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By Afshan shafi

For this week’s style me up, the stunning Zoe Khan serves as the muse for Crimson by Saira Shakira. Impeccably accessorized and polished, Zoe styles these must have lawn ensembles to perfection!

Muse: Zoe Khan

Designer: Crimson Lawn by Saira Shakira ’18

Full marks on styling folks! Crimson Luxury Lawn by Saira Shakira’s contemporary designs and meticulous detailing have us swooning. Love how Zoe Khan has styled this stunning one shoulder shirt with perfectly tailored front open bootcut pants. A statement Kelly and Luscious gold earrings give her look a chic and feminine feel.

Everything about this indeginous meets contemporary outfit is whispering class! Zoe wears this piece as an off shoulder straight shirt with culottes. She carries the beautiful ghaara embroidered Tasseled dupatta gracefully on one side. Golden pumps, a chunky necklace and a classic orange Kelly makes for an ethereal look!

Zoe is slaying this number from Crimson Luxury Lawn by Saira Shakira. A straight embroidered shirt, monochrome bootcut pants and the exotic silk fringed dupatta is put together beautifully and makes for a perfect outfit for a lunch date with girlfriends.

Giving us some refreshing summer vibes, Zoe Khan looks chic in this loose thigh length shirt and bell bottoms. We love her effortless beach waves and that delicious yellow Hermes Kelly clutch is giving her the right pop of colour!

A well-known and highly popular director and actor, Adnan Malik is making his film acting debut with Asim Abbasi’s Cake. The talented young man sits down with Ally Adnan, and talks about Cake, Pakistani cinema, minority rights, the charm of family dysfunction, and a lot else

I absolutely believe that all Pakistanis — Christian, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, Zoroastrians and others — should have equal citizenship

Cake had its world premiere in London’s West End recently. How did it go?

It was absolutely amazing! To see the name of our Pakistani film up in lights in London’s most iconic film destination was enthralling. It was a proper, world-class premiere with a full house and people loved the film.

It took you a long while to sign on to do a film. Why?

Yes, it sure did. I had a few offers after the success of television serial, Sadqay Tumhare, but none that really appealed to me. I had worked in Dil Banjara after Sadqay Tumhare. The serial was not successful and made me realize that I needed to be choosy and selective when deciding to take on acting projects. I resolved to take on projects that appealed to me, both personally and professionally, and that were in line with my personal values. Cake certainly was all of that.

What did you like about Cake?

A lot but three things specifically – the story, the cast and crew, and the director’s vision – stood out.

The script of Cake blew me away when I first read it. It moved me, made me laugh and had me in tears. It was a real page-turner. The team of Cake was truly brilliant. Not only were the actors great, but the crew included some of the finest people in the business, like production designer Aarij Hashmi, cinematographer Mo Azmi and costumier Samiya Ansari, to name a few.

Most importantly, I loved the vision Asim had for the film. He had a fantastic story and he had the wherewithal to tell it in a simple, thoughtful and effective manner. Cake has a lyrical quality to it, which is a reflection of his sensibilities as a director.

Does the finished product live up to your expectations?

It sure does. Cake is a great film with a wonderful story and features some truly outstanding performances. It excels in a lot of areas – casting, editing, cinematography, colour grading, art direction, and costume design – that have often been ignored in Pakistani films and it has great music. It is a well-integrated film, crafted by a very astute director.

I feel that the story of Cake will resonate with a lot of viewers. The themes of aging, family dysfunction, sibling conflict, marital ennui, and love are universal. People will relate to the themes and identify with the characters of the film. We hope that it will become the perfect crossover film that appeals to audiences from all over the world. The attendees of the London premiere were certainly not limited to people from the South Asian diaspora.

What are the strengths of Cake?

In many ways, Cake is a groundbreaking film because of its story and technical soundness.  It is wonderfully written, meticulously crafted and intelligently structured. It is engaging, entertaining and moving and will force people to think about their own relationships and re-examine the way in which they view familial bonds. It will encourage dialogue and debate, and, hopefully effect positive change in the lives of viewers. I know that it stayed with me for a long time after I watched it for the first time at the premiere.

One of the issues that hurts Pakistani cinema is the desire to watch and produce films that imitate Bollywood. Cake is an important film because, if successful, it could change the trend and encourage producers to invest in films that are original and groom audiences to want more than copies of Bollywood films. We need more authentic stories to be told. So, a lot is riding on this film.

You play the character of Romeo, a Pakistani Christian, in Cake. The character is very different than your own. Was it difficult for you to play this role?

Playing Romeo was a daunting task at first but Asim was very certain that I was the actor to play the character. It was his belief in me, more than anything else that convinced me to take Romeo on. The preparation to play this character was tough but, once I got into it, playing the role became easy.

How did you prepare for the role of Romeo?

Very diligentl.

A lot of research went into playing the character of Romeo. It had been written so well that I wanted to do full justice to the role. Asim and I had a lot of discussion about Romeo’s person, history and psyche. We created a backstory for him. I spent a lot of time with people similar to Romeo in environs that were frequented by them but were totally alien to me. I remember the first day when I wore his wardrobe, donned the moustache, and walked down the street near a commercial market. I noticed that people engaged with me very differently. I looked at myself from their viewpoint and realized that I was no longer Adnan Malik; I was Romeo. The reaction of people to the persona of Romeo emboldened me to get fully into his character. It was a great experience.

A lot of attention was paid to Romeo’s look as well. Asim had written him as a young man who wore checkered shirts with jeans. I did not think that jeans went well with the character and found a pair of pastel coloured, bell-bottomed pants, which my father wore in the sixties, for Romeo. They gave the character a retro look. Asim, Samiya and I decided to give Romeo a moustache and add a cut to one of his eyebrows to allude to a more complicated and, perhaps, dangerous past. I think that the effort that was put into getting Romeo’s look right was rewarded very richly. He looks like he is from another era, and, in many ways, given his values, he really is. His world view and sincerity are from an era far gone. In many ways, Romeo embodies nostalgia in the film.

You seem to be very fond of the character of Romeo.

Yes, I am.

Romeo is quiet but charming and the moral compass of the film. When I saw him on screen for the first time, I viewed him as another person, instead of myself, and found him to be very likable. He is a strong person but deals with others with kindness, sensitivity and patience. I think he is truly a hero for the twenty-first century. I think in this era of female empowerment and with the Me Too movement, we need to reexamine the portrayal of men in popular culture. In the Subcontinent, we have always depicted the hero as an alpha male. I do not believe that a grown-up, spoilt momma’s boy, who is perpetually angry, picks fights easily, and chases women relentlessly, is a “hero” in this day and age.

We need to redefine the “hero” for the twenty-first century. In my mind, he is a man who is strong, kind, supportive, emotionally intelligent, and a believer in gender equality. Romeo is such a hero and very much a man after my own heart.

What did you learn Pakistani Christians while researching the role of Romeo?

I learnt that they are not at all treated well by Pakistani society. That’s very upsetting because, in a truly Islamic society, all citizens have equal rights, and religion is never the basis for any discrimination. Islamic law considers Muslims and non-Muslims to be equal and does not accord any special privileges to Muslims. The history of Islam is full of instances where Muslims and non-Muslims have been treated equally and are subject to one and the same laws. Indeed, Christianity and Judaism have flourished in many Islamic empires. It’s upsetting to see Muslims in Pakistan treat religious minorities with contempt, disdain and unfairness.

On the positive side, I discovered that Pakistani Christians are intensely patriotic and love their country dearly. They do have a strong desire to become a part of the mainstream and be treated with love, respect and kindness.

Do Christians have equal citizenship in the predominantly Muslim Pakistan?

No, but they should.

I absolutely believe that all Pakistanis – Christian, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, Zoroastrians and others – should have equal citizenship.

Why do you think the population of minorities in Pakistan has decreased by more than fifteen percent since its creation in 1947?

It has decreased because we have failed to treat minorities with fairness, kindness and equity. We have denied them equal citizenship and not allowed them to live with us in peace and harmony. Many Islamic countries, Egypt, Malaysia and Turkey, to name a few, have succeeded where we have failed. It makes me profoundly sad to see Pakistan lose the rich benefits of diversity due to the exodus of minorities.

The constitution of Pakistan guarantees the rights of minorities. A few laws have been passed to protect the rights of religious minorities, as well. Yet, the country seems to be plagued by systemic, endemic and egregious violations of freedom of religion. Do you believe that the laws and the constitution have failed to protect religious minorities because they contradict societal, cultural and local norms, or is there another reason for their failure?

