21082024-LSTC-01.qxd 8/20/2024 11:32 PM Page 1 c m y b BIOPIC ON YUVRAJ SINGH Former India cricketer Yuvraj Singh’s remarkable journey, from his legendary career to the battle with cancer, is going to be chronicled in a biopic. Bhushan Kumar and producer Ravi Bhagchandka are collaborating to bring Yuvraj Singh’s life on to the big screen. TRIBUNE Life COP IN CONTROL NonikaSingh L OVELY actress Kritika Kamra might call herself a jaali Punjaban for she is not very fluent in Punjabi. She might profess to be an agonistic, who does not even believe in astrology and other superstitions or even the magic of numbers like 11.11. Yet, currently seen in the series Gyaarah Gyaarah, she would certainly like one wish of hers to be granted and that is to play a character out of Amrita Pritam’s literary world. Born in UP brought up in MP the , , Punjabi connect might have been a trifle diluted as her grandparents migrated from unified Punjab during Partition. Yet, she has touched base with literary texts and counts many literary luminaries, such as the radical poet Avtar Pash, as those whose works she has read with keen interest. Once a popular face on television, currently she is enjoying her place under the OTT sun. After wowing viewers with her gangster act in web series Bambai Meri Jaan, she is now playing a self-righteous cop in Gyaarah Gyaarah and getting a lot of love as well as attention. Transitioning from one kind of part to another is the beauty of acting and she consciously chooses roles that are not only different from each other, but also her own affable persona. “I don’t care to repeat myself,” she quips. Of course, conducive environment provided by directors like Umesh Bist, help the actor in her immerse in a new role with fluidity and ease. Between the production house, director, actor and her role, what matters the most to her is the director. She reasons, “Though I would like to tick more than one box on my choice-meter, ultimately it’s the director’s vision that prevails.” Gyaarah Gyaarah may have received a mixed response from critics, but she is not unduly perturbed. “Art is subjective and so is criticism,” she vouches for the Big dream ❝ CHANDIGARH | WEDNESDAY | 21 AUGUST 2024 For Kritika Kamra, who has delighted once more with her act in the series Gyaarah Gyaarah, art is subjective and so is criticism series, and had said yes to it for she trusted the makers’ vision. If thanks to the television show Kuch Toh Log Kahenge she became Dr Nidhi in popular imagination, on OTT people do remember her as Habiba of Bambai Meri Jaan and many continue to address her as Habiba Aapa. Of course, for her there is no one particular breakout role and she sums up her journey on OTT as ‘slow and steady’. Growing from strength to strength, in the near future two of her projects will see her rubbing shoulders with actors of huge mettle. Pratik Gandhi, whom she has known pre-Scam, and Vijay When someone compliments your work on the roadside or random strangers write beautiful notes or you get to skip a queue or two….life is wonderful. Those who say or feel otherwise are lying. Vijay Varma is all set for the release of the IC814: The Kandahar Hijack. He penned a note on working with ‘cinema Gods’ — Naseeruddin Shah and Pankaj Kapur — in the show, calling it a ‘big dream’. Varma, whose incredible work has impressed her beyond measure, star in her forthcoming series For Your Eyes Only and Matka King, respectively. Co-actors are a huge part and significant others of her learning curve. “Acting is give and take. And I learnt it all on the job and from people around me. I am fortunate that I get to play off their energies,” she avers. Enjoying the spotlight for years, she can see no flipside of being famous. She quips, “When someone compliments your work on the roadside or random strangers write beautiful notes or you get to skip a queue or two….life is wonderful. Those who say or feel otherwise are lying.” As for good looks, which she is naturally blessed with, again she can only see the upside. She says, “Not only in the film industry but also in all walks of life, from dating to social media likes, looks are given a lot of, may be undue too, importance.” Any wonder one of her deep desires is to deck up in lustrous finery, may be learn a dance form or two, and become a part of Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s opulent world. But the actress who once ruled the small screen is unlikely to go back to television. She doesn’t negate its relevance, power or reach, for who better than this small-town girl to understand how many still root for it and are rooted to television screens even today. For her, however, OTT is where she gets to do edgy stuff. Best phase of her life or not… she is ‘an all-in or nothing’ person. Even as her shows go back and forth in time, For Your Eyes Only too is set in the 1970s, she takes a leap forward. She may not have found overnight stardom on OTT, but one day all her cumulative choices will certainly pay off in a big way. 11.11… more than making a wish, she echoes the thoughts of Jim Rohn, ‘Don’t wish it were easier, wish you were better,’ and strives to become the best version of herself. At the photography exhibition organised by The Press Club at the Punjab Kala Bhawan-16, along with the lovely clicks what stood out was the passion of the photographers PICTURE PERFECT Sheetal Some of the works on display Everyone must have heard opinions on what great photographs should look like. But it’s more than that — it about passionate photographers sharing a glimpse of their world through a single image. The photography exhibition organised by The Press Club at the Punjab Kala Bhawan, Sector 16, is no different. The threeday exhibition has been organised to mark the World Photography Day, which is observed to commemorate the invention of Daguerreotype, one of the earliest photography processes. As photography aligns strongly with the field of media and journalism, photojournalists of the city happily shared their best c m y b works with tricity people. Some of them were about recent historic moments, mostly postCovid, of the tricity, such as the 2022 Sukhna Lake Air Show by Indian Air Force, waterlogging in 2023 due to heavy monsoon and the recent live performance by playback singer Sukhwinder Singh. There were also shades of festivals from all religions, be it Chhath Pooja, Eid, Holi or Diwali. Photo-journalists like Anand Sharma, who moved overseas, showcased scenic views from US, Dubai and more. Two senior photographers, Santokh Singh and Sarabjit Pandher, were also given a tribute for their lifetime contribution to the field of photography. Tribune photojournalists, Pradeep Tewari, Ravi Kumar, Nitin Mittal and Vicky Gharu, also showcased their works. Ravi’s pictures included law and order incidents in Tricity. There were others works that stood out, such as Start With Sunrise by Sandeep Joshi, Floating Shadows by Jaswinder Singh, Mentoring Mountaineers by Manoj Mahajan, Dream Come True by Jaipal Singh and Catch Me Not by Parvesh Chauhan. It is to be noted that out of 66 photojournalist and journalists, who presented their work only five were women, namely Arshdeep Kaur, Charanjit Channi, Aditi Chahar, Richa Sehgal and Asha Arpit. While Channi’s pictures brought you closer to nature, Arshdeep’s Old is Gold exhibit presented her artistic perspective. (On till today)
The Tribune, now published from Chandigarh, started publication on February 2, 1881, in Lahore (now in Pakistan). It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, a public-spirited philanthropist, and is run by a trust comprising four eminent persons as trustees.
The Tribune, the largest selling daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind. Restraint and moderation, rather than agitational language and partisanship, are the hallmarks of the paper. It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.
The English edition apart, the 133-year-old Tribune has two sister publications, Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi).