Category: Entertainment

  • Emmad Irfani praises Mahira Khan’s humility on set

    Emmad Irfani praises Mahira Khan’s humility on set

    Actor and model Emmad Irfani is in the spotlight for his outstanding performance as Adeel in the drama Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum.

    Irfani recently appeared as a guest on Showtime with Ramiz Raja, where he talked about his experience working with Mahira Khan.

    “Mahira is someone everyone should take lessons from on how to behave on set,” he said.“She’s such a superstar with so much humility, treating everyone with respect. As actors, you are fortunate to get a lot of importance, but the people working behind the camera are the ones putting in more effort,” he acknowledged.“

    So, just be kind to everyone, be nice to everyone, because that’s what you have. The results are not in your hands, but you have respect.It’s important how you treat people. This is what I believe,” he added.

    Emmad Irfani has starred in dramas such as Jalan and Cheekh, and currently, he is starring in Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum alongside Fahad Mustafa and Hania Aaamir.

    The drama is written by Farhat Ishqtiaq and directed by Badar Mehmood. It airs on ARY Digital on Monday and Tuesday at 8:00 PM.

  • Nobel peace laureate Malala brings new documentary to Toronto 

    Nobel peace laureate Malala brings new documentary to Toronto 

    Nobel peace laureate Malala Yousafzai, who unveiled her first documentary with Apple TV+ at the Toronto film festival, said Monday that its inspiring story of elderly South Korean women sea divers dovetails perfectly with her own activism.

    “The Last of the Sea Women” tells the compelling story of the matriarchal haenyeo community, whose members support themselves by fishing off South Korea’s Jeju island, using only wetsuits, masks, flippers, baskets and hooks.

    The traditional community, inscribed on UNESCO’s intangible cultural heritage list in 2016, has existed for centuries, but is at risk as many of the women are now in their 60s, 70s or even 80s.

    “I was looking for stories of women… I wanted stories of their resilience. And when I heard about this project from Sue, I was like, ‘This is exactly what I’m looking for’,” Yousafzai told AFP in an interview with Korean-American director Sue Kim.

    “When I look at the stories of the haenyeo, it inspires me about the possibilities and the capabilities that women have in their bodies, in their minds,” said the 27-year-old Pakistani activist, who is one of the film’s producers.

    “They have inspired me in so many ways, in their activism and how they are cooperating with nature, how they have built the community.”

    – ‘Total badasses’ –

    In the 1960s, 30,000 women plucked everything from abalone to octopus from the sea to support their families. Today, that number has dwindled to 4,000.

    The film shows the women speaking candidly about their difficult jobs, which involves holding their breath underwater for up to two minutes, and includes beautiful under-sea images of them at work.

    It explores how the haenyeo are attempting to breathe new life into their culture through training and social media outreach, and how they work together to prevent overfishing.

    It also examines the threat they believe is posed by the release into the Pacific Ocean of wastewater from Japan’s stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant.

    “I met them first when I was a child, and I was so struck by them, because they cut such a confident, bold figure,” Kim, making her feature directorial debut, told AFP.

    “They’re total badasses. They’re so physically agile and adept and strong, and they’re advocating for the environment, and they’re caring about the next generation.”

    As a teenager, Yousafzai survived a 2012 assassination attempt by the Taliban over her campaigning for education rights for girls. She was co-awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 at age 17.

    She signed a deal with Apple TV+ in 2021 to produce content focused on women and girls and has started her own production company.

    “Storytelling has been part of my activism, and I believe that we need to create platforms and opportunities for girls and women to reflect on the world as they see it,” Yousafzai said.

    “I hope to continue to work with these incredible female directors and storytellers to bring more stories to the screen.”

  • James Earl Jones: stage legend, voice of Darth Vader

    James Earl Jones: stage legend, voice of Darth Vader

    James Earl Jones, a versatile and award-winning American stage and screen actor who used his booming deep voice to bring the iconic “Star Wars” villain Darth Vader to life, has died, his representatives said Monday. He was 93 years old.

    From the works of Shakespeare and August Wilson, to his indelible voiceovers in the blockbuster space saga and as Mufasa in the Disney classic “The Lion King,” Jones earned fans with his ability to play both the everyman and the otherworldly.

    He won three Tony awards including a lifetime award, two Emmys and a Grammy, as well as an honorary Oscar, also for lifetime achievement.

    In 1971, he became only the second Black man nominated for an Academy Award for best actor, after Sidney Poitier.

    All of these accolades were hard-won, as Jones, who was born in segregated Mississippi on January 17, 1931, had to overcome a childhood stutter that often led him to barely speak at all.