Laws work when they reflect the norms, beliefs and morality of people, and fail when they are at odds with the intellectual, moral and cultural fabric of society. The people of Pakistan need to believe that treating religious minorities with fairness, equality and justice is the right thing to do; unless that happens, the laws won’t work. The only way to ensure the effectiveness of the laws is to develop a culture where religion is not allowed to become the basis of any sort of discrimination.

Do you believe that Cake has the power to positively affect the manner in which minorities are treated in Pakistan? 

Yes. I hope and wish that is makes a difference.

Ally Adnan lives in Dallas and writes about culture, history and the arts. He tweets @allyadnan and can be reached at allyadnan@outlook.com.

Photography by Yaseen Lakhani

 

 

By Mahlia Lone

The recent success of the inaugural edition of the Lahore Biennale Foundation (LBF) made the city of Lahore shine and its citizens feel proud and happy. The art work was exhibited at seven historic venues at the Shehr-o-Funn (city of crafts).

One of the main aims of the Biennale is to promote and exhibit art in a way that makes it accessible to the public at large and not just a select group. It was heartening to see that people from all walks of life attended this event and curiously appreciated the art works on display, for example the breathtaking and awe-inspiring site-specific contemporary art installations. Qudsia Rahim, director of LBF, explained: “Some of these engage with the idea of nature, others work with Lahore’s layered history and diverse geography, while others allow chances for us to take control of our own narratives.”

We look forward to its next edition after two years. Bravo team LBF!

Shahzia Sikander’s audio-video installation Disruption as Rapture with voice over provided by Ali Sethi, at the Summer Palace, Lahore Fort. Photography Atif Saeed

Imran Qureshi at work on his new series of paintings made especially for the Lahore Biennale 01. Photography Hammad Gilani

Imran Qureshi’s breath-takingly beautiful  site-specific fibre optic installation Idea of Landscape, highlighting the artificiality of the landscape now, at the Summer Palace. Photography Atif Saeed

Aisha Khalid meticulously used hundreds of thousands of commom pins to produce the carpet titled More Beautiful for Having Been Broken displayed at the Shahi Hammam. Photography Atif Saeed

Noor Ali Chagani’s Brick Installation dealing with the immense pressure on a man to build a house and provide the income to run it for his family, at Bagh-e-Jinnah. Photography Usman Saqib Zuberi

Bani Abidi’s Memorial to Lost Words displayed at the Lahore Museum. Photography Atif Saeed

Aisha Khalid’s mirrored  installation effectively and effortlessly shows what the Shahi Hammam must have looked like when it was functioning

Iftikhar Dadi and Elizabeth Dadi’s Roz o Shab 2018, neon light installation, at the Summer Palace. Photography Usman Saqib Zuberi

Qudsia Rahim, director of LBF

Shahroz Sabzwari may be the son of veteran actor Behroz Sabzwari, but he has made his own place in the field of acting and modeling, making his mark with his impeccable performance in the drama serial Tanhaiyan Naye Silsilay and Nanhi. Though his debut movie Chain Aye Na flopped at the box office, his recent hit serial Zard Zamano Ka Sawera made that look like a little bump in his very shiny ride. Sana Zehra sits down with the star of drama serial Seep to talk about love, life and his plans

One regret you live with?

None

How are you different after the release of your movie Chain Aye Na?

I’m much stronger.

What insults your intelligence?

Lies

In an emergency who would you call for help?

I have a lot of friends I can call but in an emergency I would call Naeem Khan.

Ever falsely accused of something?

No

What do you think people say behind your back?

He is one pompous @#%*!

What temptation have you successfully resisted?

A lot of them! (Laughs)

If you are in an honesty room with Syra what would you ask her?

Syra is an open book really. I don’t need to ask her anything.

First thing that comes to your mind when you think of the word fun?

Music

Name one commonly held belief that you find offensive?

That you shouldn’t eat to lose weight. No, you need to eat and eat right to lose weight.

Crazy held belief you held as a child?

That my mother was a tooth fairy.

Tell us about your project Seep?

Seep is on air now. It is Shaista Abbas’s debut. I’m very proud of it, as it’s very different.

Who did you get the most retakes with?

Sarish Khan

What is your most useless talent?

Nothing, everything has been pretty useful so far.

How do you seek someone special’s attention?

By talking. I sure can talk!

One song that you can never get tired of?

Running away by Hoobastank

Do you believe in love at first sight?

Yes, yes! With Syra.

Have you ever been stalked by an ex?

Yup

Who do you think has it easier, men or women?

Women

Who do you think is the best dressed celebrity?

My uncle, Jawed Sheikh

If you get a chance to ask God one questions what would it be?

I ask Allah questions every day. I’m very much connected to Him.

If Hareem Farooq and Hania Amir were drowning who would you save first?

Hareem

Rule breaker or take permission?

Take permission

Who would rather by your costar in 007?

Syra, who else?

Who is your favourite actor?

The late Marlon Brando

What is that one character you feel like you should’ve never said yes to?

No such character

An advice from your father that you should’ve followed?

Just recently, my tooth cap came off and my father said to go get it fixed right away. I didn’t listen and lo and behold I have severe toothache right nowL

Most embarrassing comment anyone has ever made?

There were a lot of lethal comments made when Chain Aye Na trailer was released.

Describe love in three words?

I can’t describe love in three words. I can write a whole book about it!

One word for Chain Aye Na?

My first film

One word for awards?

If you have a good jury then that’s fine, but awards should not be given based on public opinion or as a result of a popularity contest.

One word for Botox?

I like it. Everyone should get it done.

Do you think you got it before your time?

No

Do you think people should invest money in flop films?

I think investment should be done regardless. Whether it’s smart or not, the end result always speaks for itself.

Who would you rather go dancing with? Mahira or Maya?

Maya Ali

Imagine A movie scene. you have to introduce your girl to your mother. Who would it rather be: Soha Ali or Shaista Abbas?

Shaista

Who would you rather arm wrestle? Bilal Ashraf or Ali Rehman?

Ali Rehman because I might have a chance with him, but Bilal Ashraf hell no!

If you were given a chance to do a high school musical that would you rather do it with: Sonya Hussain or Armeena Khan?

Sonya

Were your exes invited to your wedding?

I invited some of them.

Did they show up?

One of them did.

Imagine you are swimming in sunny California and suddenly you start drowning. Who would rather be your lifeguard: Sadaf Kanwal or Amna Babar?

Sadaf Kanwal

Imagine there is an alien attack happening. who would rather be your side kick: Kubra Khan or Syra Shahroz?

If I say Kubra Khan my world will end so I will say Syra Shahroz.

If you had a choice of a personal butler, would it rather be Sanam Baloch or Sarish Khan?

Sarish Khan

And why is that?

Because she’d be one hot butler.

Who is that one actress you really wish to work with?

Maya Ali

Rate the following as the best actress: Mahira Khan, Mehwish Hayat or Saba Qamar?

Mehwish Hayat, Saba Qamar and Mahira Khan

What does GT mean to you?

Good times!

“I invited some of my exes to my wedding”

Off the Cuff with
Shaista Abbas

Making her debut with the drama serial Seep opposite Shahroz Sabzwari, Shaista is the younger, half-sister of Meera Jee and is a paralegal by profession. Growing  up in London, her Urdu is not fluent so she’s working extra hard on her dialogue delivery as  all eyes are currently on this beauty. Sana Zehra sits down with the ingenue for a fun rapid fire session

Most googled question: Are you really Meera Jee Sister?

I’m her half-sister.

Do you think you got special treatment because of your sister?

I don’t think so. I had to audition for this role just like anyone else

How come you are not so active on social media?

That’s because I am a very shy person.

What is your personal grievance?

Don’t have any.

Who is your style icon?

Aishwarya Rai. I think she is gorgeous, a real lady and has a positive energy around her. She exudes optimism.

What is the most expensive gift you bought for yourself?

A pair of gold earrings

What do you think about celebrities posting pictures of various brands on their social media?

Well, if something makes them happy then why not? If it gives them a sense of achievement then why not celebrate it and share it with the rest of the world and give inspiration to young girls as well? No harm in that!

What about people who cannot afford these brands?

It’s a sad reality that so many people are in want and are suffering. We should all help them but if someone wants to enjoy life then I say let it be. God has everything. He can provide anything to anyone. We are divided into social strata for a reason. Everything should be taken positively.

Ever seen a ghost?

No, but I wish to because I don’t get scared.

If you have an unlimited food supply what one thing would you want to eat?

Fish and eggs

What is your guilty pleasure?

Chocolates.

Favorite Music?

Punjabi songs

Last video watched on YouTube?

Series of interviews of celebrities

Last crush?

I had a crush on my classmate.

Any tattoos?

No, I’m not a tattoo kind of person.

