawantji. We had a room each and a bal-cony converted into a kitchen. For eight years, I grew up amid CPI meetings. It was an unusual childhood: Each couple, includ-ing my parents, would take turns to look after all the children of the families who lived together. We celebrated all major festi-vals together — be it Holi, Diwali, Eid, Xmas. My education was varied. Due to our meagre income, I went to an Urdu-medium school, and then a municipal school. When I got zero in all subjects, Abba sent me to Queen Mary’s, where the fees were a princely Rs. 30. As English-speak-ing parents were a pre-requisite for admission, Sardar Jaffrey’s wife Sultana became my mother Shaukat; Munish Narayan Saxena pretended to be Kaifi Azmi!
My parents worked hard to give us a better life: Abba gave all his earnings to his party and was left with Rs. 40 each month. This was when my mother started working —first as an announcer on AIR and then with the Indian People’s Theatre Association (IPTA). Later, she joined Prithvi Theatres. Life improved after my father wrote the film Buzdil, for which he was paid Rs. 500. My father was different other fathers who left for the office in the mornings. My kurta-pyjama-clad Abba, instead of going to office, would write all day.â€
Sayyid Akhtar Hussein Rizvi, known as Kaifi Azmi, was the son of a zamindar from Uttar Pradesh (United Provinces in British India) who gained renown at a young age for his Urdu poetry, especially as a ghazal (lyrical poem) writer. He joined first the Quit India Movement, then the Communist Party of India and lastly the Progressive Writers’ Movement. He married Shaukat in Hyderabad where Munni (later named Shabana by a family friend) was born. The young family moved to Bombay where their son Baba was born. There Kaifi met filmmakers and started to work in the film industry as a script and dialogue writer and lyricist. Kaifi revamped Hindi film dialogues and songs by bringing Urdu literature to films. He changed the tenor and vocabulary of the filmi song. Kaifi Azmi’s greatest feat as a writer is considered to be Chetan Anand’s Heer Raanjha (1970) for which he penned the entire dialogue of the film in verse.
Shaukat Azmi in her Urdu lan-guage book Kaifi Aur Main, which has been translated into English by Nasreen Rehman under the title Kaifi and I, writes about Shabana’s personality growing up: “It was her hypersensitivity that made her (Shabana) acutely aware of our financial constraints, and she never made the usual demands that most children make of their parents. White plimsoles were a part of her uniform and Shabana went through a pair in three or four months. One day, I grumbled, ‘Such large feet like Clodhoppers! How can I afford a new pair, every three months?’ A few days later I noticed that her shoe was ripped near the small toe, but instead of asking for a new pair Shabana had cut out a piece of cardboard and glued it on the hole. My heart went out to her and I scraped togeth-er some money and bought her a new pair.
I used to give Shabana thirty paisa a day for her bus fare from Juhu to Santa Cruz station. If she wanted a snack she saved five paisas by getting off the bus four stops earlier at Juhu Chowpatty and trudging home, but she never demanded extra money. Once again, it was from Parna that I learnt about this many years later.
Shabana was always looking for ways to earn some extra money for the house. After she had passed her Senior Cambridge in the first division, Shabana had three months before going to col-lege. She found herself a job selling Bru Coffee at petrol stations, earning thirty rupees a day. She did not tell me, and I am afraid that I was so busy rehearsing that I did not notice her absence. At the end of the month she handed me all the money she had earned. Surprised, I asked, ‘Betey, where did you get this money from?’ She made light of it and said, ‘I had three months to wait before going to college. I thought, why not put the time to some use.’
I was very proud of Shabana but I was also distraught that at this young age she felt she had to share her family’s financial responsibilities.â€
Despite the family’s finan-cial constraints, Shabana grew up in awe of her father who gave his children a unique Bohemian upbringing that contributed to their creative careers (Baba became a cine-matographer). Shabana com-pleted a graduate degree in Psychology from St. Xavier’s College, Mumbai, and went to watch a film in the cinema that changed her life.
“I had the privilege of watch-ing Jaya Bahaduri in a (diploma) film, Suman, and I was completely enchanted by her performance because it was unlike the other perform-ances I had seen. I really mar-velled at that and said, ‘My God, if by going to the Film Institute I can achieve that, that’s what I want to do.’†said Shabana looking back
Since she had always enjoyed acting in school and college, she decided to pick it up as a vocation and joined the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune. Incidentally this was where actor Farooq Shaikh, of Umrao Jaan fame (that also starred Shaukat Azmi as the head courtesan), was two years her senior. Naturally gifted, Shabana topped the list of successful candidates of successful candidates of 1972.
Her professor at FTII was the iconic film actor/director Guru Dutt’s award winning documentarist grandson Shyam Benegal. For his directorial feature film debut Ankur (The Seedling, released in 1974), he cast Shabana in the lead. The film is based on a true story of eco-nomic and sexual exploitation in his home state, Telangana. In it, Shabana plays Lakshmi, a married village servant who drifts into an affair with a col-lege student who visits the countryside. Benegal shot to fame with this film that started the realistic New India Cinema or parallel cinema. For her portrayal, Shabana won the National Film Award for Best Actress, quite a feat for a newcomer.
That year she also starred in Dev Anand’s mainstream movie Ishq Ishq Ishq. Dev’s nephew, Shekhar Kapur, who had recently given up a desk job as a chartered accountant in London to pur-sue his Bollywood dream, had a support-ing role in the film. The actor, and later director, was smitten. Shabana promptly dumped her boyfriend actor Benjamin Gillani and began a seven year relation-ship with Shekhar. They eventually got engaged and moved in together to make a go of it. Though it didn’t work out; they split up so amicably that later Shabana starred in Shekhar’s directorial debut Masoom (1982), based on Erich Segal’s novel Man, Woman and Child, which catapulted him to fame as a director.
Shekhar went on to direct such commer-cial and critical successes as Mr. India and Bandit Queen. Internationally, he was chosen to direct Cate Blanchett in the vastly successful Elizabeth and Elizabeth: The Golden Age but after the box office dud Four Feathers, Western filmmakers are no longer as interested in hiring him.
In the meantime, the very married writer Javed Akhtar who lost his own poet father in 1976 had started visiting the Kaifi household. Javed had just added poetry to his roster of literary accom-plishments, having written his first Urdu couplet as homage to his father and sought counsel on matters pertaining to Urdu literature from Kaifi Azmi.
