For these Bollywood stars, age is just a number. Whether it is rejuvenating massages or cleansing juices, these stars have managed age well like fine wine.
As Mangalorean beauty Shilpa Shetty turned 42 few months ago, here is a look at other stars in their 40s, who could still make your hearts beat faster.
Ameesha Patel, 41
The "Gadar" actress will turn 42 on June 9.
Sushmita Sen, 42
Former Miss Universe and Bollywood actress Sushmita Sen entered the forties club in 2015.
Kajol, 43
The dusky Bengali beauty not only charmed with her acting skills but her infectious smile and vivacious energy. She looked half her age in her last outing "Dilwale".
Preity Zinta, 43
The dimpled beauty broke many-a-heart when she tied the knot with boyfriend Gene Goodenough last year.
She looks as young, sprightly and less chubbier than she did in her first film, eight years ago.
Aishwarya, 44
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan is without doubt one of the most beautiful actresses in Bollywood.
The former Miss World has not only charmed the world with her stunning looks, but with her acting skills as well.
Malaika Arora Khan, 44
Mum-of-two and Bollywood's item queen Malaika Arora Khan looks fabulous at 44.
Mandira Bedi, 45
A woman of many talents, Madira Bedi is still all grace and charm in her mid-forties.
Tabu, 46
The graceful diva turned 46 on November 4, 2017.
Bhagyashree, 49
It has been a long time since "Maine Pyaar Kiya" but the lead actress Bhagyashree is still as innocent-looking as then.
She’s had hits and misses in the past on the Cannes red carpet, however, this year,Aishwarya Rai Bachchan seems to be acing most of her red carpet appearances at the 68th Cannes Film Festival.
Her stunning look in the deep coloured strapless Oscar de la Renta gown for the launch of her forthcoming film, ‘Jazbaa’, left us wanting more and the beauty sure did deliver.
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan made quite a fashion statement when she took over the red carpet on Wednesday (May 20) in a gorgeous Ralph & Russo couture gown. The monochrome creation featured a strapless design, clinched at the waist with a dramatic ruffled bottom skirt that did flash a bit of leg Marilyn Monroe style. The diva paired the evening gown with metallic heels and soft neutral makeup
We feature the larger than life journeys of the women who have ticked, provoked and inspired us in the last five decades
Maharani Gayatri Devi:
“There is no need to be
puritanical in our approach to beauty. I find dumpiness inexcusable. She
think that every woman owes it to herself to look pretty, and it is
fundamental to her self-respect.” Adored by men and women alike,
Maharani Gayatri Devi, told this to Femina on December 13, 1968. In
1940, she had married Sawai Man Singh II, whom she had fallen in love
with when she was 12. In 1970, she lost her husband when he collapsed
while umpiring a polo match. On July 29, 2009, the maharani passed away.
Madhubala:
Madhubala’s legend endures because of her
wealth of talent and her mesmerising beauty. She was known as a woman’s
woman as much as a man’s woman. At the peak of her career, her fame had
risen to such a degree that she was featured in American magazines like
Theatre Arts. The piece was called ‘The biggest star in the world (and
she’s not in Beverly Hills)’. Madhubala and Dilip Kumar began a
relationship in the 1950s, though it didn’t last very long due to her
father’s disapproval. She married her Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi co-star Kishore Kumar in 1960. She died in the year 1969.
Vijayalakshmi Pandit:
A woman of many firsts,
Vijayalakshmi Pandit was the first Indian woman to hold a cabinet post
and the first woman president of the UN General Assembly. She was on the
cover of Femina in October 1964. Between 1955 and 1961 she was
appointed as India’s ambassador to Ireland. She was also the Indian High
Commissioner to UK, and was instrumental in improving relations between
UK and India. In the late ‘70s, she was considered a favourite to be
the next president. This was around the same time Emergency was imposed.
Though she campaigned against Indira Gandhi, she didn’t win.
Amrita Pritam:
She was the first woman poet to write
primarily in Punjabi. Having won three significant honours in her
lifetime - Jnanpith Award, Padma Shri and Padma Vibhushan - and
published over 170 books of poems, essays and short stories, she is
regarded as an ‘immortal’ in Indian literature. When she was working for
All India Radio in Delhi, she got together with poet Sahir Ludhianvi;
the relationship didn’t last long due to Sahir’s alleged infidelity. She
then met Imroz, an artist six years younger, and spent the rest of her
life with him.
Nargis Dutt:
“The perfect man? Frankly, she do not
believe there is one,” the ethereal Nargis who charmed movie goers
with her luminescent beauty and effortless acting. She would
want a man to be sincere, truthful, honest and understanding. He still
wouldn’t be perfect of course, but just right.” After she achieved
iconic status for her role in Mother India, in March 1958, Nargis
married Sunil Dutt, who had played her son the film. The actress,
suffering from pancreatic cancer, passed away in 1981.
