‘I had no expectations from Bodyguard’

Bodyguard’s blockbuster success has been largely attributed to its hero Salman Khan and to an extent, its leading lady Kareena Kapoor.

But it’s very hard to ignore Hazel Keech, who plays Kareena’s best friend in the film, and never leaves her side through most of the film.

Yes, the beautiful London-based newcomer — she’s born to an English father and an Indian mother — has a chunky role in the film, and she does full justice to it.

She opened up to Sonil Dedhia about her life, and of course, Salman Khan.

Your performance in Bodyguard received a fantastic response. Are you in seventh heaven?

Absolutely! (Producer) Atul Agnihotri was expecting to break some box office records but it has exceeded everyone’s expectations. It feels nice when people recognise you and talk about your work.

Personally, I didn’t have any expectations as I was just enjoying the experience and excited to be a part of a movie.

What did your parents think of the film?

My mother was very happy because I have been struggling for a long time.

Resource : http://www.rediff.com/movies/slide-show/slide-show-1-interview-with-hazel-keech/20110908.htm

In a twist, Google reviews Zagat and decides to bite

For years, a wave of online competitors eroded Zagat’s formidable empire of quotation-mark-happy reviews of restaurants and bars around the world. But on Thursday, Zagat found an ally in the biggest online giant of all, selling itself to Google.

The deal will unite Zagat, whose burgundy-covered guides were among the first examples of user-generated content, and Google, which has made local services one of its highest priorities.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but people briefed on the matter said that Google had paid $100 million to $200 million. Tim and Nina Zagat, who began the company by compiling restaurant ratings from friends into slim surveys more than three decades ago, will remain with the business.

The deal will most likely mean a lucrative payout for the Zagats, as well as for the private equity firm General Atlantic, which bought a third of the company in 2000. But it also raises questions about how Google will integrate Zagat, whose main offerings include its popular paper guidebooks and a paid subscription website.

Local online advertising is an increasingly lucrative market, one that analysts estimate to be about $140 billion a year. Google estimates that about 20 percent of its daily searches are for things that are nearby, and that percentage is even higher for queries made on mobile phones.

“All of these are users wondering where they should go, where they should spend their time, so to be able to offer accurate information is important, and that’s why we’ve been getting focused on reviews,” Marissa Mayer, Google’s vice president for local, maps and location services, said in an interview.

Mayer said that Zagat’s reviews would supplement Google’s Places reviews, but that the publisher’s Web home would remain a paid site for now.

“I think Marissa needs a little time to think about it,” Tim Zagat said, “but the list of things to do here is pretty obvious.”

Google said it would keep publishing the guidebooks for now. Tim Zagat said that the print books were “very profitable.”

Mayer said that Google planned to expand Zagat’s team, which now includes sales staff, fact-checkers, hundreds of contractors who conduct the surveys and, most important, the hundreds of thousands of reviewers in more than 100 cities.

Two years ago, Google tried – and failed – to buy Yelp, Zagat’s biggest online competitor, for $500 million. Last year, Google introduced Places, a Yelp-like service for listing local businesses and collecting consumer reviews. But

the service has not collected the same volume of reviews as Yelp and others.

“It’s a little bit of a consolation prize,” Greg Sterling, an analyst with Opus Research, said of the Zagat deal. “They went after Yelp, which would have been a bigger prize for them for many reasons, including salespeople and a sexier brand. But this is a pretty strong acquisition.”

The Zagats have tried to sell their company at least once before. In January 2008, they announced that they had hired Goldman Sachs to auction the publisher. But the couple called off the sales process six months later, after several buyers balked at the $200 million asking price.

The Google deal will end several troubles that have restricted the Zagats’ attempt to expand an online business. Because the Zagat website is largely behind a subscriber pay wall, Google and other search engines did not rank the company’s reviews high on their pages of results. Instead, the company has turned to a series of alliances with the likes of Facebook, Foursquare and, yes, Google.

Resource : http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/internet/in-a-twist-google-reviews-zagat-and-decides-to-bite/articleshow/9919771.cms

Alastair Cook has silenced critics, says Graeme Swann

England v India one-day international series

* Remaining games: The Oval (9 Sep), Lord’s (11 Sep), Cardiff (16 Sep)
* Start time: 1300 BST
* Coverage: Live Test Match Special commentary on BBC 5 live sports extra, BBC Radio 4 Long Wave & BBC Sport website; live video scorecard (with TMS commentary) on BBC Red Button (not Freeview) & BBC Sport website; live text commentary on BBC Sport website & mobiles; watch live on Sky Sports (subscription required); highlights on Channel 5

England off-spinner Graeme Swann says captain Alastair Cook has silenced those who questioned his place in the one-day side.

Cook was not in the side before taking control in May, but averages 67.25 in 10 games as skipper.

“He’s just letting his bat do the talking,” said Swann.

“It is very good for Cooky. He works very hard on his game, no-one works harder. It is brilliant that it is paying off for him.”

Essex opener Cook hit an unbeaten 80 in England’s seven-wicket win over India at the Rose Bowl on Tuesday to give his side a 1-0 lead in the five-match series with three to play after the first game was abandoned as a draw.

Victory in the third match at The Oval on Friday would ensure England at least a drawn series with the world champions, but Swann says that Cook’s side need to be winning at home and when they travel to India in October to be on track to fufill their ambition of winning the 2015 World Cup.

“Our official world ranking is five and I don’t think we can argue with that,” added the Nottinghamshire bowler.
ICC ODI Rankings
Continue reading the main story

1. Australia

2. Sri Lanka

3. South Africa

4. India

5. England

6. Pakistan

7. New Zealand

8. West Indies

9. Bangladesh

10. Zimbabwe

11. Ireland

12. Netherlands

13. Kenya

“We have shown some improvement recently but we have to continue that if we want to be one of the best teams.

“We have to beat teams like India, not just in this series, but when we go away to play them as well.”

England could recall Jonathan Trott to the side that triumphed in the rain-shortened match in Southampton.

Trott’s return would push Ravi Bopara down to number five in the batting order, a spot vacated by a shoulder injury suffered by Eoin Morgan.

Bopara, 26, is a veteran of 61 ODIs, but with a batting average of only 28.41 he has yet to establish him as an England regular.

“I’m not putting any pressure on myself. Guys have come into the team in their very late 20s and done very, very well,” said the Essex man.

“I don’t believe in the age thing or whether it’s your last chance.

“I’ve got a lot to offer, and a lot in the bank that I haven’t expressed fully on the international stage.”

India, without an international victory on tour so far, will be hoping to have all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja available to boost their bowling attack after his arrival in the UK was delayed by visa problems.

Meanwhile, England have announced their itinerary for their trip to the United Arab Emirates to face Pakistan early next year.

They will arrive on 3 January and have two tour matches before the first of three Tests begins on 17 January.

The second and third Tests start on 25 January and 3 February respectively, while the five one-day games start on 13 February, with the first two held in Abu Dhabi and the remaining three – as well as the three Twenty20 games on 23, 25 and 27 February – back in Dubai.

England (from): AN Cook (Captain), C Kieswetter (wkt), IJL Trott, IR Bell, RS Bopara, BA Stokes, TT Bresnan, SCJ Broad, GP Swann, JM Anderson, JW Dernbach, SR Patel, ST Finn.

India (from): MS Dhoni (Captain, wkt), P Patel, A Rahane, R Dravid, V Kohli, S Raina, R Jadeja, P Kumar, R Ashwin, R Vinay Kumar, M Patel, A Mishra, V Aaron, RP Singh, M Tiwary.

Umpires: M Erasmus (SA) and N Llong

Resource : http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/14836314.stm

Find bowlers, find success

Summer has left England. Like many visitors who come here, it was on a short stay. And so the t-shirts are being replaced by heavy cardigans and pullovers, and cheery folk who sat on sidewalks with beer or coffee now dart indoors. When the sun goes, it takes the smile with it. Now the chilly breeze blows, the harbinger of a winter that will shorten days and expand gloom. And the sky, like a salesman on hard times, wears the same grey suit every day. Is it a coincidence that talk of a recession is back?

It was meant to be an Indian summer, this. Long days; stylish, wristy batsmen, with clean pads and sleeves rolled down, overcoming tall bowlers who hit the deck and swing the ball. It was meant to be Federer v Nadal over 20 days of Test cricket. But like many cookbooks, where the photographs are more promising than the recipes, the build-up was more exciting than the action. It went downhill very quickly, a banquet that never progressed beyond the starters. And now, while the dessert menu is still being offered, everyone is fidgeting with the car keys. Ah, the Indian summer! Neither word appropriately describes the last two months.

And yet, for those who don’t always get their place in the sun, anything will do. Opportunity knocks on their door but rarely, and now, with the most calamitous sequence of injuries befalling India, they see hope in the encircling gloom. Certainly the scratch opening pair has caught the eye, and while Patel and Rahane doesn’t quite roll off the tongue like Tendulkar and Dravid, or Sehwag and Gambhir, they bring a little sense of anticipation to the die-hard supporters.

From a boy who held the fort valiantly but whose main scoring stroke was a dab on the off side, Parthiv Patel has blossomed. Mistaking size for stature, England’s bowlers peppered him with short-pitched bowling. With a smile here, a word there, and a rapier-like bat, he has played the pull shot as well as anybody; though it must be admitted that the wickets in the limited-overs games have looked like they are waiting for the summer to end too. Now if he can drive a bit like Sourav Ganguly (through the covers, that is, not on the highways), we might have an outsider coming in to take up a batting position. And, more important, someone who can allow MS Dhoni a break.

My colleague Alan Wilkins recently asked Ajinkya Rahane, “Where have you been all along?” It is a question many have posed. He has looked correct and compact, and has walked out like he belongs. And thankfully, he has opened the innings. Whoever makes him bat No. 3 again in the Ranji Trophy should be tried for sabotage. Like with Gautam Gambhir, he might do it occasionally for India, but his place is at the top. Now he must knock on Sunil Gavaskar’s door, pester him, ask if he can sit at his feet, for no one in India understands facing the new ball better.

In fact it is an old fantasy of mine that the best young batsmen in India go away on an excursion with Gavaskar to a small town that has but a hotel, a couple of practice pitches and no media. For six days they only practise batting and talk about it over long, lazy dinners. Then the best six bowlers go there with Kapil Dev, to talk and bowl. For I don’t see talent being a problem in India, merely its refinement. Gavaskar sits in a commentary box these days and Kapil has many business interests, but what they know about their profession, the work ethic and the hours it demands, must be transmitted. And they will enjoy it. My father was a teacher and I could see how excited he was by a bright pupil.

Maybe this will emerge from a post-mortem, for one is needed. The essence of a postmortem like this will lie in intent and, thereafter, action. If there is no action, only a report, it will end up being a bit like a discussion on a famine over a fancy dinner. Surely three people can put together a plan to find bowlers in India, for I am convinced they exist. It is a question of finding and nurturing them. If you run a steel plant and start running short of iron ore, you find iron ore, don’t you?

And the post-mortem must address the issue of the IPL. The IPL is not a problem in itself; it is what comes before and after. It is not a filler for an interval, it needs an interval after it. In the next two weeks the BCCI will have a new president and soon the IPL will have a new commissioner. If they can put the visiting cards and letterheads aside and get down to work on the real issues, we might even have an Indian summer in 2014, when five Tests are played.

Resource : http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/531590.html

Beds for thalassemia patients at all govt hospitals

Shimla: The Himachal health department on Thursday issued instructions to all government hospitals to provide beds to Thalassemia patients, in need of periodic blood transfusions, on priority. Minimum of two beds will be reserved for these patients in every hospital. A spokesman said that blood will also be made available by authorities. “Free medicine and treatment facilities will be made available to the patients. Various NGOs and other organisations are also regularly holding blood donation camps. Wheel chair/trolleys will also be provided to them in case the lift was not available,” he added.

Himachal Sadan in Chandigarh ready

Shimla: The newly constructed Himachal Sewa Sadan, built in Chandigarh for the benefit of the patients being treated at the PGI and other hospitals, will soon be thrown open to the public. PWD Minister Gulab Singh Thakur on Thursday inspected the building at Sector 25 (West) and gave the go-ahead to make the complex functional without any delay. Thakur said the new building will cater to the lodging needs of the patients referred to PGI, Chandigarh. The building, completed at a cost of Rs 10.50 crore, has 23 double bedrooms and has 153 beds, including 18 dormitories.

Resource : http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Briefly-Region/843714/

In a New Libya, Ex-Loyalists Race to Shed Ties to Qaddafi

TRIPOLI, Libya — Khalid Saad worked for years as a loyal cog in Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s propaganda machine, arranging transportation to ferry foreign journalists to staged rallies, ensuring that they never left their hotels without official escorts and raising his own voice to cheer the Libyan leader.
The day that rebels took Tripoli, Mr. Saad immediately switched sides.