Javed was born in 1945 in Gwalior to Jan Nisar and Safia Akhtar. Jan Nisar, an Urdu poet of ghazals and nazms (rhymed and prose style poems), a Bollywood lyricist and a part of the Progressive Writers’ Movement, belonged to a renowned family of Sunni theologians, scholars and poets. His father Muztar Khairabadi and paternal uncle Bismil Khairabadi were both poets, while his great-grandfather, Fazl-e-Haq Khairabadi was not just a scholar of Islamic studies and theology, but also edited the first diwan of Mirza Ghalib upon his request. He was also a leader of the Indian Revolution of 1857 in his hometown of Khairabad.
Javed grew up in Lucknow and attended Saifiya College in Bhopal. Then, film star Rajesh Khanna changed his life. Up till now, different writers were used to pen a film’s story, screenplay and dialogue and none of them were given any credits in the title. Rajesh Khanna gave Javed and his writing partner Salim Khan (Salman Khan’s father) their first break as screen-play writers by hiring them for Haathi Mere Saathi and sweetening the pot by mentioning them in the film’s credits. Javed said in an interview, “One day, Rajesh Khanna went to Salim sahib and said that Mr. Devar had given him a huge signing amount with which he could complete the payment for his bunga-low Aashirwad. But the film was a remake and the script of the original was far from being satis-factory. He told us that if we could set right the script, he would make sure we got both money and credit.â€
Of the 25 films Salim-javed wrote, Â 21 were huge hits. Eventually, they split in 1982 reportedly due to ego issues. They are known as “the most successful (Bollywood) scriptwriters of all-time”
The eminently suc-cessful duo Salim-Javed became con-tracted by G. P. Sippy as resident screen-writers for Sippy Films and were responsible for such blockbusters as Andaz, Seeta Aur Geeta, Zanjeer, Deewaar, Sholay, Don and Mr. India, directed by Shabana’s ex Shekhar Kapur.
Together the Akhtar-Azmis are a redoubtable film family
On the sets of Hema Malini starrer Seeta Aur Geeta, Javed met the former child star and then 17 years old Honey Irani who had a supporting role in the film. Honey belonged to an Irani, Zoroastrian family and her older two sisters were also in the industry. Honey’s eldest sis-ter Maneka is married to the stunt film-maker Kamran Khan and is the mother of film-makers Sajid Khan and Farah Khan, the latter is ofcourse one of the better known choreogr-pahers in the indus- try. Honey’s mid-dle sister Daisy, who was a suc-cessful actress, is married to screen-writer K.K. Shukla.
Honey developed a teenage crush on the 26 year old writer and the two bonded on a similar sense of humour. “I liked his sense of humour, he liked mine,†Honey told Farhana Farook, “Love is blind. I was totally in awe of Javed….He was los-ing in a game of cards on the sets. I said, ‘Let me pull a card for you’. He said, ‘If it’s a good one, I’ll marry you’. The card was good. He declared, ‘Chalo, chalo let’s get married….Salim sahib, a family friend, told my mom that this boy wants to marry her but he has no home, plays cards and drinks. My mom said, ‘Let her get married, she’ll learn a lesson and come back.’†Javed later immortalized their proposal in the Sholay scene when Amitabh Bachchan takes Dharmendra’s proposal to Hema Malini’s aunt Leela Mishra.
They got married in 1972. “We didn’t have a place. My elder sister Maneka, who was married to filmmaker Kamran Khan (filmmakers Farah and Sajid Khan’s father), had an extra room in Juhu. It was used to store shooting props.
She cleared it for us. We stayed there for a year,†Honey said. “Javed made me promise; I wouldn’t accompany him to parties, apply make-up or hire a maid. So, I’d get up at 4 am to fill water. Of course, when I got pregnant, we had a maid. I had two air-conditioners in my parents’ home. Javed felt bad for me as we didn’t have one. He got a second-hand air condition-er. We were thrilled and called our neigh-bours. And just when they had gathered, the AC conked off. I was so upset. We’d then sprinkle water on the floor, spread a chaddar and sleep.â€
Two children were born in quick suc-cession, Zoya and Farhan. Affluence fol-lowed Javed’s career success. Honey’s film connections and Javed’s talent made the couple popular socially and soon they were spending convivial evenings with top stars like Amitabh Bachchan. Honey reminisces, “I guess I was lucky for him. After Zanjeer, we never looked back. We bought a flat in Bandstand and then this bungalow. Mashallah! We had a party every night. Amitji and Jaya (Bachchan), Yashji and Pam (Chopra), Yashji and Hiroo (Johar) would often be here. Those days Amitji used to drink. We’d have a blast the whole night and then go and drop him for his shoot at 5 am. The initial years were wonderful. I don’t really blame Javed for what hap-pened later. He was young when he got such huge success. It’s not easy to handle that. He used to drink a lot too. That was one of the major problems.â€
Simultaneously, another relationship was brewing. Shabana recounts how “Javed had been coming to our home for a long time, like other poets he would come to read his poems to my father, seek his opinion. But I was very busy with my work, and never really engaged with him. I would try to avoid him since Javed was a married man with two children.†Finally, he took the first step at a Page 3 event, and struck up a conversation with Shabana about her film Sparsh and it was the first of many engaging literary, philo-sophical and political conversations between the two.
Javed said at this time Shabana was plagued by “thousands of questions about which she’d never thought earlier. It’s no surprise then that we were drawn closer to each other.â€
Shabana added, “I sat in on conversa-tions my father had with him on poetry, on politics, and I realised he was very different from his image. Look at the similarities in our backgrounds. In dis-covering Javed I rediscovered my father. Both are from UP, both poets, film lyri-cists, writers. Both love politics… In fact if you consider the fact that one seeks the perfect match of backgrounds for an arranged marriage, then this could well have been the perfect arranged marriage. He was already married by the time I realised how well suited we were. We stayed away from each other for as long as was possible. My mother was against it completely.â€

Shabana said she liked Javed’s wit, humour and his tehzeeb (manners). “He would never put up his feet before elders.â€
1976 onward rumours of his closeness with Shabana fuelled frequent feuds between the married couple. “We separat-ed in 1978 as things had turned bad,†said Honey without any bitterness. Javed and Shabana had become increasingly open about their relationship in the couple of years preceding the separation. “There were fights and ugly scenes. But we ensured the children (Farhan and Zoya) weren’t around. I realised there was no point in living with a man who was no longer in love with me. So I told him, ‘Please.’ Javed said he couldn’t speak to the children. So I spoke to them and said, ‘Your father is not leaving me because of you guys. It’s just that we don’t get along.’â€
“Nobody can understand the anguish, the heartbreak,†said Shabana. “There were children involved. For 2 to 3 years, we suffered the trauma. And then one day, we decided to break up. It was too trau-matic for the children if we went on. We told each other, ‘We will break up after one last meeting.’ We met for that last meeting and we talked and talked … not love talk alone, but about everything, pol-itics, poetry. We got so busy talking, we forgot to break up.