    “Stuttering is painful. In Sunday school, I’d try to read my lessons and the children behind me were falling on the floor with laughter,” Jones told the Daily Mail in 2010.

    Reciting his own poetry, at the prodding of an English teacher, helped him to gain control of his voice, which would later be used to strike fear among millions in “Star Wars” as Darth Vader.

    Jones did not physically portray the character — David Prowse wore Vader’s black cape and imposing face mask, while Jones offered the voice, oozing the evil power of the Dark Side.

    “I am your father,” Vader tells Luke Skywalker, portrayed by Mark Hamill, in a pivotal fight scene in “The Empire Strikes Back” — a twist etched in cinema history.

    “He created, with very little dialogue, one of the greatest villains that ever lived,” “Star Wars” creator George Lucas said in 2015 at a ceremony honoring Jones in New York.

    – Broadway –

    From Mississippi, Jones moved to Michigan at age five, where he was raised by his maternal grandparents.

    Initially, he studied to become a doctor, and though he shifted his major to drama, and graduated from the University of Michigan, he didn’t initially think about an acting career.

    “Even when I began acting studies, I thought about being a soldier,” Jones told PBS public television in 1998.

    “And the idea of being an actor didn’t occur to me until after my service was almost finished.”

    After university, Jones served in the US Army and then moved to New York to try his luck in acting, working as a janitor at night to make ends meet.

    He made his Broadway debut in 1958 in “Sunrise at Campobello” at the Cort Theatre — which in 2022 was renamed the James Earl Jones Theatre.

    He tackled many iconic Shakespeare characters on the stage, including Othello and King Lear, but also performed in several Wilson plays, chronicling the Black experience in America.

    “On stage, Jones was commanding, powerful. He embodied the elegance and dignity of African American men,” said director Kenny Leon.

    But the silver screen eventually came calling.

    – Admirals and kings –

    Jones’ film debut came in 1964 as Lieutenant Zogg in Stanley Kubrick’s Cold War satire “Dr Strangelove.”

    Military roles would crop up throughout his career, notably Admiral Greer in three films about Tom Clancy’s beloved character Jack Ryan (“The Hunt for Red October,” “Patriot Games,” “Clear and Present Danger”).

    As for kings, he has played a few — King Jaffe Joffer in the Eddie Murphy comedy “Coming to America” (1988) and Mufasa, Simba’s father, in “The Lion King” (1994).

    His first major award came in 1969, a Tony for best actor in a play for “The Great White Hope”, in which he portrayed troubled but gifted boxer Jack Jefferson — based on the real-life Jack Johnson, the first Black world heavyweight champion.

    Jones revived the role in a film adaptation of the play — earning his sole Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe award for the performance. In 2011, he won an honorary Academy Award.

    Even into his 80s, Jones was a force on Broadway, starring opposite Angela Lansbury in “The Best Man” in a 2012 revival — earning another Tony nomination in the process — and with Cicely Tyson in “The Gin Game” in 2015.

    And for years, he greeted viewers of the cable news network CNN with the simple phrase: “This is CNN.”

    – ‘Darker voice’ –

    But his most famous role was ultimately the one for which he never appeared on screen.

    Lucas eventually chose between Jones and film legend Orson Welles for the role.

    “George thought he wanted a — pardon the expression — darker voice. So he hires a guy born in Mississippi, raised in Michigan, who stutters and that’s the voice and that’s me,” Jones told the American Film Institute in 2009.

    Jones initially did not want to be credited for the film, as he felt his voiceovers were simply part of the movie’s special effects, but eventually conceded, and went on to voice the character in multiple films, television series and video games.

    In his 90s, he stepped back from the role. But he signed over the rights to his voice recordings to a start-up that is working with Lucasfilm to preserve and recreate it for future projects using artificial intelligence.

    The technology was used in the Disney+ mini-series “Obi-Wan Kenobi” in 2022, according to Vanity Fair.

    Jones’ second wife Cecilia died in 2016. They had one son.

  • Shagufta Ejaz celebrates wedding anniversary in hospital

    Shagufta Ejaz celebrates wedding anniversary in hospital

    Renowned actress Shagufta Ejaz silenced slanderers by celebrating their wedding anniversary at the hospital with her husband, who is currently under medical treatment.

    Some time ago, the senior actress took to social media users who criticised and slandered her for going abroad and said that she would never forgive the slanderers, adding that she would hold their neck on the Day of Judgment.

    She recently shared a new vlog on her YouTube channel, which included her wedding anniversary, which she celebrated in her husband’s hospital room.

    In the next part of the Vlog, the senior actress complained about the inadequate facilities of the private hospital and requested the fans to pray for her husband’s full recovery.