Now he works for the rebels’ provisional government, coordinating transportation for its officials and insisting that his previous support for Colonel Qaddafi was just business. “My uncle and my son were soldiers for the revolution,” he said in an interview. “Everyone will be happy now. Everything is changed now. Everyone is free.”

As the curtain falls on Colonel Qaddafi’s Tripoli, many of its supporting actors are rushing to pick up new roles with the rebels, the very same people they were obliged not long ago to refer to as “the rats.” Many Libyans say the ease with which former Qaddafi supporters have switched sides is a testament to the pervasive cynicism of the Qaddafi era, when dissent meant jail or death, job opportunities depended on political connections, and almost everyone learned to wear two faces to survive within the system.

That cynicism may now prove to be Tripoli’s saving grace. After months of a brutal crackdown and a bitter civil war, in a country with little history of unity where autonomous brigades of fighters still roam the capital, citizens have been unexpectedly willing to set aside their grievances against functionaries of the Qaddafi government. Everyone knows that almost everyone who stayed out of jail during four decades of Colonel Qaddafi’s rule was to some extent complicit.

Indeed, the thin veneer of support helps explain why the loyalist forces who had terrorized the city crumbled so swiftly when it became clear that the end was near, averting the expected blood bath. Though loyalists still hold out in pockets around the country, and there have been episodes of retaliatory violence and looting, Tripoli, the capital, changed hands and returned to peace in a matter of days.

“The way the system worked, everyone had to be part of it — all of us,” said Adl el-Sanusi, a former official of Colonel Qaddafi’s Foreign Ministry who is now working for the provisional government’s Foreign Ministry. “If we say, ‘Get rid of whoever was part of the system,’ we would have to get rid of the whole population,” he said.

Now, he said, many of those former loyalists “are more revolutionary than anyone else!”

Rebel officials have said for months that they would try to avoid the mistakes made in Iraq after Saddam Hussein was overthrown, when United States officials disbanded the military and barred all former members of the ruling Baath Party — many of Iraq’s most experienced professionals — from working in any public-sector job.

Instead, the Libyan rebels said, they will seek retribution, in a courtroom, against only the most notorious Qaddafi government officials, those who oversaw torture or killings, egregiously enriched themselves or, in the case of the captured television host Hala Misrati, led the propaganda war on state television.

The rebel leaders pledged to welcome back most of the bureaucrats and other midlevel functionaries, and so far, former senior officials of Colonel Qaddafi’s government say the provisional government appears to be keeping its word. To underscore that point, the rebel leadership held a ceremony on Tuesday to hand control of a major natural gas plant to the same manager who was responsible for its security under Colonel Qaddafi.

“There are very few instances of revenge,” said Abdulmajeed el-Dursi, the former chief of the Qaddafi-era foreign media operation, sipping coffee at a cafe full of rebels and talking about opening a media services company.

“It is legitimate, all these things they are doing — freedom of the press, the rule of law,” Mr. Dursi added. “We always thought it was the right thing to do.”

Officials at the rebels’ detention centers around the city say they have sent scores of Colonel Qaddafi’s former soldiers and supporters back to their homes after they have turned in their weapons, and even some of the former soldiers now insist that they are revolutionaries at heart.

Ahmed el-Naeli was a soldier from Tripoli captured and jailed weeks ago by rebels in the Nafusah Mountains, where a reporter for The New York Times gave him a business card. On Tuesday, he called to say that he, too, had changed sides. After his capture, Mr. Naeli said, “I turned around and joined the revolution.”
Officials at local police stations say hundreds of officers are returning to work, usually in their home neighborhoods without incident.

They are “well accepted” because local residents understand they were only part of the system, said Abdou Shafi Hassan, 34, a former officer who began working with the rebels months ago, smuggling weapons and plastic explosives for them until he was caught and sent to jail.

Now he is an acting police chief in his neighborhood, Tajura, where he is recruiting dozens of former officers back to work. “They are the ones who are bringing the security to the city,” he said.

A top associate of the Qaddafi government’s spokesman, Moussa Ibrahim, cast aside any pretense of loyalty when he offered to sell a Western journalist a series of secret tape recordings he had made of his former boss trying to bribe journalists for favorable coverage.