After the separation, though Javed was providing child support, it didn’t cover all the children’s expenses. “I started embroidering saris. Reena Roy, Mumtaz and others would buy them,†said enterprising Honey. “I had written some short stories but feared they’d be dismissed as Javed’s.†She showed one to Pam Chopra who showed it to her husband Yash Chopra, the uber successful filmmaker. Yash chose it for a film. “Later, Yashji asked me to develop a ‘five minute’ idea which he gave me. Soon, I wrote the script and read it out to him. But he just got up and left. An hour later, he returned after having completed his pooja. He hugged me saying, ‘I was so moved. It’s fantastic.†The film was Lamhe (1992), which became a big hit. Honey also wrote Darr (1993) for Yash Raj Films, followed by Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai, Kya Kehna and Koi Mil Gaya. She fell out with the Chopras when she complained that she wasn’t given due cred-it for writing Dilwale Dulhania Le Jaayenge.
When I told my father, I asked him, ‘Is he wrong for me?’
And he said, “He is not wrong, but the circumstances are wrong.’
When I asked him, ‘What if I change the circumstances?’
He said, ‘Then it should be okay.’
Shabana and Javed’s affair continued for the next six years and Shabana inspired him to write romantic couplets.
The song Dekha ek khwaab from Silsila picturised on Amitabh-Rekha was written in 1981 at the height of their affair. They eventually tied the knot in a traditional Muslim ceremony in 1984, while his divorce from Honey was finalized the fol-lowing year.
The public was outraged because peo-ple felt that Shabana who proudly posed as a feminist was being a hypocrite by first having an adulterous affair and then getting married to an already mar-ried man. Shabana defended her decision explaining that she was no home-wrecker and that the mar-riage was already over by the time she entered the scene. Though not entirely true, that was her justifica-tion.
Honey said she maintained cor-dial relations with her ex and still respected him. “He has been decent and generous. He gave me this house. Javed says, ‘One good thing about you is that you don’t cling to negative thoughts’. Once someone says ‘sorry’, my slate is clean.â€
“Girls run after him. He is a poet, he must be so romantic, they think. But believe me, there is not a single romantic bone in his body. I once asked him about it and he joked: ‘Look, the trapeze artist does not hang from a trapeze at home.â€
“I didn’t make any sacrifices — that’s too dramatic. I did what I thought was right,†she said describing her life as a struggling single mother. “I did miss a man. I was in a long relationship, which didn’t work. But I never gave marriage a thought. I didn’t know how he’d be with the kids. Though they did tell me, ‘If you wish to get married, go ahead’. Today I have my grandchildren (Shakya 12, and Akira 5), my friends and my work. Of course, you do feel lonely. But I can’t go through the pain again. At this age what you need is a companion, someone to share, to travel with…There again I’m being a romantic.â€
She was generous enough to allow Shabana to enjoy a warm relationship with Farhan and Zoya. “I never spoke a word against Shabana or Javed. I didn’t want the children to develop feelings of hate or anger. They’d go over and meet them. Javed would come over. Touchwood! Their relationship never went wrong. But I have no rapport as such with her. I go to Javed’s house on his birthday. Shabana and I greet each other. It’s cordial. There’s a lot of respect. That’s it. But it’s not as if we are sahelis (friends). Not at all.â€
Shabana described her conjugal bliss in an interview, “After marriage it was like we were two peas in a pod. So much was similar about us. There was not much adjustment needed on my part. There was so much he had gone through in a broken marriage that he had come out of it wiser, more mature. I married a sensible man, growing wiser with years. We have each shaped and moulded the other since we married, but the most important fact is that we are also very good friends. And he jokes in his typical manner. He loves to say ‘Shabana is such a good friend; even marriage could not spoil our friendship.’
I have no interest in action films, or in sports. He loves all sports: tennis, cricket, soccer. He took me to watch the finals at Wimbledon. I watched the match and swore never to go again. He also likes to joke: If there’s a sad serious film on TV, or a boring programme, he will say, ‘Shabana ko bulao, it’s her type of pro-gramme.’â€
While doting on her husband Shabana continued, “the wonderful thing about Javed is that whether I am with him in a slum or with the Queen of England, he is so completely at home. He will win them all over. He is constantly stealing my friends away from me! But to give him his due, in academic circles he is known at Princeton, Harvard, Columbia, and he has delivered lectures there. He com-mands a lot of respect. He is competitive but never jealous; he is ambitious but never insecure.
For medical reasons, I could not have a child. It hurt a lot, and I was heartbroken for a while. Then I told myself, ‘One can’t have everything in life.’ Also Zoya and Farhan were very young then, and their mother was generous in letting us have access to them. So I had children around. And I got the man! I cannot imagine being married to anyone else.
We have deep trust and faith in one another. He will never open my bag, or read my mail. (I would do all that though.) The friendship keeps us close. He is deeply emotional and sen-sitive. Of course we have fights and bit-terness; we are so busy in our own worlds that it is great to be together when we do meet! That is what marriage should be about – the undying and unconditional friendship between two individu-als who invest trust and time in each other for a lifetime.â€
Javed said something similar
to Priya Gupta in an interview for The Times of India, “Shabana is basically my friend. We happen to be married. Our friendship is so strong that even marriage could not break it. We got mar-ried as people thought that you have to be married. What is impor-tant is there are so many things that we share, like our basic values and our aesthetics. And there are many matters on which we differ from each other. But if we are totally sim-ilar, then you should not live with a person who is exactly like you. And if you are totally different, then too, you can’t function together. So I think there is a right kind of balance between similarity and dissimilarity between us. She is a very strong woman with a strong sense of fairness and desire for justice all around. We have come from the same training school. Her parents were poets, leftists, involved in progress of writers’ movements. We both, in our own way, have learnt to hold progressive, liberal, religious and as a matter of fact almost anti- religious values. But she is dangerously frank. That makes me uncomfortable. I generally don’t do that. Much like all cultural civilisations, I am diplomatic.â€
“The camaraderie between Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar is hard to miss; they are so at ease with each other. ‘We have a really happy marriage because we rarely meet,’ quips Shabana.
Javed believes that two people can be happy together only when they are happy as individuals. “And no matter how close you are to each other, every-one has a private space that needs to be respected. When you expect more than the other person is willing to give, the relationship sours,†he says.