    Yahya Siddiqui, husband of Shagufta Ejaz, has been suffering from cancer for five years and is undergoing treatment in a private hospital.

  • ‘If I were older, I would’ve played Noor Jahan’: Hajra Yamin

    ‘If I were older, I would’ve played Noor Jahan’: Hajra Yamin

    Actress Hajra Yamin is making waves with her performance as Sumbul in the drama Noor Jahan.


    Recently, Hajra appeared as a guest on Gloss Etc by Maliha Rehman where she was asked, “If it was up to you, would you play Sumbhal or some other character?”

    The Noor Jahan actress replied, “I would play Sumbul. I would definitely choose Noor Jahan if I were older. What a character and what an amazing job. Negativity aside, she is such a powerful woman. I love it.”

    The host asked, “Is Saba Hamid as strict in real life as she portrays her characters, like Noor Jahan? Does she have a similar presence off-screen?”

    Hajra Yamin said, “I will be very honest with you. Sometimes we feel that the people who seem very strict are actually more scared of us than we are of them. Maybe they have social anxiety; this is a very general statement, you know, because I have a little bit of social anxiety myself, which sometimes comes across as arrogance. Saba Aapa….the talent she has, the figure that she is, I was a bit anxious about how it would be. A lot of my work is with her, or has been with Kubra Khan, but it was nice, and she was clear about who should do what. There was one thing that was good, where I was a bit scared, but then there was Musadik, and he said, ‘No, Azaam, we’ll do it this way, and it’ll be fine.’ I said, ‘Alright, okay.’

    “You know, I sometimes forget my lines. Saba Appa doesn’t forget her lines. She is a pro. Oh, she is so good. She is so good that she instantly remembers her lines. And the performance we saw on screen was amplified from what we saw firsthand. The gestures, the way she glared, the stern tone, she never shouted, but the sternness in her voice, in certain words, she emphasized it. And that was not missed by anyone. What I am really happy about is that the nuances of this story are visible to everyone,” Hajra Yamin added.

    Noor Jahan is written by Zanjabeel Asim Shah and directed by Musadik Malek. It airs on ARY Digital on Friday and Saturday at 8:00 PM.

  • ‘Baby Baji Ki Bahuwain’ teaser reveals Azra’s efforts to mend past mistakes

    ‘Baby Baji Ki Bahuwain’ teaser reveals Azra’s efforts to mend past mistakes

    Actress Javeria Saud returns as Azra to lead the family in the much-anticipated sequel to the hit drama Baby Baji, titled Baby Baji Ki Bahuwain.

    Azra was previously depicted as the fiery eldest daughter-in-law from the original ‘Baby Baji’.

    The teasers released have already garnered millions of views, giving viewers a sneak peek of the upcoming family drama.

    Fans have expressed their anticipation in the comments.

    Tehseen Khan returns as the sequel’s director, and Saqib Ali Rana has written the script.

    Alongside Javeria Saud, her real and reel-life husband Saud, and other actors including Hassan Ahmed, Sunita Marshall, Tuba Anwar, Junaid Jamshed Niazi, and Fazal Hussain, who will reprise their roles from the original hit series.

  • Hira Khan exposes casting scam after being asked to wear revealing clothes for audition

    Hira Khan exposes casting scam after being asked to wear revealing clothes for audition

    Famous actress Hira Khan warned new artists of casting fraud by sharing her own experiences.

    Recently, she gave an interview to Fuschia Magazine, which has gone viral on various social media platforms.

    In the interview, the actress narrated what happened in the audition without naming anyone, explaining how an experienced artist from the industry suggested she attend a fake audition, and how another director from the industry tricked her.

    She said, “When I was shooting for the drama serial Mere Humsafar, a fellow artist, whom I met on the sets, gave me the number of a director and said that he wanted a girl for a new project. Contact him.”

    She added, “Following the advice of the fellow artist, I called the said director and instead of asking me about my work, he asked for my photos and called me for an audition.”

    She continued, “When I asked him to fix the time in the afternoon, he called me at 11 pm.”

    Hira Khan said that the director told her, “You will have a screen test and will be selected based on that. You will have to wear bold clothes for the screen test,” and added that “your audition should be kept secret, which will only be seen by the producers.”

    The actress explained that after hearing the director’s words, she became suspicious and called another director from the industry to ask if auditions were conducted in such a manner.

  • ‘Receiving threatening calls, car is also being followed,’ says actress Sana

    ‘Receiving threatening calls, car is also being followed,’ says actress Sana

    Famous actress Sana Nawaz has revealed that she has been receiving threats since several weeks, her car was chased at least twice, and her ex-husband may also be involved.