Analog or Digital?

Digital

Who is your spirit animal?

I love dogs.

If you are a magician and you could change one thing about yourself what would it be?

I’d make myself more beautiful.

Can you cook?

Yes, I love to cook.

Fahad Mustafa, Junaid Khan, and Ahsan Khan: Who would you want to work with in the future?

Fahad Mustafa

Out of these two who would you say yes to a dinner date. Imran Abbas or Mikaal Zulfiqar?

Mikaal Zulfiqar

An actor you really wanted to work with?

Mikaal Zulfikar

What is your take on Botox and fillers?

Something very convenient nowadays, a good thing to have I guess. I appreciate the people who would be that daring to go for it.

Have you ever been hit on by a co-star?

Maybe

Have you ever committed to a shoot and not show up?

No way, I’ve always met my commitments.

If you have an opportunity of losing one memory what would it be?

Hating someone.

How many times have you been in love?

I love to love and I love the feeling of love and I don’t mind falling in love again and again.

Everything is fair in love and war—True or False?

True

What does GT means to you?

Every time can be a good time.

Photography:

Arsalan Bilgrami of a.bilgrami studio

Hair & makeup:

Shaista Studio Z salon and spa

Shahroz grooming:

N-Pro

Location courtesy:

The Deli

Shaista is Meera’s younger, half-sister

“We are divided into social strata for

a reason” (Hmmm    )

By Mahlia Lone

Nida Azwer

Lady-like Elegance

Hussain Rehar

Sharp Tailoring

Sania Maskatiya

Monochrome Magic

HSY

Gothic Revival

Arjumand Bano

Tropical Vibe

Saira Shakira

Empire of the Sun

Fahad Hussayn

Floating Blossoms

RICI MELION

Dress to Impress

Republic by Omar Farooq

Weekend Wear

Saira Rizwan

Easy to Wear

Mona Imran

Pop Artist

Shirin Hassan

Pink Poppies

Zonia Anwaar

Orange You Glad

Who? Purniya

Why? We love the navy colour, grommet detailing and flattering draping of her gown

Who? Asma Chishty

Why? The friendly publisher looks elegant and chic in the perfectly put together ensemble

Who? Kamiar Rokni

Why? The new design director at Sapphire is always tastefully dressed

Who? Selina

Why? What a great tropical jacket by Arjumand Bano, which the PR maven has worn over black and paired with red peeptoes

Who? Sara

Why? And this designer never has a hair out of place, and is always immaculately turned out

Who? Ramsha

Why? This is so cute on her and also pops on the red carpet

Who? Mehek

Why? Young and fun

Who? Ather

Why? A fashion risk that somehow works

Who? Anushey

Why? The optic illusion dress is different in a good way. She smartly keeps her accessories simple

Mahlia S. Lon

Recently, I spent a sunny Sunday exploring the various exhibitions put up by the Lahore Biennale Foundation 01 showcasing the Shehr-o-Funn. People from all walks of life were out and about, interested to view what was on display and curious to learn and see life from the artists’ viewpoint. The Punjab Government, LBF team, sponsors and artists did a great job organising the event, arranging the logistics and lending their talent, making meaningful, thought-provoking art accessible to the public at large from the mightiest to the most humble. I myself felt joyful wandering around Old Lahore checking out the installations and paintings as I would anywhere in the world, but not as we usually do insulated in our daily lives. Not only were the exhibits wonderful to look at and the Sufi concerts divine to hear but thought provoking as well. It’s so much more effective to demonstrate your opinion subtlely and make a person reach his/her own conclusion based on the feelings invoked than to bash someone on the head with an idea and ram it down his/her throat. In case you missed it, we have some of the highlights for you in this issue.

Additionally, we get up close and personal with young actors Adnan Malik, Shahroz Sabzawari and Shaista Abbas. Fahad Hussayn’s beautifully crafted sartorial masterpieces, Muse’s plans to collaborate with Parisian design houses, all the latest and best fashion straight from the runway of PFDC Sunsilk Fashion Week and much more awaits you in this issue. See you next fortnight

 

1. LUXURY CHAIR

Featuring a print that can be interpreted as classic French Fleur De Lis or Dutch Delftware, this beautiful Luxury Patterned Single Chair is surprisingly versatile. For a French feel, pair it with rustic or shabby-chic pieces and cool walls and floors. Alternately, to bring Holland into your home, go for a canal-side vibe that includes worn wooden furniture and fresh blooms.

2. ONE    

The latest Summer Mirage collection of affordable yet trendy leisurewear is now available at popular high street store One.

3. Freshkon Colored Cosmetic Contact Lens 

Bored with your look? Freshkon Coloured Cosmetic Contact Lens offers a wide range of colours from subtle browns to dazzling blues and greens that will enhance your facial features. Try on a pair, you will feel like a new person.

3. Reeva by Shoe Planet

Comfortable pumps with on trend block heels are availabe at Shoe Planet for under Rs. 3000.

The favoured makeup artist of many celebrities, Eric Sen has been transforming faces for the past 17 years. Sana Zehra gets the latest tips and bridal makeup trends from Eric

What is your take on bridal makeup?

It should be subtle. Not over the top and begging for attention. Brides come to me wishing to look fair and a tone lighter I always tell them let’s just enhance what you have instead of making you look fair. Less is always more.

What are universal beauty tips?

Glowing Skin

Natural looking foundation

Less pressed and loose powder

Biggest makeup mistake women make?

Wrong foundation and over the top back combing.

Top current beauty trends?

Neon pastel colours as well as plum, orange and deep blood red lips.

Do you think these shades would suit everyone?

You need to have confidence to carry any trend tbh (to be honest).

What are the three makeup items that no one should leave home without?

Lipstick

Mascara

Blush

Favourite beauty brand that you think suits our Asian skin types?

MAC and Estee Lauder

How can a bride get beautiful skin?

My advice to them is eat healthy, eat fresh fruits and vegetables and sleep tons. Make a detox water with cucumber slices in it and stay well hydrated. Another tip is to stay away from bleach and use sunblock when going out.

There is a huge trend of using whitening products and bleach is one of them. What would you suggest.

I am against the idea of bleaching. I think we should enhance our natural complexion rather than using bleach. Bleach is extremely bad for your skin. Brides especially must bleach with extreme caution. Who wants blotchy, inflamed, reddish and over sensitive skin on her wedding day?!

If someone really want to bleach their face what would you tell them?

Try using face polish instead if you really insist on bleaching your face.

How has the makeup evolved over the last 17 years since you’ve been working?

Huge change! We have a small industry and my mentors have actually brought in trends that no one else was using at that time. Makeup and hair has seen a huge change but makeup trend seems to repeat itself the most.

How much should a bride trust their makeup artist and how much input should be given?

Always have consultation first with your makeup artist. But some brides are adamant that their lips are bold and eyes are smoky at that point I listen to them but then try to keep eyes a bit subtle since it should have my signature look also.

Which actress or model transforms the most?

Sunita Marshall and Amina Ilyas

Who is the most finicky celebrity to work with?

Haven’t had the chance to meet someone like that, have had a pleasant experience so far with everyone.

Who needs a good makeup artist badly in our industry?

Hard question! I’d rather not answer.

Which celebrity would you want to work with?

I really wanted to work with Sridevi but she alas she’s no longer with us. In the Pakistani industry, luckily I have worked with almost everyone.

Any message for upcoming new makeup artists?

Focus on your work. Respect your seniors. and focus on features don’t get stuck on makeup. Work on enhancing the features instead of just slathering on colourful makeup products.

Photography: Raza Jaffri

Hair & makeup:  Eric Sen

Who? Sonya Mirza

Why? The pretty, new mom is also Gucci-ed out

Who? Amara

Why? We love her fun Gucci L’Aveugle Par Amour sunnies

Who? Shaan

Why? He’s a dapper dan in his three-piece suit

Who? Abeer Irfan

Why? She knows how to dress her athletic figure in the most flattering way

Who? Mahgul Kabir

Why? A contemporary way to pull off the Spanish senorita look

Who? Nooray Bhatti

Why? The ballerina ribbon stockings are so cool

The beautiful Muse for Saira Rizwan, Jowairiyya chooses her favorite outfits from Saira Rizwan by Ittehad Textiles and tells us how she puts the looks together

Muse: Jowairiyya

Designer: Saira Rizwan by Ittehad Textiles

Photographer: Farhan Naqvi

The over all silhouette, look and feel makes this a perfect semi formal ensemble. I love  the Dupatta, carried on the side to flaunt the contrasting colors and elements. Simple teal blue drop earrings compliment the look with  lilac  lipsand cheeks for the win. 

With this outfit, I have created a formal look. The sublime colour palette and embroidery is in sync with the straight pants and knee length shirt.  I kept my hair straight and paired the outfit with patent gold pointed pumps and 3D flower nude clutch. 

The green outfit from Saira Rizwan Luxury Lawn’18 by Ittehad is perfect for any formal events in the summer. Love the lightness of the fabric, which is beautifully embellished and has gorgeous detailing. This is definitely going to my go to outfit for festive occasions.  the peplum silhouette makes it modern chic with a tinge of traditional. I have left my center parted hair open with plum lips for a neat, graceful look. The outfit is paired with nude pointed pumps completing the look. 

This pastel colored outfit is perfect for the hot summer. A simple yet chic collar neck and tasseled hem goes well with this soft pink outfit, which is beautifully accentuated with embellished details. chandelier  earrings and pink lips go with this perfectly. The outfit has been accessorized with matching dusty pink pointed pumps and clutch.

By Mahlia Lone

All Bollywood fans mourned Sridevi’s tragic untimely demise this February. The highest earning Indian actress of her time, she was Bollywood’s first female Superstar carrying the movie on her own appeal without relying on a big name hero. Acting in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Hindi language films, she had pan Indian appeal, and was a talented dancer as well as having great comedic timing. In a national poll, Sridevi was voted “India’s Greatest Actress in 100 Years.”

Her death as in her life drew in the crowds with hundreds of thousands of mourners lining Mumbai’s streets crying out “Sridevi Amar Rahe” (long live Sridevi) as her funeral cortege slowly traversed the six km. from Green Acres society where the family lived in an apartment in Lokhandwala Complex to the crematorium in Vile Parle. The funeral procession was headed by a tall, open truck covered in white flowers (her favourite colour) a massive portrait of Sridevi in the back. Her body draped in the national flag and encased Snow White like in a glass casket  was done up with full make-up, wearing a ceremonial gold and maroon coloured Kanjeevaram sari with a large gold necklace and sindoor (vermilion) on her forehead to proclaim her suhaagan (married woman) status. The Kapoor men, Boney, Anil, Sanjay and Arjun travelled in the truck with the body. The Maharashtra government accorded full state honours for the funeral and there was a gun salute before the cremation. Her last rites were performed by her two daughters, Jhanvi and Khushi, as Boney looked on with his head bent mournfully. Sridevi’s ashes are to be scattered at sea.

Let’s take a look back at her life, career and her relationship with her beloved Boney and her lovely girls.

Born Shree Amma Yanger Ayyapan in 1963 in Sivakasi, Madras State, to a Tamil lawyer, Ayyapan, and Rajeshwaramma, belonging to an upper caste Reddy family from Andhra Pradesh, Sridevi had a younger sister Srilatha. The family was strictly vegetarian and, till her marriage, Sridevi was always accompanied by her mother or by her sister on film sets. She started acting in Tamil films at only four years of age in 1967. In 1972, Sridevi made her first Bollywood movie as a child artist and, in 1975, she portrayed the heroine’s youngest sibling in the cult classic Julie.

Hitting puberty, Sridevi starred in her first leading role in a Tamil film at only 13 in 1976. In the following years, she followed it up with a number of films with South Indian Superstars, Kamal Haasan and Rajinikanth. Fittingly aged 16, Sridevi made her Hindi film debut as a heroine in Solva Sawan in 1979. But her big break in Bollywood came four years later when she stared opposite Jeetendra in Himmatwala, which became one of the biggest blockbusters of the year.  The actress with massive “Thunder Thighs”  became a huge hit with the masses. Her vigorous dance on the catchy song “Nainon Mein Sapna” fully synchronized with Jeetandra made her an overnight sensation, as did her daring, loud outfits and elaborate headgear. The very next year, the two starred in Tohfa, the biggest hit of the year, making Sridevi a bona fide star. She appeared on the cover of Filmfare magazine with the headline, “Unquestionably No.1!” In total, Jeetendra and Sridevi ended up doing 16 films together, including the above two.

In 1986, Sridevi played a woman/snake in Nagina, the second biggest blockbuster of the year. Though many actresses have played this role complete with writhing snake like dance moves, Sridevi’s dexterous climax dance on the song “Main Teri Dushman” became the snake dance to beat for all Indian actresses.

In her personal life, Sridevi’s parents arranged her marriage with Indian-American tennis player Vijay Amritraj who had newly become famous playing on the American tennis circuit. However, she broke off her engagement as she had fallen for Bengali born and raised Bollywood Disco dancing star, Mithun Chakraborty, husband of another actress Yogeeta Bali. Between 1984 and 1989, Mithun and Sridevi starred in four Hindi films together. Their relationship conincided with a spate of second marriages of Hindu Bollywood actors with their actress paramours, such as Dharmendra with Hema Malini and Raj Babbar with Smita Patil. In 1985, Mithun too secretly  wed Sridevi. After three years of waiting in the wings, Sridevi gave up on the relationship after Yogeeta tried to commit suicide and Mithun refused to either publicly acknowledge his second marriage or leave his first wife. A steadfast Yogeeta told a reporter, “I will accept it even if he takes on a second wife.” Sridevi figured Mithun was neither getting divorced like he claimed nor going to in the future, Sridevi got her marriage annulled in 1988. Incidentally,   Mithun went back to Yogeeta, and the couple is still married today and has four children together.

At this point, producer, older brother of star Anil Kapoor and son of Hindi film producer Surinder Kapoor, Boney finally spoke up and made his feelings known to Sridevi. Boney had been smitten with the actress after watching her in a Tamil film,  and once she made her  Bollywood debut, offered her a role in a movie he was planning Mr. India starring brother Anil. Boney admitted later, “I fell in love with Sri after watching her Tamil film during the late 1970s. I even flew to Chennai to meet her but she was shooting in Singapore. A few months later, I watched Sri’s debut Hindi film Solva Sawan (1979) and realised I wanted her to work with me. One day I went to meet her on the sets of a movie. But Sri was an introvert and wouldn’t talk to strangers. She talked to me in half-broken English and Hindi and just said that her mother took care of her projects. When she (her mother) asked for Rs. 10 lakh, I offered her Rs. 11 lakh because I wanted to be close to Sri. Her mother was impressed.”

During the shooting he continued to make an extra effort, “There were no vanity vans at that time but I arranged for a separate make-up room for her (Sridevi). Gradually, she felt comfortable with me,” he said.

In 1983, Boney had an arranged marriage with Mona and had two children, Arjun and Anshula, with her as Sridevi was heavily involved with Mithun. In fact, Mithun had first gained fame in Boney’s 1980 production of the rural set drama Hum Paanch. Mona recalled that Mithun didn’t approve of Sridevi’s close friendship with her producer Boney and to reassure the former she tied a raakhi on the latter and declared him to be like  a brother to her.

When the award winning Shekhar Kapur directed Mr. India, the sci-fi movie about a hero who becomes invisible, became the highest grosser of the year, defying all odds, it . Another of Sridevi’s unique dance numbers on the song “Hawa Hawaii,” her comedic turn as Charlie Chaplin, as well as the villain Amrish Puri’s catchphrase “Mogambo khush hua” (Mogambo is pleased) in the cult classic became super popular with the audience.

Sridevi’s character wearing a blue chiffon sari blowing in the wind sings “Kaate Nahin Kat Te/Yeh Din yeh raat/Lo aaj main kayhtee hun/ I love you” (These days and nights don’t seem to end without you, so I’m telling you today that I love you) to the hero, Boney probably imagined she was singing to him. Filmfare magazine described her as “truly a goddess in a blue sari.”

Speaking about what first attracted him to Sridevi, the  producer observed, “I was impressed from the start by the dignity with which she conducted herself. On the sets when she was shooting she would largely keep to herself. But she was never considered standoffish. There was always warmth towards her. What really endeared me to her was that she was down to earth. Success never went to her head. She was always grounded and continues to be. So commands respect spontaneously. When she enters a room people stand up for her.”

Sridevi recalled their courtship years, “Boney came to me in 1984 to sign me to play Seema, the lead female role for Mr. India. He confessed later, that he fell in love with me outright.” Boney even paid off Sridevi’s mother‘s debts and the grateful actress finally started responding to his advances.

In 1989, Sridevi played a double role portraying fraternal twins separated at birth in ChaalBaaz, a feat she performed with great expertise. Director Pankaj Parashar said “She proved her range with the movie and after that she got lots of offers which saw her in a double role.” She was deemed to have such a wide range that she played double roles in four more movies. The same year saw the release of the uber successful producer Yash Chopra’s romantic comedy Chandni with Sridevi playing the title role and it became the biggest blockbusters of 1989.The Times of India declared it, “one of the most watched films of Indian cinema.” According to the Tribune, “Leena Daru (costume designer) scored a winner again when she created the ‘Chandni Look’ for Sridevi. Every street corner sold the salwar-kameez and dupatta that gave the heroine a refreshingly understated look, rarely seen on the Indian screen.” Additionally, Sridevi’s dance number on “Mere Hathon Mein Nau Nau Choodiyan” was played at every wedding and the audience thirsted for even more of her. Sridevi became the undisputed queen of Bollywood in the 80s. She got Filmfare Best Actress nominations for both the movies, and won the award for ChaalBaaz.

In her private life, stories about Sridevi’s affair with married man Boney gained momentum. But the couple denied the allegation and Sridevi vociferously brushed it aside as idle gossip.

Meanwhile, she continued to work in big budget commercial potboilers. Yash Chopra repeated his formula once again by casting Sridevi opposite Anil in his 1991 film Lamhe. Influential Indian website Rediff.com stated, “Quite easily one of his most definitive films, Chopra surpassed his own findings of romance with the insightful, lovely Lamhe….One of the most remarkable films of her career…often considered a film way ahead of its time.” Though critically acclaimed , the film’s theme of incest did not hit it off with the conservative class and even Sridevi found it to be “too bold” for her personal taste. However, it won five Filmfare trophies including Filmfare Award for Best Film and Sridevi’s second Filmfare Award for Best Actress. The Rajasthani costumes worn by the actress in the film also won designer Neeta Lulla her first National Film Award for Best Costume Design.  This movie too over the years became a cult classic.

The next year, Sridevi starred in the epic Khuda Gawah opposite Bollywood Superstar Amitabh Bachchan. She played a double role as an Afghan warrior Benazir and her daughter. Shot mostly in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan, the movie was a huge hit there with BBC reporting that “it ran to packed houses for 10 weeks in Kabul.” The movie remained “in great demand after the re-opening of cinema halls in the country (in 2001)” according to a website.

By now madly in love with his heroine, Boney produced the most expensive Indian films of its time, the action comedy Roop Ki Rani Choron Ka Raja (1993) starring his brother and his ladylove. But the gimmicky movie bombed badly at the box office.

Their love, however, was flourishing. “He did take a few years to sort out his life before formally proposing to me in 1993,” the actress recalled. “I fell in love with him when I got to know the real him. It was difficult, traumatic even and it took me many years to finally accept the fact that I was destined to be with Boney. In hindsight, I only wish that I had realised and accepted his love for me sooner. I always believe in following my heart and I am glad that I did. My parents had passed away by then and my sister was shocked with my decision.”

By now, Sridevi had been acting nonstop for 30 years. Her parents had both passed away from illness and her sister was married. The actress hankered for a family of her own. Judaai (1997) became Sridevi’s last film appearance before she took a 15 years hiatus from film acting. Yet again cast opposite Anil (soon to become her brother in law in real life), she portrayed a greedy, money hungry housewife who “sells” her husband to a rich girl.

Soon after, Sridevi got knocked up and the news of her pregnancy spread like wildfire.

Mona related her side to reporters, “He (Boney) was 10 years older to me. I was 19 when I married him. So I literally grew up with him. Ours was a 13-year-old marriage. So it came as a shock when I realised that my husband was in love with somebody else… There was nothing left in the relationship to give it a chance because Sridevi was already with child. My family, including my father, my mother and sister was the greatest support. The humiliation was painful because I was pitted against a heroine. I was made to feel lesser than her. The industry wives gave me suggestions like, ‘Why don’t you lose weight?’ or ‘Why don’t you join a gym?’ All this made me realise that I had to get up, dust myself and start walking all over again. Also the advice that my friend Meena’s mother gave me became the gospel truth for me. She said, ‘If somebody has no place for you in their lives, then you can have no place for them in yours.’ I understood that I had not failed – my relationship had!’” Their two kids Arjun and Anshula faced a lot of difficulties at school during their father’s affair as the fellow students would mercilessly tease them.

In 1996, Sridevi and Boney tied the knot in a simple temple ceremony a few months before their daughter Jhanvi was born. But Boney did not immediately announce the wedding.

A big humiliating scandal was caused when Mona’s mother, Sattee Shourie publicly verbally abused Sridevi and even tried to physically beat her. In retaliation, the actress banned Boney from meeting  his first family. According to a 1997 Stardust story, the star felt extremely insecure about her marriage: “It rankles her no end that Mona is still Boney’s legally wedded wife, while she herself continues to remain his mistress, a temple wedding notwithstanding.”

On one occasion, Boney met his first wife Mona and took his children, Arjun and Anshula out on a picnic. Sridevi was livid and started shouting, “You b-, you @!#*!#!. How can you do this to me? If you love your kids and wife so much then why don’t you shift back into that house again? You cheat, you liar…” Sridevi didn’t want a repeat of her experience with Mithun who when push came to shove neither left his first wife and children nor publicly acknowledged Sridevi as his wife. She was not even willing to let Boney see his kids. After Jhanvi’s birth, under pressure from Sridevi and her family, Boney divorced his first wife and gave her custody of the kids. This is a major reason that Arjun has no relationship with his step-mother and half-sisters.”

Arjun, now himself an actor, frankly said in an interview, “My relationship with Sridevi would never be normal. She is just my father’s wife and nothing beyond that.”

In 2000, Sridevi gave birth to their younger daughter, Khushi. Their in laws from both sides were supportive of the couple. Sridevi said that Srilatha, “shares a great relationship with my husband and is convinced that he is the best thing that ever happened to me!” Moreover, she declared that she herself shared a very warm bond with the entire Kapoor khandaan (family), “I share a fantastic relationship with them. My mother in law adores me and I always try to pamper her because she loves to be spoilt by me. I can also never forget the support and strength I got from my sister in law Sunita (Anil’s wife and Sonam’s mother) all through and the love I got from Boney’s sister, Reena. The affectionate bond I share with Boney’s youngest brother, Sanjay (also an actor) and his wife Maheep is also a lifeline!” Incidentally, Boney launched both his brothers in films and also managed Anil’s career till the year 2000.

Starting 2004, Sridevi started making special appearances on TV and on the runway; she also started painting too keep herself creatively occupied.

2009 was a good year for Boney; it was the year he produced the second highest grossing action blockbuster of the year Wanted starring Salman Khan in his comeback role. In Pakistan, the movie  shattered records having the highest opening weekend of any Indian movie up till then.

Sridevi too made her comeback with the comedy English Vinglish from debutante director Gauri Shinde. She played a simple, middle class housewife who enrolls in an English-speaking course after her husband and daughters mock her English. The Times of India called it “easily one of the best films of 2012” and Sridevi’s performance “a master class for actors.” While Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN wrote, “Sridevi delivers a performance that is nothing short of perfect. It’s warm and fuzzy, and leaves you with a big smile on your face.”

Sridevi became the only actress in Bollywood to make a successful comeback as a leading lady after marriage and a long time out because she was smart enough to reinvent herself. Not only did she not pick a project based on a romantic theme, but also she came back slimmer and even more attractive than before despite the passing of years.

To keep slim, svelte and young looking, Sridevi was reputed to have had 29 plastic surgeries, including liposuction, a number of rhinoplasty procedures, lips augmentation, Botox and fillers, a breast lift with implants, etc. After Sridevi’s death that was initially supposed to be due to cardiac arrest, Piyali Ganguli claimed on a social media post that “Sridevi was always under immense pressure to keep her weight down, have a wrinkle-free face, and do everything possible to hide her age.” Piyali said that she met Sridevi five years ago and found her very beautiful but unhappy and that continuously visited clinics in Southern California.

The husband and wife teamed up for their home production for the thriller Mom that marked a career milestone for her—her 300th film. She played a mother avenging her teenage daughter’s (played by Pakistani starlet Sajal Aly) rape, a role she said she empathized with and found it hard to be in a normal state after the rage she felt during filming. The film did well both critically and commercially. The news website Firstpost.com commented hilariously, “Here is a 53-year-old leading actress doing what Amitabh Bachchan once excelled at….Sridevi is a far more a riveting watch than a shirtless Salman Khan with his 6 plus packs or the quintessential middle aged Hindi film hero, who refuses to grow up….Suddenly, Bollywood shines bright with hope for the heroine over 50.”

In an interview, Boney proclaimed that Mom was his gift to his wife, “If I were Shah Jahan I would have built her a Taj Mahal. If I were a painter, I would have made her a beautiful painting. But, I make movies. Hence, I don’t know a better way than the gift of films for her.”

Having shot for her last on-screen appearance, a cameo in upcoming film Zero, Sridevi, Boney and Khushi along with the rest of the Kapoors, including Anil, were in Dubai end February attending nephew Mohit Marwah and Antara Motiwala’s lavish wedding in Dubai. Jhanvi was back in Mumbai shooting for her debut movie Karan Johar’s Dhadak opposite Ishaan Khatter (actor Shahid Kapoor’s brother).

Dressed to the nines in dazzling ensembles matching those of her seventeen year old daughter, Sridevi looked ravishing. She posed for cameras, danced and enjoyed herself thoroughly, blissfully unaware tha t these were her last few days in this world. After the wedding celebrations ended on 20th February, she told Boney who had a meeting in Lucknow on the 22nd to take Khushi and return to India without her as she had to shop for Jhanvi. She was staying in Room No. 2201 at Jumeirah Emirates Towers Hotel.

Boney related the events of the fateful day to his old friend Komal Nehta: “On the 24th (February 24th ) morning, I spoke to her. When she told me, ‘Papa (that’s how she addressed Boney), I’m missing you’, I also told her that I was missing her (Sridevi) a lot. But I didn’t tell her that I would be joining her in Dubai in the evening (he had decided to pay her a surprise visit). Jhanvi had seconded my idea of going to Dubai because she was scared, her mom, not used to being alone, would misplace her passport or some important document if she was alone.” According to Boney, there had been only two occasions in the last 24 years when they had not travelled together abroad — when Sridevi had travelled for two film appearances. “Although I didn’t accompany her on those two trips, I made sure that my friend’s wife was with her on both the occasions. The Dubai stay was the first time Sridevi was alone for two days — 22nd and 23rd — in a foreign land. I booked a 3.30 p.m. flight to Dubai on February 24th, and reached the hotel where she was staying at around 6.20 p.m. Dubai time.” After reaching the hotel, the couple hugged and kissed, and chatted for around 15 minutes. Boney suggested they go to Zuma for a “romantic dinner”. “I went to the living room while Sridevi went to the master bathroom to bathe and get ready. I channel surfed channels and was watching the South Africa-India cricket match for a few minutes followed by the Pakistan Super League cricket match highlights.” After around 15-20 minutes, he got restless as it was around 8 p.m. then and being a Saturday, he felt restaurants would fill up.

Boney’s impatience made him shout out to his wife from the living room. After calling out to her twice, he lowered the volume of the TV set and bellowed. Still no reply. He then walked to the bathroom and knocked on the door, calling out “Jaan, Jaan.” Again only silence at the other end, so he opened the door. The tub was full of water and a motionless Sridevi was immersed completely, from head to toe, in the water. There were no splashes to be seen on the bathroom floor outside the tubs, so it was clear that she had not flayed or struggled in her last moments. First, Boney called his friend and after he arrived, finally the police at 9 p.m.

To shocked fans all over the world, it was announced that Sridevi died on 24th  February 2018 at 19:00 GMT in Dubai. The initial report of cause of death was a cardiac arrest, but after a couple of days the forensic report released by the Dubai Police indicated that she had died of accidental drowning in the hotel bathtub. Traces of alcohol were found in her body and water in her lungs. On the 27th, the case was closed and her body was flown back to Mumbai accompanied by Boney and stepson Arjun on a private jet, belonging to the Indian industrialist and close friend, Anil Ambani.

Tributes poured in from the world over. The Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi lamented on social media, “Saddened by the untimely demise of noted actor Sridevi. She was a veteran of the film industry, whose long career included diverse roles and memorable performances. My thoughts are with her family and admirers in this hour of grief. May her soul rest in peace.”

In a different vein, a professor at Oxford  University wrote, “Ordinariness, thy name is not Sridevi. In life nor death. For a woman who had everything else, she seemed to crave it, hiding that obscene talent behind Corpulent Kapoor, motherhood, the couture gowns, the plastic surgeries which straightened all the kinks. I mourn you, what you were and what you could have been.”

After the funeral, Boney released a touching statement: “To the world, she was their Chandni, the actor par excellence, their Sridevi, but to me, she was my love, my friend, mother to our girls, my partner. To our daughters, she was their everything, their life. She was the axis around which our family ran.”

All Bollywood fans mourned Sridevi’s tragic untimely demise this February. The highest earning Indian actress of her time, she was Bollywood’s first female Superstar carrying the movie on her own appeal without relying on a big name hero. Acting in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Hindi language films, she had pan Indian appeal, and was a talented dancer as well as having great comedic timing. In a national poll, Sridevi was voted “India’s Greatest Actress in 100 Years.”

Her death as in her life drew in the crowds with hundreds of thousands of mourners lining Mumbai’s streets crying out “Sridevi Amar Rahe” (long live Sridevi) as her funeral cortege slowly traversed the six km. from Green Acres society where the family lived in an apartment in Lokhandwala Complex to the crematorium in Vile Parle. The funeral procession was headed by a tall, open truck covered in white flowers (her favourite colour) a massive portrait of Sridevi in the back. Her body draped in the national flag and encased Snow White like in a glass casket  was done up with full make-up, wearing a ceremonial gold and maroon coloured Kanjeevaram sari with a large gold necklace and sindoor (vermilion) on her forehead to proclaim her suhaagan (married woman) status. The Kapoor men, Boney, Anil, Sanjay and Arjun travelled in the truck with the body. The Maharashtra government accorded full state honours for the funeral and there was a gun salute before the cremation. Her last rites were performed by her two daughters, Jhanvi and Khushi, as Boney looked on with his head bent mournfully. Sridevi’s ashes are to be scattered at sea.

Let’s take a look back at her life, career and her relationship with her beloved Boney and her lovely girls.

Born Shree Amma Yanger Ayyapan in 1963 in Sivakasi, Madras State, to a Tamil lawyer, Ayyapan, and Rajeshwaramma, belonging to an upper caste Reddy family from Andhra Pradesh, Sridevi had a younger sister Srilatha. The family was strictly vegetarian and, till her marriage, Sridevi was always accompanied by her mother or by her sister on film sets. She started acting in Tamil films at only four years of age in 1967. In 1972, Sridevi made her first Bollywood movie as a child artist and, in 1975, she portrayed the heroine’s youngest sibling in the cult classic Julie.

Hitting puberty, Sridevi starred in her first leading role in a Tamil film at only 13 in 1976. In the following years, she followed it up with a number of films with South Indian Superstars, Kamal Haasan and Rajinikanth. Fittingly aged 16, Sridevi made her Hindi film debut as a heroine in Solva Sawan in 1979. But her big break in Bollywood came four years later when she stared opposite Jeetendra in Himmatwala, which became one of the biggest blockbusters of the year.  The actress with massive “Thunder Thighs”  became a huge hit with the masses. Her vigorous dance on the catchy song “Nainon Mein Sapna” fully synchronized with Jeetandra made her an overnight sensation, as did her daring, loud outfits and elaborate headgear. The very next year, the two starred in Tohfa, the biggest hit of the year, making Sridevi a bona fide star. She appeared on the cover of Filmfare magazine with the headline, “Unquestionably No.1!” In total, Jeetendra and Sridevi ended up doing 16 films together, including the above two.

In 1986, Sridevi played a woman/snake in Nagina, the second biggest blockbuster of the year. Though many actresses have played this role complete with writhing snake like dance moves, Sridevi’s dexterous climax dance on the song “Main Teri Dushman” became the snake dance to beat for all Indian actresses.

In her personal life, Sridevi’s parents arranged her marriage with Indian-American tennis player Vijay Amritraj who had newly become famous playing on the American tennis circuit. However, she broke off her engagement as she had fallen for Bengali born and raised Bollywood Disco dancing star, Mithun Chakraborty, husband of another actress Yogeeta Bali. Between 1984 and 1989, Mithun and Sridevi starred in four Hindi films together. Their relationship conincided with a spate of second marriages of Hindu Bollywood actors with their actress paramours, such as Dharmendra with Hema Malini and Raj Babbar with Smita Patil. In 1985, Mithun too secretly  wed Sridevi. After three years of waiting in the wings, Sridevi gave up on the relationship after Yogeeta tried to commit suicide and Mithun refused to either publicly acknowledge his second marriage or leave his first wife. A steadfast Yogeeta told a reporter, “I will accept it even if he takes on a second wife.” Sridevi figured Mithun was neither getting divorced like he claimed nor going to in the future, Sridevi got her marriage annulled in 1988. Incidentally,   Mithun went back to Yogeeta, and the couple is still married today and has four children together.