Shabana recounted an incident where a woman walked in on her ironing Javed’s kurta. ‘She asked me how I could call myself a feminist. I was doing it because I wanted him to wear a well-ironed kurta. It was that simple,’ she says. Javed adds, ‘Thankfully no one came into the room the day I was press-ing your feet because you were tired. They wouldn’t have believed it if I told them that it was not an everyday occurrence!’
And when it comes to age, Shabana is more accepting of it. ‘Embrace your age. Don’t fight to be younger,’ she says, even as Javed adds, ‘Given a chance, I’d live forever. Not because I love myself — although that is true too — but because the thought that I won’t be around to see new movies, listen to new songs and learn about new discoveries about the human body and the uni-verse is depressing. And there are so many poems, scripts and more waiting to be written.’†—Susanna Myrtle Lazarus, The Hindu “Girls run after him. He is a poet, he must be so romantic, they think. But believe me, there is not a single romantic bone in his body. I once asked him about it and he joked: ‘Look, the trapeze artist does not hang from a trapeze at home.â€
The Sunday Tribune article described their relationship thus: “Here’s a marriage where the couple discuss various ‘isms’ (socialism, Marxism or secularism) over a cup of adrak (ginger) tea which Javed cannot make and Shabana loves. It’s another matter altogether that their rare disagreements lead to heated debates. Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar’s is a marriage of intellect, and like true believ-ers in democracy, they agree to disagree.
While possessiveness for the man and jealousy in the woman are considered inevitable and even prescribed in a romantic relationship, here’s a couple who thinks differently. Says Javed in an interview, ‘We seek love from one source, wisdom from another and companionship from yet another. Seldom does it all come from one single source. She gives me all this plus mental and intellectual support.’
And when constant companionship like Siamese twins is considered a hall-mark of intimacy, Shabana has her own prescription for a successful relationship. ‘Bumping into each other, occasionally, at airports,’ she says, ‘is very good for mar-riage!’
The world knows her as the inspiration behind Javed’s most romantic song, Ek ladki ko dekha toh aaisa laga. She was the narmi ki baat (gentle whispers), sardi ki dhup (the winter sun), resham ki dor (a strand of silk) and sandhal ki aag (a sandalwood fire).
She, in turn, simply calls him Jadu—in her peculiar style with sparkling eyes disap-pearing into the crinkles. She is not the only muse in this relationship. ‘What I really value is when I have to write a paper and am stuck; I know I can depend on him to help me.’ For Shabana, Jadu is the touchstone for testing ideas and thoughts. It’s Javed who encouraged her to do the con-troversial role in Fire (in which she plays a lonely lesbian). He is the one who coerced her into Submitting Arth for National Film Awards (1982) and Fire for the Best Actress Award both times.â€
Though Javed was born a Muslim, he is a self proclaimed atheist and raised his children with the same beliefs. In fact, Javed gets upset when people refer to him as being Muslim. he replies that only his name is muslimÂ
After his second marriage, Javed had a solo writing career in which he wrote the scripts for a dozen movies and more than 100 songs. He has won a total of 11 National Film Awards for his song lyrics and 13 Filmfare Awards; he was also awarded the civilian honours Padma Shri in 1999 and the Padma Bhushan in 2007 by the Government of India, as well as the 2013 Sahitya Akademi Award in Urdu, India’s second highest literary honour, for his poetry anthol- ogy Lava. He also served for a term in the Parliament’s upper house Rajya Sabha starting 2009.
Javed’s son Farhan Akhtar is an actor/filmmaker and Zoya is a screenwriter/direc-tor. They have collaborated on films such as Dil Chahta Hai, Rock On and Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara that have the recurring theme of friendship. Farhan said this was because he leaned on his friends’ support during the painful times his parents split up. “I have always found this relationship of friends very beauti-ful. It made a lot of sense to me when Zoya told me that dur-ing our growing up years, friends played a very important part for us. Given the fact that my parents were going through a divorce, friends became a huge part of our support sys-tem and eased a whole lot of pain for us.â€
Recognised as one of the finest Indian actresses and having appeared in more than 120 Hindi and Bengali films, Shabana in her turn has won the National Film Award for Best Actress five times and also bagged four Filmfare Awards, as well as several international awards like the Silver Hugo Award for Best Actress at the 32nd Chicago Film Festival and Jury Award for Best Actress at Outfest, Los Angeles. Some of her notable films include Shyam Benegal’s Nishant (1975), Junoon (1978), Susman (1986), and Antarnaad (1992); Satyajit Ray’s Shatranj Ke Khiladi; Mrinal Sen’s Khandhar, Genesis, Ek Din Achanak; Saeed Mirza’s Albert Pinto Ko Gussa Kyon Aata Hai; Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh and Disha; Gautam Ghose’s Paar; Aparna Sen’s Picnic and Sati; Mahesh Bhatt’s Arth; Vinay Shukla’s Godmother. She has starred in Western productions such as John Schlesinger’s Madame Sousatzka (1988) and Roland Joffe’s City of Joy (1992), Klotz’s Bengali Night, Immaculate Conception, the comedy Son of the Pink Panther, and Ismail Merchant’s In Custody. She is also a skilled theatre actress having performed in many plays, such as M. S. Sathyu’s Safed Kundali (1980), based on The Caucasian Chalk Circle; Feroz Abbas Khan’s Tumhari Amrita with actor Farooq Sheikh, which had a vastly suc-cessful five year run; the Singapore Repertory Theatre Company production Ingmar Bergman’s adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House; and in 2014 toured UK, Dubai and India with British production Happy Birthday Sunita. Having worked in films, theatre and televi-sion, she pointed out the differences in these media, remarking that the-atre is really the actor’s medium; the stage is the actor’s space; cine-ma is the director’s medium; and television is a writer’s medium.
Finally about her marriage she has this to say, “after 32 years of marriage, you get so intertwined with each other,†said Shabana speaking of Javed. “It’s the same with him. In fact, Javed has even written a poem, titled Shabana, which talks precisely about this. The time we spend together, watch-ing movies, listening to music—those are far more precious to me than any solitaires.â€
Â

As the country mourned the loss of the 47 innocent people who died in the Chitral-Islamabad crash due to engine malfunction and PIA grounded its entire ATR fleet, consisting of 10 planes, pending further investigation, it was another reminder that our lives are conducted mostly on blind faith. And only after disasters occur, do we take precautions and that too for a limited time. Fatalism is so engrained in our psyche that we avoid assigning responsibility.
And now from the tragic to the everyday mantra of “life goes on”.
Each season brings new fashion in its wake. And no season is as fashionable as the winter shaadi and party season. This issue’s Runway Report is crammed with latest looks hot off the runways of FPW, London, and BCW, Lahore. Ammara Khan, a super popular fashion designer, also reveals to GT readers her inspiration for her Il Giglio collection: Florence, the city famous for its arts and architecture and home to the powerful Medici during the Renaissance.