The most famous turncoat was Gen. Albarrani Shkal, a senior officer who was in charge of a large army unit that fought the rebels. About a month before Tripoli fell, officials of the new provisional government said, General Shkal began secretly collaborating with the rebels. The rebels instructed him to stay in his job so that when their troops entered Tripoli he could order his own soldiers to disperse. “He saved a lot of lives,” Mr. Sanusi of the Foreign Ministry said.

More than 50 Libyan ambassadors serving abroad abandoned Colonel Qaddafi as soon as the uprising began, and Mr. Sanusi said that many others sought to defect in the following months. The rebel leaders told them they could do more for the cause if they stayed in their jobs, he said.

“So many people had turned, that it really ended up a true popular revolution,” Mr. Sanusi said.

Youssef M. Sherif, one of Libya’s most prominent writers, said he tracked the waning days of Colonel Qaddafi’s government by the wages it paid young people to cheer in front of the state television cameras. At first, he said, they were paid about $360, then $140, then $35 and then the money ran out.

When the money ran out, so did the crowds.

Mr. Sherif said he asked people why they accepted such money from a tyrant. “ ‘Better I spend it than him!’ ” they would say.

Salem el-Ajelli, 39, an unemployed resident of the Abu Salim neighborhood where rebels fought a fierce firefight to eradicate the last bastion of support for Colonel Qaddafi in the city, said that he and his neighbors would sometimes be paid $30 a day to cheer for the colonel.

“Most of us are just regular people who did not really care about Qaddafi or not Qaddafi,” Mr. Ajelli said. “We just worrying about getting by day by day.”

Resource :http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/08/world/africa/08tripoli.html and http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/08/world/africa/08tripoli.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2

21 killed in twin blasts, west Pakistan

BEIJING, Sept. 8 (Xinhuanet) — At least 21 people have been killed by two bomb blasts near government offices in Quetta, the capital city of the southwestern Pakistani province of Baluchistan.

One of the blasts was carried out by a suicide bomber, who blew himself up in a vehicle packed with explosives near the car of Farrukh Shehzad, the deputy head of the paramilitary Frontier Corps in Baluchistan. Shehzad was wounded, while his wife was killed. The other suicide bomber detonated inside his house, killing several of Shehzad’s guards.

Police said they were investigating whether the strike was in revenge for the recent arrests in Quetta of three top al-Qaeda suspects, an operation that was assisted by the CIA.

But within hours, the Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack and a spokesman for the group said Shahzad was targeted because of an incident several months ago that left five people dead at a checkpoint in the city.

Resource : http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/video/2011-09/08/c_131115833.htm

Nifty seen higher on mixed Asia; Inflation data eyed

NEW DELHI: The 50-share Nifty index is expected to open flat-to-higher on Thursday tracking muted Asian markets.

Investors will also closely watch weekly inflation data due later today. Food inflation has hit double-digits in mid-August on the back of costlier onion, vegetables, fruits and protein-based items.

Data released by the commerce and industry on Thursday, last week showed food inflation, as measured by the wholesale price index, stood at 10.05% in the week to August 20 – up from the previous week’s 9.80%.

The BSE Sensex closed 1.2% higher on Wednesday led by gains in HDFC Bank, L&T and Reliance Industries.

“Indian markets are likely to remain strong on Thursday and build upon the strength of the last few days,” said Kunal Saraogi, CEO, Equityrush.

“The 50-share Nifty index is likely to rise to levels closer to 5,170-5,200 levels in this week. The Nifty has strong support close to 5070 levels and is likely to remain byouyant for some more time,” added Kunal

US stocks bounced more than 2 per cent on Wednesday; reversing three days of losses after Germany’s top court smoothed the way for Berlin’s participation in bailouts that could ease Europe’s debt crisis.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 275.56 points, or 2.47 percent, to 11,414.86. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 33.38 points, or 2.86 percent, to 1,198.62. The Nasdaq Composite Index added 75.11 points, or 3.04 percent, to 2,548.94.

In early trade, Hong Kong was trading 0.9 pc lower, Tokyo was up 0.4 pc, TSEC was trading 0.3 pc higher and Shanghai was down 0.2 pc.

At 08:17 AM, Nifty India stock futures in Singapore were up 2.5 points at 5122.50, indicating a flat-to-higher opening in the domestic market.