    In a short video message released to the media, Sana Nawaz spoke about the threats and harassment she is faxing, reiterating her determination to take legal action.

    “I have been associated with showbiz for many years, and many people know that strange things have been happening in my life for some time,” she revealed, going on to elaborate: “I have been receiving strange, threatening phone calls for some time now, leaving me worried and unsure of how to resolve the matter.”

    According to the actress, she and her children are being threatened, and pressured, and their car was chased twice, causing her great concern. She said, “I do not understand who is responsible for these threats and why I am being followed.”

    She also mentioned that before the current threats and blackmailing, she had been pressured by her ex-husband and ex-father-in-law.
    “I feel that my ex-husband and ex-father-in-law may be behind these threats,” she added.

    The actress reiterated her resolve to take action, stating that she is recording the video so that her message reaches everyone. According to Sana Nawaz, “There have been problems with many actresses before. Every time, actresses are targeted and oppressed.”

    She added, “Some actresses have a big name on the screen, but they also face incidents like harassment, and their fate is also troubled.”

    She married Fakhar Imam Jafri in 2008, and they have two children together.

    After the divorce, although she spoke about her ex-husband many times, she never made serious allegations against him, only vaguely accusing him of violence and cheating.

  • ‘Stree 2’ breaks box office record set by ‘Pathaan’

    ‘Stree 2’ breaks box office record set by ‘Pathaan’

    Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan’s film Pathaan whose box office collection record broken by Shraddha Kapoor and Rajkummar Rao Stree 2.

    A day after breaking the record of Hindi version of ‘Baahubali 2’, Amar Kaushik’s horror-comedy has now become second highest-grossing Hindi film in India with a total gross collection higher than that of forthcoming Shah Rukh Khan release Pathan.

    According to Indian media reports, Stree 2 grossed INR 527 crore at the box office within one week of its release.

    After earning INR 10 crore on Sunday, September 8th, the film has added a total of INR 527 crores so far and is now India’s second-highest-grossing Hindi release.     

     The sequel to the 2018 film Stree2 is called Stree and it follows what happens after a great evil returns from her grave leading an entire village of men into war.

  • Final day of the IVS Film Festival brought heroes and villains to spotlight

    Final day of the IVS Film Festival brought heroes and villains to spotlight

    The three-day Indus Valley School (IVS) Film Festival wrapped up on Sunday with an engaging panel discussion on the creation of characters in mainstream dramas and films.

    The panel, titled ‘Heroes and Villains – Stereotypes and Nuances in Film and TV’, included drama writer Bee Gul, director Nadeem Baig, and actors Sarwat Gillani and Sabeena Farooq.

    The discussion was moderated by famed journalist Fifi Haroon, who discussed fixing the concept of heroes and villains.

    Gul stated, “I feel a villain is way more liberated, free of fear of judgment, as compared to a hero…because he is not cautious of what people will say about him.”

    “In Pakistan, we create kind of ‘cardboard’ villains…we never get to refer to the back story or the psychology behind even the characters,” Gul added.

    Haroon then asked Gul if there was enough space for impactful heroes. “There is not a lot of space, but as an artist, you have to create the space. For example, in Raqeeb Se, I have created a villain who is a domestic abuser. However, the audience couldn’t hate him completely because there is a backstory, so in the same way, we can create heroes with human elements,” she responded.

    Sabeena Farooq shared her experience from the drama Tere Bin, in which she couldn’t relate to the character she played: Haya. She noted that while some characters might not resonate with actresses, that doesn’t mean they don’t exist.

    “My director and co-actors told me that such characters exist, and then I went to research on my own. That is how I was able to manufacture this character the way the audience saw it,” she added.

    When asked about the lack of ambitious female heroes in Pakistani media, Farooq expressed hope for more layered female characters in the future.

    “I wish that someday we progress enough to show layers of ambitious characters the way we unwrap characters in love because we need it.” She acknowledged the presence of strong female leads but noted that “there are not enough; however, we’re trying.”

    Baig also shared the challenge of writing and directing multiple female characters in a show. He emphasised the importance of believable writing and the creative process of making different characters’ stories fit together.

    “The major craft lies in writing, and then it is up to the director how they weave these multiple characters with different backstories together,” he explained. He shared that during Sinf-i-Aahan, he asked Umera Ahmed, the writer, “to change the approaches of a few scenes.”

    “One person’s protagonist can be another person’s antagonist,” Gillani said.

    The discussion concluded with a call for more female-led films in Pakistan and characters that drive change. The festival ended with an award ceremony for aspiring filmmakers and a musical performance.