Farhan Tahir, the famous Pakistani-American Hollywood star who we regularly watch on many a TV show, is ready to star in a Pakistani movie. He tells us his criteria for selecting the vehicle for his Pakistani showbiz launch; he also tells us about his fast paced life in Hollywood. Another high profile Pakistani-American is Huma Abedin, Hillary Clinton’s trusted adviser, personal assistant and confidante. Her ill-conceived marriage to the Jewish ex-Congressman and self proclaimed sex addict, Anthony Weiner, is the topic for this issue’s Memorable Romance.
Talking of the fast and furious, the most accessible Formula One race for us is the Abu Dhabi one. If you’ve always wanted to attend and get some of that adrenalin high, then actor Saim Ali gives you tips collected from his own recent trip. Enjoy!
By Mahlia Lone
Known in political circles as Hillary Clinton’s “body woman,†“shadow†and “mini me,†Huma Mahmood Abedin was born in 1976 to Indian/Pakistani parents in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Her parents, both born pre-Partition in British India, highly religious, scholarly college professors, founded the Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs in 1978; an Abedin family run organization devoted to the study of Muslim communities in non-Muslim societies around the world. For this, the family received regular funding from Muslims the world over, especially Saudi Arabia. In fact, her father Syed Zainul Abedin (1928-1993) relocated the family to Jeddah upon receiving a lucrative teaching post there when Huma was only two. She was enrolled at a British all girls’ school in Jeddah and learnt Arabic. Her younger siblings, sister Heba and a brother were born much after her. Their mother Saleha Mahmood Abedin is currently, an associate professor of sociology and dean at Dar Al-Hekma College, Jeddah.
Huma returned to the U.S. for her higher studies and got a BA from George Washington University in Washington D.C. with a major in journalism and a minor in political science. She wanted to be a serious political journalist like her first idol Christiane Amanpour and wanted to work in the White House press office. In 1996, while still at university, she began working in the East Wing of the White House as an intern to the First Lady Hillary Clinton. Another famous intern, Monica Lewinsky started working in the West Wing, the President’s section, at the same time. Highly intelligent and efficient, Huma got a full time job at the White House following graduation and served as the back-up to Hillary’s personal aide. When Hillary ran for the Senate in 2000, her older White House aides moved on. But Huma went with her and officially took over as Clinton’s primary aide and personal advisor during her successful 2000 U.S. Senate campaign in New York.
“Huma is a very, very religious person — she doesn’t smoke, drink or swear, always very polite,†a Clinton insider told Newsweek
In 2001, Anthony Weiner the Jewish Democrat, then in his second term as a Congressman from Queens, New York, and 12 years her senior first saw Huma. “I was like, ‘Wow, who is that?’ †he told The New York Times Magazine’s Jonathan Van Meter. Weiner represented New York’s 9th congressional district from January 1999 until June 2011, winning seven consecutive terms and never receiving less than 59% of the vote; he was a popular politician who got the job done. On paper, it was a match made in heaven. At a Democratic Party retreat at Martha’s Vineyard in August, Weiner asked Huma out for a drink. She replied that she had to work, but Hillary promptly gave her the evening off. Huma waved her arms at her boss and shook her head no. But Hillary encouraged them, “Of course all you young people should go out.â€
On the date, Huma, a teetotaler, ordered tea and then retreated to the bathroom for a long time. “She ditched me,†Weiner said crestfallen.
The two kept running into each other in D.C. but Huma wasn’t interested. She thought he was “a brash, outspoken, ambitious, camera-hogging New Yorker.†Very slowly opposites began to attract. Weiner finally won Huma over in January 2007, when he sat between Hillary and her rival for the Democratic nomination, then-Senator Barack Obama, at President George W. Bush’s State of the Union address. “I appreciate you looking out for my boss,†Huma texted him. They went out for coffee and romance blossomed.
During Hillary’s unsuccessful 2007 bid for the Democratic nomination, Rebecca Johnson wrote in a Vogue article that Huma is “Hillary’s secret weapon†and that her motivation is not the details of policy or political horse-racing, but “the way that politicians are uniquely invested with the power to help individuals—as with, say, the woman whose legs were badly broken by a piece of plane fuselage on 9/11â€, whom Huma visited with Hillary in the hospital. Huma said, “To me, that’s one of the blessings of this job. In some tiny, tiny way I am part of history, but I am also able to help people.â€
“I’m not sure Hillary could walk out the door without Huma,†Clinton adviser Mandy Grunwald told Johnson. “She’s a little like Radar on M*A*S*H (TV show). If the air-conditioning is too cold, Huma is there with the shawl. She’s always thinking three steps ahead of Hillary.†That year Huma went with the grand doyenne of fashion and publishing, Vogue’s Anna Wintour to Paris for a $1,000-a-person fund-raiser at the home of James Cook, an American businessman. It’s pertinent to note that Huma cuts a stylish figure herself, rarely repeating an outfit and always perfectly accessorized. Her go-to red carpet look is designer wear that is polished with splashes of colour and flashes of metallics. Plus she is high powered and rubs shoulders with all the American bigwigs.
In July 2008, a New York Times article stated that Weiner is one of the most intense and demanding of bosses, often working long hours with his staff, requiring them to be in constant contact via their cell phones, frequently yelling at them, and even throwing office furniture when irate. As a result, he had one of the highest staff turnover rates of any member of Congress, including, at one point, three chiefs of staff in 18 months. He admitted to pushing his aides hard but said that this was just his style of working. Some of his employees praised him for “his intense involvement in constituent concerns and readiness to fight for New York City.â€
“The couple framed it as a sex scandal without actual sex, a narrative that made sense, stated a NY Times storyâ€
Meanwhile, Huma started serving as the deputy chief of staff to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from 2009 to 2013. In 2010, Huma made TIME magazine’s 40 under 40 list of a “new generation of civic leaders and rising stars of American politics.†Hillary sought Huma’s advice on Middle East affairs. Senator John McCain commented at this time, “She is a person of enormous intellect with in-depth knowledge on a number of issues—especially issues pertaining to the Middle East.†So Huma was a rising star in the D.C. political firmament.
In 2010, Huma and Weiner tied the knot in a ceremony officiated by Bill Clinton. She wore an embellished Indian-inspired Oscar De la Renta gown with polki jewellery that spoke of her ancestry. The designer favoured by First Ladies Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush told Vogue that designing the embroidered, cap-sleeved gown for Huma “was like dressing Scheherazade, the beautiful queen from One Thousand and One Nights.†The lavish wedding cost a cool $250,000.
In her wedding toast, Hillary said fondly of the bride: “I have one daughter. But if I had a second daughter, it would be Huma.†Saleha, Huma’s real mother said Hillary may as well be Huma’s mother as she got to see her daughter far more than she (her mother) did.
In May 2011, Abedin accompanied Hillary and Obama on an official trip to London that included a state dinner at Buckingham Palace. Huma wrote to her husband from her “spectacular†room at the palace, “I cannot believe what an amazingly blessed life that we live, these incredible experiences we’ve both had.â€
Just days later the perfect life came crashing down. Weiner hastily called and left a message for his wife, who was in Washington, the ominous words, “My Twitter was hacked.†In fact, Weiner had mistakenly tweeted a photograph of his crotch meant for a 21-year-old Seattle college student to his 45,000 followers. It was a full blown sordid sex scandal. Huma who was pregnant at the time accompanied by Weiner hid from the reporters at a friend’s house in the Hamptons. Only when they were packing up the car to return to New York City, Weiner had the guts to confess, “It’s true. It’s me. The picture is me. I sent it.â€
“It was every emotion that one would imagine: rage and anger and shock,†Huma recalled to the Times later. Calling a news conference, Weiner came clean. He admitted he had sent explicit messages to six women during the previous three years, but had never actually met any of them. One State Department official said that many blamed Huma for driving Weiner to sexting because she “was never around. She gave so much to Hillary Clinton, what did she have left for him? It was politically incorrect, but we did wonder.â€
Huma sought refuge with Hillary who had herself lived through Bill’s extramarital escapades while in office that had resulted in a scandal on a much bigger scale. The next day after the press conference, Huma returned to work at the State Department. “My compass was my job. It was where I could go and life was normal,†she said.
“Huma didn’t really want me to resign, frankly. Her frame was: ‘We’ve got to get back to normal somehow,’ †Weiner told Van Meter. But he didn’t really have a choice. He resigned his office and gave up his $174,000 salary. Huma was making $155,000 from her State Department salary. The Clintons stepped in to help Huma financially. Not only did Weiner have to sell his Forest Hills condominium for $430,000, but Huma also sold her Washington condominium, for $620,000, at a slight loss. They moved into one of longtime Clinton supporter and New York developer, Jack Rosen’s buildings at 254 Park Avenue South. They were hardly slumming it in the sunlit, 12th-floor, 2,120-square-foot, four-bedroom $3 million apartment, the monthly rent of which was at least $12,000. In Dec 2011, Huma gave birth to a baby boy, Jordan Zain Weiner. Life was better than normal.
Weiner started a consulting firm, Woolf Weiner Associates, to pay the bills. To help her favourite, Hillary signed off on Huma’s request to become a special government employee (S.G.E.) at the State Department, so she could work from her New York City home while taking care of her newborn. Huma acted as a consultant with expertise that no other person could supply on a “myriad of policy, administrative and logistical issues,†according to her application for S.G.E. status. She became an S.G.E. by mid 2012 and was paid $62.06 per hour. She was also acting as a consultant to Teneo Holdings, a global strategic-consulting and investment-banking firm co-founded by her friend and colleague Douglas Band, Bill Clinton’s right hand man. For the seven months she worked at Teneo, she was paid $105,000. Additionally, Huma was hired as a consultant to the William J. Clinton Foundation to help plan for Hillary’s “post-State philanthropic activities.†Getting four different paychecks at once, the potential for conflicts cropped up immediately, according to William D. Cohan who tallied up her salaries in a Vanity Fair article. Together the couple reported a combined income of $496,000 for 2012. Politics sure is a lucrative career!
That summer, Huma, Weiner, and six month old Jordan posed for People magazine in their gorgeous apartment. They were happy. Huma is quoted in the article, “Anthony has spent every day since (the scandal) trying to be the best dad and husband he can be. I’m proud to be married to him.â€
Weiner was running for the 2013 NYC mayoral elections, but again he was caught sending graphic messages this time using the cheesy pseudonym Carlos Danger to a 22 year old woman named Sydney Leathers, an Indiana native who on social media had first expressed her disapproval of his extramarital behaviors. The story broke right after the sunny People story appeared. Weiner admitted that he had continued to send sexually explicit messages to at least three women in 2012. One recipient of his messages said that Weiner described himself to her as “an argumentative, perpetually horny middle-aged man.â€
Despite demands for Weiner to drop out of the mayoral race, he doggedly and penitently held a press conference with his wife beside him in which he announced that he would continue his campaign. He apologised, “I said that other texts and photos were likely to come out and today they have…I want to again say that I am very sorry to anyone who was on the receiving end of these messages and the disruption this has caused.†Not surprisingly Weiner lost the mayoral primary, winning only 4.9% of the vote. But the repercussions went far beyond New York, dragging Hillary’s name into messy headlines about pornographic pictures and Weiner’s descriptions of his carnal appetites.
“The Clintons put him in exile,†one longtime Clinton insider said. They had no choice but to distance themselves not from Huma, but her errant husband who had become a political liability.
Weiner and Huma had allowed filmmakers full access to his “circus-like†mayoral campaign for a documentary called Weiner that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016. The film’s co-director Elyse Steinberg told The Daily Beast reporter: “Just as Anthony was reduced to a caricature and a punch line, so was Huma. Our hope is that you get to see a different side of her: as a wife, as a mother, as a person with a very important job and you also get to see the judgment that was placed against her. Huma is one of many women whose husbands did something wrong or embarrassing, and they were criticized for staying in the marriage. Our job was to question those judgments.â€
“In the documentary, the filmmaker asks Weiner, ‘Did Huma want you to go back into politics?’ Without hesitation he responded. ‘She did. She was very eager to get her life back that I had taken from her,’ reported Tara McKelvey for BBC News. “The marriage survives. But Abedin’s role changes. She goes from being a devoted wife to someone who places her bets, at least politically, on Clinton – not her husband. The metamorphosis of Abedin from a committed wife to a cautious one, hedging her bets, takes place gradually during the film. It’s expressed in a subtle manner—more through gestures than words. In a political ad that’s shown early in the film, she smiles at her husband while he talks about his candidacy for mayor. Later at an event in a New York apartment, she stands up and says: “I’m usually in that room as far as possible from the microphone.’ Then she makes the case for why New Yorkers should vote for her husband.