At this point, producer, older brother of star Anil Kapoor and son of Hindi film producer Surinder Kapoor, Boney finally spoke up and made his feelings known to Sridevi. Boney had been smitten with the actress after watching her in a Tamil film,  and once she made her  Bollywood debut, offered her a role in a movie he was planning Mr. India starring brother Anil. Boney admitted later, “I fell in love with Sri after watching her Tamil film during the late 1970s. I even flew to Chennai to meet her but she was shooting in Singapore. A few months later, I watched Sri’s debut Hindi film Solva Sawan (1979) and realised I wanted her to work with me. One day I went to meet her on the sets of a movie. But Sri was an introvert and wouldn’t talk to strangers. She talked to me in half-broken English and Hindi and just said that her mother took care of her projects. When she (her mother) asked for Rs. 10 lakh, I offered her Rs. 11 lakh because I wanted to be close to Sri. Her mother was impressed.”

During the shooting he continued to make an extra effort, “There were no vanity vans at that time but I arranged for a separate make-up room for her (Sridevi). Gradually, she felt comfortable with me,” he said.

In 1983, Boney had an arranged marriage with Mona and had two children, Arjun and Anshula, with her as Sridevi was heavily involved with Mithun. In fact, Mithun had first gained fame in Boney’s 1980 production of the rural set drama Hum Paanch. Mona recalled that Mithun didn’t approve of Sridevi’s close friendship with her producer Boney and to reassure the former she tied a raakhi on the latter and declared him to be like  a brother to her.

When the award winning Shekhar Kapur directed Mr. India, the sci-fi movie about a hero who becomes invisible, became the highest grosser of the year, defying all odds, it . Another of Sridevi’s unique dance numbers on the song “Hawa Hawaii,” her comedic turn as Charlie Chaplin, as well as the villain Amrish Puri’s catchphrase “Mogambo khush hua” (Mogambo is pleased) in the cult classic became super popular with the audience.

Sridevi, Boney Kapoor, Jhanvi Kapoor, Khushi Kapoor at Manish MalhotraÂ’s 50th birthday bash hosted by Karan Johar on 5th Dec 2016 shown to user

Sridevi’s character wearing a blue chiffon sari blowing in the wind sings “Kaate Nahin Kat Te/Yeh Din yeh raat/Lo aaj main kayhtee hun/ I love you” (These days and nights don’t seem to end without you, so I’m telling you today that I love you) to the hero, Boney probably imagined she was singing to him. Filmfare magazine described her as “truly a goddess in a blue sari.”

Speaking about what first attracted him to Sridevi, the  producer observed, “I was impressed from the start by the dignity with which she conducted herself. On the sets when she was shooting she would largely keep to herself. But she was never considered standoffish. There was always warmth towards her. What really endeared me to her was that she was down to earth. Success never went to her head. She was always grounded and continues to be. So commands respect spontaneously. When she enters a room people stand up for her.”

Sridevi recalled their courtship years, “Boney came to me in 1984 to sign me to play Seema, the lead female role for Mr. India. He confessed later, that he fell in love with me outright.” Boney even paid off Sridevi’s mother‘s debts and the grateful actress finally started responding to his advances.

In 1989, Sridevi played a double role portraying fraternal twins separated at birth in ChaalBaaz, a feat she performed with great expertise. Director Pankaj Parashar said “She proved her range with the movie and after that she got lots of offers which saw her in a double role.” She was deemed to have such a wide range that she played double roles in four more movies. The same year saw the release of the uber successful producer Yash Chopra’s romantic comedy Chandni with Sridevi playing the title role and it became the biggest blockbusters of 1989.The Times of India declared it, “one of the most watched films of Indian cinema.” According to the Tribune, “Leena Daru (costume designer) scored a winner again when she created the ‘Chandni Look’ for Sridevi. Every street corner sold the salwar-kameez and dupatta that gave the heroine a refreshingly understated look, rarely seen on the Indian screen.” Additionally, Sridevi’s dance number on “Mere Hathon Mein Nau Nau Choodiyan” was played at every wedding and the audience thirsted for even more of her. Sridevi became the undisputed queen of Bollywood in the 80s. She got Filmfare Best Actress nominations for both the movies, and won the award for ChaalBaaz.

In her private life, stories about Sridevi’s affair with married man Boney gained momentum. But the couple denied the allegation and Sridevi vociferously brushed it aside as idle gossip.

Meanwhile, she continued to work in big budget commercial potboilers. Yash Chopra repeated his formula once again by casting Sridevi opposite Anil in his 1991 film Lamhe. Influential Indian website Rediff.com stated, “Quite easily one of his most definitive films, Chopra surpassed his own findings of romance with the insightful, lovely Lamhe….One of the most remarkable films of her career…often considered a film way ahead of its time.” Though critically acclaimed , the film’s theme of incest did not hit it off with the conservative class and even Sridevi found it to be “too bold” for her personal taste. However, it won five Filmfare trophies including Filmfare Award for Best Film and Sridevi’s second Filmfare Award for Best Actress. The Rajasthani costumes worn by the actress in the film also won designer Neeta Lulla her first National Film Award for Best Costume Design.  This movie too over the years became a cult classic.

The next year, Sridevi starred in the epic Khuda Gawah opposite Bollywood Superstar Amitabh Bachchan. She played a double role as an Afghan warrior Benazir and her daughter. Shot mostly in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan, the movie was a huge hit there with BBC reporting that “it ran to packed houses for 10 weeks in Kabul.” The movie remained “in great demand after the re-opening of cinema halls in the country (in 2001)” according to a website.

By now madly in love with his heroine, Boney produced the most expensive Indian films of its time, the action comedy Roop Ki Rani Choron Ka Raja (1993) starring his brother and his ladylove. But the gimmicky movie bombed badly at the box office.

Their love, however, was flourishing. “He did take a few years to sort out his life before formally proposing to me in 1993,” the actress recalled. “I fell in love with him when I got to know the real him. It was difficult, traumatic even and it took me many years to finally accept the fact that I was destined to be with Boney. In hindsight, I only wish that I had realised and accepted his love for me sooner. I always believe in following my heart and I am glad that I did. My parents had passed away by then and my sister was shocked with my decision.”

By now, Sridevi had been acting nonstop for 30 years. Her parents had both passed away from illness and her sister was married. The actress hankered for a family of her own. Judaai (1997) became Sridevi’s last film appearance before she took a 15 years hiatus from film acting. Yet again cast opposite Anil (soon to become her brother in law in real life), she portrayed a greedy, money hungry housewife who “sells” her husband to a rich girl.

Soon after, Sridevi got knocked up and the news of her pregnancy spread like wildfire.

Mona related her side to reporters, “He (Boney) was 10 years older to me. I was 19 when I married him. So I literally grew up with him. Ours was a 13-year-old marriage. So it came as a shock when I realised that my husband was in love with somebody else… There was nothing left in the relationship to give it a chance because Sridevi was already with child. My family, including my father, my mother and sister was the greatest support. The humiliation was painful because I was pitted against a heroine. I was made to feel lesser than her. The industry wives gave me suggestions like, ‘Why don’t you lose weight?’ or ‘Why don’t you join a gym?’ All this made me realise that I had to get up, dust myself and start walking all over again. Also the advice that my friend Meena’s mother gave me became the gospel truth for me. She said, ‘If somebody has no place for you in their lives, then you can have no place for them in yours.’ I understood that I had not failed – my relationship had!’” Their two kids Arjun and Anshula faced a lot of difficulties at school during their father’s affair as the fellow students would mercilessly tease them.

In 1996, Sridevi and Boney tied the knot in a simple temple ceremony a few months before their daughter Jhanvi was born. But Boney did not immediately announce the wedding.

A big humiliating scandal was caused when Mona’s mother, Sattee Shourie publicly verbally abused Sridevi and even tried to physically beat her. In retaliation, the actress banned Boney from meeting  his first family. According to a 1997 Stardust story, the star felt extremely insecure about her marriage: “It rankles her no end that Mona is still Boney’s legally wedded wife, while she herself continues to remain his mistress, a temple wedding notwithstanding.”

On one occasion, Boney met his first wife Mona and took his children, Arjun and Anshula out on a picnic. Sridevi was livid and started shouting, “You b-, you @!#*!#!. How can you do this to me? If you love your kids and wife so much then why don’t you shift back into that house again? You cheat, you liar…” Sridevi didn’t want a repeat of her experience with Mithun who when push came to shove neither left his first wife and children nor publicly acknowledged Sridevi as his wife. She was not even willing to let Boney see his kids. After Jhanvi’s birth, under pressure from Sridevi and her family, Boney divorced his first wife and gave her custody of the kids. This is a major reason that Arjun has no relationship with his step-mother and half-sisters.”