Equityrush Recommendations

BHEL is a ‘BUY’ call with a stop loss below Rs 1,760 and a target of Rs 1,900

Tata Teleservices is a ‘BUY’ call with a stop loss of Rs 19 and a target of Rs 20.50.

Stocks to watch:

State-run Shipping Corp of India is in the process of conducting due diligence to buy a 10-15 per cent stake in an Indian shipbuilder, but the process could take time. The company is talking to almost all the major shipbuilders in India including ABG Shipyard, Bharati Shipyard and Pipavav Shipyard.

The manufacturer of AC generator TD Power Systems will list its equity shares on exchanges today. The company raised Rs 227 crore through the issue of 88,67,187 equity shares at lower end of price band of Rs 256-261 a share, diluting 26.68% stake.

Maruti Suzuki Ltd after Japan’s Suzuki Motor Corporation Chairman Osamo Suzuki will meet Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi in order to finalise setting up a manufacturing plant in Gujarat.

Reliance Communication Ltd after the company bagged order worth Rs 1400 cr form HDFC Bank Ltd for 15 years to build and maintain data center for the bank.

Coal India Ltd will be watched on reports indicating the coal major is running 191 mines without any environmental clearance, the Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG) said in a report on the company.

resource : http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/market-news/nifty-seen-higher-on-mixed-asia-inflation-data-eyed/articleshow/9906722.cms

FIIs net buy Rs 262.43 cr in cash market on Sept 7 (prov)

By Ekta Batra, Research Analyst at CNBC-TV18

Institutional action

FIIs have net bought Rs 262.43 crore in the cash market and Rs 848.88 crore in the F&O market on September 7, as per provisional data available on NSE. However, DIIs have net sold Rs 80.81 crore in the cash market yesterday.

FIIs in F&O

FIIs have net bought Rs 282.30 crore in Index Futures, Rs 145.21 crore in Index Options and Rs 458.60 crore in Stock Futures yesterday.

F&O cues

Total Stock Futures added 85.67 lakh shares in open interest. Nifty Futures shed 10.42 lakh shares in open interest. Nifty Open Interest PCR increased to 1.43 versus 1.39.

Total Put added 24.47 lakh shares in open interest. Total Call added 23700 shares in open interest.

Highest Open Interest Outstanding was seen at 4700 Put, 4800 put and 5000 put. Nifty 4500 Put added 15.29 lakh shares in Open Interest.

Nifty 5100 Put added 7.67 lakh shares in Open Interest and Nifty 5000 put 7.25 lakh shares in Open Interest.

Nifty 5400 call added 4.67 lakh shares in Open Interest. Nifty 4900 put added 3.04 lakh shares in Open Interest.

Nifty 4400 put shed 18.30 lakh shares in Open Interest. Nifty 5000 call shed 6.03 lakh shares in Open Interest.

Nifty 5300 call shed 5.04 lakh shares in Open Interest. Nifty 4900 call shed 3.74 lakh shares in Open Interest. Nifty 4300 put shed 2.88 lakh shares in open interest.

Resource : http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/cnbc-tv18-analyst-markets/fiis-net-buy-rs-26243-crcash-marketsept-7-%28prov%29_583937.html

Deepika’s no to turn bald

Pretty Deepika Padukone makes news wherever she goes. Be it her recent private visit to the Ajmer Sheriff dargah or to her often meetings with ‘good friend’ Sidharth Mallya. However, she isn’t willing to talk about anything personal. Though Deepika’s last release Amitabh Bachchan starrer ‘Aarakshan’ has not fetched her rave reviews, yet she said she’d love to do different kinds of films. This is another matter that she is more comfortable with love stories, she emphasized. When asked how far she would experiment with her looks for a film, the pretty actress made it amply clear that she’ll never do anything that disconnects her from the image that the audience have in their minds.

While in ‘Karthik Calling Karthik’ she sported short hair she declares that she would never go completely bald. About her present movies, she said she is now shooting for ‘Desi Boyz’ with Akshay Kumar and John Abraham in the lead. But, it’s significant that for the third time she will be seen with Saif Ali Khan in ‘Cocktail’ after ‘Love Aaj Kal’ and ‘Aarakshan’. This shows her emotional connect with the chhote nawab. Anyway, Kareena has no problem if Deepika works with Saif.

Resource : http://ww.smashits.com/deepika-s-no-to-turn-bald/bollywood-gossip-8914.html

Search Optimization Help