Weiner is skinny and wiry–a coiled fury. He also has Faustian appetites. He’s slouched on a couch. She’s standing on the side of the room, with her arms crossed. ‘The level of guilt,’ he says and puts his hand on his heart. She practically rolls her eyes – and leaves the room. She loves him, but the scandal has pushed her almost to a breaking point. Later he says he wants her to go with him to the polls on Election Day to show her support for his candidacy. While he talks, she’s standing in a dark hallway with her arms crossed. One of Clinton’s advisors, Philippe Reines, who served as a spokesman when Clinton was Secretary of State, appears as a dark force in the film—unseen but powerful. Reines wants Abedin to stay away from her husband during a key moment in his mayoral campaign. Apparently, he thinks it could damage her reputation. She listens to Reines—not her husband. Weiner was committed to politics. But he became a punch line. In the end, his wife distanced herself from his campaign. She didn’t go with him to the polls on Election Day. The film shows that in political theatre, sometimes it’s smart to stay off stage.â€
Neither of the couple watched the documentary.
In 2013, a stage production The Weiner Monologues premiered at the Access Theater. Directed by Jonathan Harper Schliemann, the play was based on media coverage of Weiner’s sexting scandal.
Meanwhile, Hillary had started her bid for the 2016 Presidential Election with Huma as the vice chairwoman of her campaign and considered by many as the most powerful person in the campaign organization. This was not surprising as Huma had remained Hillary’s closest confidante. Annie Karni wrote on the Politico.com site that Abedin was “the only official channel to Clinton†and was hence “elevated to the most senior member of Clinton’s old guard. Huma is occupying a perch overseeing the campaign operation.â€
“Just knock on the door to the bedroom if it’s closed,â€Â Hillary would tell Huma.
“A lot of times, Hillary would snap her fingers and go, ‘Gum.’ And Huma would fetch it,†a Clinton insider told Newsweek. Huma was so dedicated that when she heard Hillary had been forced to carry her own bag up a staircase, she almost cried.
“Whatever the title, the job she performs for Hillary has always been essentially the same: confessor, confidante, and constant companion. It’s safe to say that over the years Abedin and Hillary have spent more time together than either has with her husband. A former adviser to Bill Clinton describes her as ‘a mini Hillary.’ Wherever Hillary goes, Abedin goes,†Cohan wrote.
“Abedin’s near constant presence by Clinton’s side for decades has made her a source of fascination and, in recent years, a paparazzi-stalked celebrity in her own right. Fans at rallies stop her for selfies; she has been photographed multiple times for Vogue, even by Annie Leibovitz; she hobnobs with movie stars at Paris Fashion Week; and she has the distinction of being the only Clinton campaign staffer who has been singled out by Donald Trump for attack (he used her marriage and recent separation from former Rep. Anthony Weiner to question Clinton’s judgment),†he added.
In her turn, after Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump had proposed banning Muslims from entering the United States, Huma wrote an open letter to Clinton supporters calling her “a proud Muslim†and criticized Trump’s plan as “literally writing racism into our law books.â€
Further public humiliation was in store for Huma when in August 2016 the New York Post printed excerpts from a Twitter conversation between Weiner and an unnamed woman. Weiner had again sent a picture of his crotch, this time with his four year old son sleeping on the bed beside him. He also told the woman he’d dreamed about her, and invited her to meet him in New York.
Before the story broke in the press, Hillary was asked by reporters what she thought about the latest whiff of scandal but she dismissed it as “rumours.†Several of Mrs. Clinton’s friends and allies suggested she distance herself from Huma. Hillary is very loyal, but she’s also pragmatic.
The two women’s closeness had caused envy in those who sought to curry favour because Huma speaks for Hillary, and people adept at getting access to Hillary knew it. “Everybody fights to be at the center and Huma controls a lot of that dynamic,†a former advisor to Hillary said. Mrs. Clinton steadfastly refused to give up Huma.
The New York Times reported the next day that Huma had finally separated from her womanizing husband. She announced, “After long and painful consideration and work on my marriage, I have made the decision to separate from my husband. Anthony and I remain devoted to doing what is best for our son, who is the light of our life. During this difficult time, I ask for respect for our privacy.â€
*NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS OR NEW YORK POST*
EXCLUSIVE: Huma Abedin and her Husband Anthony Weiner go for brunch on Father’s Day and take their son to a park for some family fun in New York. Abedin was dressed down in jeans and flat shoes with a floral print shirt and was enjoying her day off whilst Hillary Clinton was in Hospital celebrating the birth of her grandson. Weiner was having fun with his son in the park going on a slide and swings. Weiner went for some trendy green shades in the blistering New York sunshine.
When asked whether Ms. Abedin would step down from the campaign, Hillary’s campaign chairman, John D. Podesta answered, “Huma is a terrific leader. She’s multifaceted, has a great strategic sense, and she’s a wonderful colleague. She’s an integral part of the team, and her competence is only exceeded by her humility. We of course stand by her.â€
“There is a long list of usually chatty Clinton surrogates and supporters who went gone mute on the subject of Huma Abedin,†wrote Cohen. “The ones who didn’t get the memo, or chose to ignore it, stuck close to the prescribed script. Michael Feldman, the managing director of the Glover Park Group, a communications consulting firm, said that after 20 years Abedin has become part of the ‘institutional memory’ and now occupies ‘a really important and unique place in the organization.’
Bob Barnett, the lawyer who brokered the Clintons’ multi-million-dollar book deals, says Huma is ‘now one of the key glues that holds Clinton world together…. She knows everyone and everyone knows her. She knows their strengths. She knows their weaknesses. She knows the roles they’ve played, and that history is priceless to a person in public life.’â€
Then horror of horrors, in September the Daily Mail published an article claiming that Weiner had engaged in a months long sexting relationship with a 15-year-old girl. The troubled teenager claimed he asked her to dress up in “school-girl†outfits for him on video messaging app Skype and persuaded her to engage in “rape fantasies.†They also sexted through the app Confide specifically designed for confidentiality, automatically deleting messages and images after the first time they have been read or viewed. However, the girl took screenshots of a few of the lurid messages and images, including him bare-chested in the bathroom, which he had sent her that she shared with the Dailymail.com.
Devices owned by Weiner were seized as part of the investigation into this incident. He gave a statement to DailyMail.com in which he said: “I have repeatedly demonstrated terrible judgement about the people I have communicated with online and the things I have sent. I am filled with regret and heartbroken for those I have hurt.â€
The father of the teenager called him “a monster.†He told the Daily Mail that Weiner’s conduct was “absolutely criminal,†and that it has been “gut-wrenching†to watch the impact it has had on his daughter. “I hope I never come in contact with him, I’ll be in jail if I do.â€
Still the Clintons never publicly criticized Mr. Weiner.