Arjun, now himself an actor, frankly said in an interview, “My relationship with Sridevi would never be normal. She is just my father’s wife and nothing beyond that.”

In 2000, Sridevi gave birth to their younger daughter, Khushi. Their in laws from both sides were supportive of the couple. Sridevi said that Srilatha, “shares a great relationship with my husband and is convinced that he is the best thing that ever happened to me!” Moreover, she declared that she herself shared a very warm bond with the entire Kapoor khandaan (family), “I share a fantastic relationship with them. My mother in law adores me and I always try to pamper her because she loves to be spoilt by me. I can also never forget the support and strength I got from my sister in law Sunita (Anil’s wife and Sonam’s mother) all through and the love I got from Boney’s sister, Reena. The affectionate bond I share with Boney’s youngest brother, Sanjay (also an actor) and his wife Maheep is also a lifeline!” Incidentally, Boney launched both his brothers in films and also managed Anil’s career till the year 2000.

Starting 2004, Sridevi started making special appearances on TV and on the runway; she also started painting too keep herself creatively occupied.

2009 was a good year for Boney; it was the year he produced the second highest grossing action blockbuster of the year Wanted starring Salman Khan in his comeback role. In Pakistan, the movie  shattered records having the highest opening weekend of any Indian movie up till then.

Sridevi too made her comeback with the comedy English Vinglish from debutante director Gauri Shinde. She played a simple, middle class housewife who enrolls in an English-speaking course after her husband and daughters mock her English. The Times of India called it “easily one of the best films of 2012” and Sridevi’s performance “a master class for actors.” While Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN wrote, “Sridevi delivers a performance that is nothing short of perfect. It’s warm and fuzzy, and leaves you with a big smile on your face.”

Sridevi became the only actress in Bollywood to make a successful comeback as a leading lady after marriage and a long time out because she was smart enough to reinvent herself. Not only did she not pick a project based on a romantic theme, but also she came back slimmer and even more attractive than before despite the passing of years.

To keep slim, svelte and young looking, Sridevi was reputed to have had 29 plastic surgeries, including liposuction, a number of rhinoplasty procedures, lips augmentation, Botox and fillers, a breast lift with implants, etc. After Sridevi’s death that was initially supposed to be due to cardiac arrest, Piyali Ganguli claimed on a social media post that “Sridevi was always under immense pressure to keep her weight down, have a wrinkle-free face, and do everything possible to hide her age.” Piyali said that she met Sridevi five years ago and found her very beautiful but unhappy and that continuously visited clinics in Southern California.

The husband and wife teamed up for their home production for the thriller Mom that marked a career milestone for her—her 300th film. She played a mother avenging her teenage daughter’s (played by Pakistani starlet Sajal Aly) rape, a role she said she empathized with and found it hard to be in a normal state after the rage she felt during filming. The film did well both critically and commercially. The news website Firstpost.com commented hilariously, “Here is a 53-year-old leading actress doing what Amitabh Bachchan once excelled at….Sridevi is a far more a riveting watch than a shirtless Salman Khan with his 6 plus packs or the quintessential middle aged Hindi film hero, who refuses to grow up….Suddenly, Bollywood shines bright with hope for the heroine over 50.”

In an interview, Boney proclaimed that Mom was his gift to his wife, “If I were Shah Jahan I would have built her a Taj Mahal. If I were a painter, I would have made her a beautiful painting. But, I make movies. Hence, I don’t know a better way than the gift of films for her.”

Having shot for her last on-screen appearance, a cameo in upcoming film Zero, Sridevi, Boney and Khushi along with the rest of the Kapoors, including Anil, were in Dubai end February attending nephew Mohit Marwah and Antara Motiwala’s lavish wedding in Dubai. Jhanvi was back in Mumbai shooting for her debut movie Karan Johar’s Dhadak opposite Ishaan Khatter (actor Shahid Kapoor’s brother).

Dressed to the nines in dazzling ensembles matching those of her seventeen year old daughter, Sridevi looked ravishing. She posed for cameras, danced and enjoyed herself thoroughly, blissfully unaware tha t these were her last few days in this world. After the wedding celebrations ended on 20th February, she told Boney who had a meeting in Lucknow on the 22nd to take Khushi and return to India without her as she had to shop for Jhanvi. She was staying in Room No. 2201 at Jumeirah Emirates Towers Hotel.

Boney related the events of the fateful day to his old friend Komal Nehta: “On the 24th (February 24th ) morning, I spoke to her. When she told me, ‘Papa (that’s how she addressed Boney), I’m missing you’, I also told her that I was missing her (Sridevi) a lot. But I didn’t tell her that I would be joining her in Dubai in the evening (he had decided to pay her a surprise visit). Jhanvi had seconded my idea of going to Dubai because she was scared, her mom, not used to being alone, would misplace her passport or some important document if she was alone.” According to Boney, there had been only two occasions in the last 24 years when they had not travelled together abroad — when Sridevi had travelled for two film appearances. “Although I didn’t accompany her on those two trips, I made sure that my friend’s wife was with her on both the occasions. The Dubai stay was the first time Sridevi was alone for two days — 22nd and 23rd — in a foreign land. I booked a 3.30 p.m. flight to Dubai on February 24th, and reached the hotel where she was staying at around 6.20 p.m. Dubai time.” After reaching the hotel, the couple hugged and kissed, and chatted for around 15 minutes. Boney suggested they go to Zuma for a “romantic dinner”. “I went to the living room while Sridevi went to the master bathroom to bathe and get ready. I channel surfed channels and was watching the South Africa-India cricket match for a few minutes followed by the Pakistan Super League cricket match highlights.” After around 15-20 minutes, he got restless as it was around 8 p.m. then and being a Saturday, he felt restaurants would fill up.

Boney’s impatience made him shout out to his wife from the living room. After calling out to her twice, he lowered the volume of the TV set and bellowed. Still no reply. He then walked to the bathroom and knocked on the door, calling out “Jaan, Jaan.” Again only silence at the other end, so he opened the door. The tub was full of water and a motionless Sridevi was immersed completely, from head to toe, in the water. There were no splashes to be seen on the bathroom floor outside the tubs, so it was clear that she had not flayed or struggled in her last moments. First, Boney called his friend and after he arrived, finally the police at 9 p.m.

To shocked fans all over the world, it was announced that Sridevi died on 24th  February 2018 at 19:00 GMT in Dubai. The initial report of cause of death was a cardiac arrest, but after a couple of days the forensic report released by the Dubai Police indicated that she had died of accidental drowning in the hotel bathtub. Traces of alcohol were found in her body and water in her lungs. On the 27th, the case was closed and her body was flown back to Mumbai accompanied by Boney and stepson Arjun on a private jet, belonging to the Indian industrialist and close friend, Anil Ambani.

Tributes poured in from the world over. The Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi lamented on social media, “Saddened by the untimely demise of noted actor Sridevi. She was a veteran of the film industry, whose long career included diverse roles and memorable performances. My thoughts are with her family and admirers in this hour of grief. May her soul rest in peace.”

In a different vein, a professor at Oxford  University wrote, “Ordinariness, thy name is not Sridevi. In life nor death. For a woman who had everything else, she seemed to crave it, hiding that obscene talent behind Corpulent Kapoor, motherhood, the couture gowns, the plastic surgeries which straightened all the kinks. I mourn you, what you were and what you could have been.”

After the funeral, Boney released a touching statement: “To the world, she was their Chandni, the actor par excellence, their Sridevi, but to me, she was my love, my friend, mother to our girls, my partner. To our daughters, she was their everything, their life. She was the axis around which our family ran.”

 

Mahlia S. Lon

Like many other women, I’ve been attending a lot of lawn launches agog with curiosity as I was told that this year many collections were different from the plethora of print on print on print earlier. Women had started to resemble overgrown gardens in full bloom, or a smorgasbord of busy print. This year, having listened to their clients, lawn designers have produced suits that are much more sophisticated looking with solids thrown in the three piece mix for good measure. Clients are responding positively by buying out certain collections completely.

Everything looks good on a young, toned body but unfortunately not all trends are universally flattering. One wearable trend that leapt out at me at this year’s Oscars were the long sleeves worn by the older actresses who looked stylish, elegant and age appropriate. Long sleeves came in two varieties: Tight and statement, both wearable. One should always wear what is flattering to one’s own figure to appear to best advantage as one ages, and leave the super trendy outfits to the younger girls.

For all the countless Sridevi fans out there, we have her Memorable Romance with her husband Boney Kapoor in these pages. Relive her life and your own association with the star through the story. As a journalist, it’s best for me to present the facts in as unbiased as I can and keep my personal views and conjectures to a minimum. Hope you enjoy it!

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