FBI director James Comey went public with the latest investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server, after he announced that the FBI was investigating emails found on a laptop seized during the investigation into Weiner. Freedom of Information Act requests from a conservative organization have made many of Clinton’s staff’s emails sent during her State Department tenure public. Huma was involved in many of the sensitive emails that were scrutinised. In one email dating back to the time when Clinton was Secretary of State, then-Clinton Foundation executive Doug Band asked Huma to facilitate a meeting between Hillary and the Crown Prince of Bahrain.
Hillary to her credit did not fire Huma regardless of what her husband’s indiscretions had cost her.
But what is wrong with Weiner? And why has he ruined his life? Jaffe, a UCLA-trained addiction expert said, “If someone’s life is repeatedly negatively affected by this behavior and they are unable to stop it, they need help.â€
A NY Times story on Weiner stated that the Society for the Advancement of Sexual Health estimates that 6 to 8 percent of Americans are sex addicts. Awareness of sex addiction, an intimacy disorder, has gone mainstream thanks to celebrities like Tiger Woods, David Duchovny, Russell Brand, etc. “Those commonly afflicted are 30- to 50-year-old men, upwardly mobile, successful men, type-A, pillar-of-the-community, CEO-type personalities who usually have a problem connecting to other people and generally have some sort of trauma in their past.â€
The Post recently photographed Weiner horseback-riding through the woods at a $25,000, 35-day, all-male sex rehabilitation program at the Recovery Ranch in Nunnelly, Tenn. In-patient rehab is considered a last resort for sex addicts. The patients greatly benefit from having the seclusion the all-male treatment center provides without all the triggers that women can create. Upon entering the facility, electronic devices are immediately confiscated and for the first two weeks patients can’t even receive phone calls.
As we all know, Hillary Clinton lost the general election. Her email server scandal may have been a contributing reason. Huma was seen in tears after her boss’ loss. She now works as Hillary’s personal assistant.
“I’d call Huma one-in-a-million,†Clinton staffer Philippe Reines told a NY Times reporter. “She is truly one of a kind, one in a billion. We are all in awe of her poise, grace, judgment, intellect and her seemingly endless energy.â€
Movies: La La Land Â
La La Land, a 2016 American romantic comedy-drama musical, is written and directed by Damien Chazelle and stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. The plot follows a musician and an aspiring actress who meet and fall in love in Los Angeles, but as success elevates them in their careers, the dreams they worked so hard to maintain threaten to tear the duo apart.

The film’s title not only references the city that is home to Hollywood, Los Angeles, but also allegorically references the difference between real life and reel life. The musical genre, which is resurrected by this film, might go some way to filling the void left by Bollywood films here in Pakistan. This is just the movie for dating couples who are tired of sneaking about and secretly meeting at the movies only to find an annoying litany of superhero action movies. We recommend you share a bucket of popcorn for this one. The movie releases on December 9 in the US, with a world-wide release soon after.
Books: The Undoing Project —Michael Lewis
Michael Lewis describes the relationship between Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, two psychologists whose groundbreaking studies on how our minds trick us into making bad judgments earned them a Nobel Prize in Economics (of all fields). Their theory has become the foundational framework of Behavioral Economics. Their peculiar area of research—human decision making—has had implications for a wide variety of academic and professional fields from professional sports to military thinking and strategy.
Lewis’ books have a knack for being picked up by Hollywood executives. He first started working on this book as a sequel to Moneyball, the book that was adapted into a screenplay and later enacted on screen by none other than the studly Brad Pitt. When he began doing research, Lewis found an even more compelling story. That of an intellectual partnership with a falling out, a story of betrayal and intrigue all to do with the realm of ideas. Be sure to get your hands on The Undoing Project, for who knows you might want to beat the lines at the cinema when it is adapted into a movie one day.
Music:Â Disclosure Top 5 Songs
Disclosure is an English electronic music duo consisting of brothers Howard and Guy Lawrence. Their music marks the end of many an evening, as the guests are ushered out and the hosts prepare the mood for the select few invited to the after-party. Here are 5 songs from the duo that you want on your post-party playlist:
Television Shows:Â Peaky Blinders
Peaky Blinders is Britain’s answer to the much loved Gangs of Wasseypur, which enjoys more than just a cult following in Pakistan and India. The television drama is based upon the exploits of the Peaky Blinders gang that operates out of Birmingham, England in the aftermath of the First World War. The gang comes to the attention of Chief Inspector Chester Campbell (Sam Neill), a detective sent over by Winston Churchill to clean the streets of Birmingham from the dual threat of the Irish Republican Army and the rising tide of Communist agitators in the wake of the Ocotober Revolution of 1917 that elevated the Bolsheviks into power in Russia. The show does well to marry intrigue and violence, all the while representing the various threats to the crown in the inter-war period. With three seasons available on Netflix, Peaky Blinders is a good show to have on your radar.
Sapphire silk
Following the launch of Sapphire Winter Volume 2, Sapphire’s Silk Anniversary collection Route de la Soie has launched nationwide on the 6th of December.The collection comprises of silk dupatta and shirts featuring fashion forward prints with a modern flair. This two-piece silk collection celebrates the label’s second year in fashion with an exclusive range of luxurious silk fabrics and striking hues with a mix of contemporary silhouettes. We cant wait to get our hands on this collection!
Sana Ahmed’s luxury pret
Dazzling and trendy, Sana Ahmed’s luxury pret ensembles have already proved popular, though she is a relatively new designer. You will stand out in a show-stopping outfit by this fabulous designer.
Cafe Latch
Cafe Latch is a welcome addition to the Lahore restaurant scene. Located on Fashion Avenue at Mall 94, the hip cafe boasts Mediterranean fare with a bit of classic British cuisine. We especially loved the Cream of Broccoli Soup, tender Calamari and flavoursome Prawns. The light and fruity Eton Mess hit us with a dessert high. Check it out; you will be pleased.
Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler
One of the most luscious debuts in recent times, Stephanie Danler’s Sweetbitter is astonishingly good! Grab your copy from the Last Word book store today.
Firdous ready to wearÂ
Of all the brands I visited and learned about when I visited Firdous, this one excited me the most. It’s currently being touted as a “rising star”. The brand presents innovative and striking prints. Some Firdous ready to wear articles are too cute for me to take seriously. You can get what all the ladies in town are buying in drove.



























































































