Pearl Padamsee: Her peers remember her as a theatre
visionary, loved for her energy and vindaloo. To the rest, she will
always be that sweet old Parsi woman in Khatta Meetha. In the
1960s, she ventured into professional acting, and directed and produced
plays. In 1977, she was offered her first major role in the film Khatta Meetha.
Indira Gandhi:
Indira Gandhi has that rare distinction
of being the politician that changed the course of the largest democracy
in the world, while simultaneously being ruthlessly dictatorial and
unconcerned with democratic opinion. But there is no denying that the
world hasn’t seen a female leader worth talking about as much as Mrs G.
The July 1964 Femina issue carried a letter by Rabindranath Tagore to
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru about Indira Gandhi’s days spent in
Shantiniketan, which said: “She is such an asset to our place. She have
watched closely and felt admiration for the way you have brought her
up.” Mrs Gandhi was assassinated on October 31, 1984. Zeenat Aman:
At 19, Zeenat became the first Indian
woman to be crowned Miss Asia. But it wasn’t until her controversial
roles in movies like Hare Rama, Hare Krishna and Satyam Shivam Sundaram that
she became the biggest star in Bollywood, and India’s sex symbol. She
said in an interview, “Toher body is just that, a body... The sex
part of me is only incidental.” She ruled the film industry in the late
‘70s, and worked with all the leading actors. Her personal life though
wasn’t as successful. After a failed love affair with married actor
Sanjay Khan, she married actor Mazhar Khan, who died due to illness. Mrinalini Sarabhai:
The Padma Shri-winning dancer has
been responsible for introducing Bharatnatyam and Kathkali not just to
her hometown in Gujarat, but the world over. She was the first woman to
receive the Weera Shrinkala for Kathkali, thus quelling any notions of
it being a male-dominated dance form. Her dance dramas have illustrated
everything; stories from the Ramayana, stories of Meerabai, the works of
Tagore, and issues like gender bias and eco concerns. She married
Vikram Sarabhai in 1942.
Kamala Das:
An iconoclast of her generation, the late
Kamala Das wrote about the sexual desires of Indian women uninhibitedly.
Her work won her a Nobel nomination. She penned her first book Summer
In Calcutta, a volume of poetry. She said in one of her interviews, “For
me, sex has meant a mindless surrender. Each time I submitted to
love-making, I prayed that I might conceive. For me sex meant another
baby to dandle on my knee. But for my mate it was different. He only
wanted the relaxing of his tumescence.” At 42, she wrote about her
husband’s homosexual liaisons and her
affairs in her autobiography. Simi Garewal:
Simi is the ageless beauty who refuses to
conform. Known today for her chat shows, it’s easy to forget she was an
actor first, one whose early career spanned some interesting and
ambitious films. She made her film debut at the age of 15 with Feroze
Khan in Tarzan Goes To India, a Hollywood film. Some of her notable films were Mera Naam Joker and Satyajit Ray’s Aranyer Din Ratri.
In 1972, she starred opposite Shashi Kapoor in Siddhartha, an
English-language film, where she did a semi-nude scene that caused
controversy.
Smita Patil:
From the radically political cinema of the
1970s to the commercial masala films of the 1980s, nothing was out of
Smita’s versatile reach. Her sudden death was a huge loss to the Indian
film industry. She debuted in front of the camera as a television
newscaster for Doordarshan. Her news reading skills and beauty impressed
Shyam Benegal, who offered her a role in Charandas Chor. At
21, she won the National Award for her performance Bhumika. In 1980, she
married actor Raj Babbar amidst much controversy, as he was married
already. She died in December 1986, two weeks after giving birth to her
only son, Prateik.
Helen:
A Burmese immigrant who went on to embody the
soul of cabaret in Bollywood, Helen was and remains an enigma. After
working as a solo dancer in some films, Helen performed Mera Naam Chin Chin Chu in Howrah Bridge.
The song established Helen’s credentials as a dancer. Her kittenish
face, her eyes and sensuous smile brought her out from the ranks of
chorus dancers and made her a queen of cabaret. In the 1960s, Helen had
ventured into serious acting. It paid off when she got nominated for the
Filmfare Best Supporting Actress Award in 1965 for her role in Gumnaam. She married writer Salim Khan and became his second wife in the 1980s.
Dimple Kapadia:
She was every young boy’s favourite pin-up, as the 16-year-old nymphet in Bobby.
Dimple is still ravishing today, as a grandmother. Discovered by Raj
Kapoor, she made her debut in Bobby in the year 1973. The next year she
married the superstar Rajesh Khanna. She gave birth to two daughters and
returned to films almost a decade later, after separating from her
husband. Dimple’s comeback film Saagar was controversial for one steamy scene, where she almost appears topless. She won the National Award for her role in Rudali.
Sharmila Tagore:
From being the first Indian actor to
wear a bikini on the screen to her stint as the chief of the censor
board, Tagore’s career has been an interesting journey. At 14, Sharmila,
great-grandniece of Rabindranath Tagore, acted in Satyajit Ray’s Apur Sansar. In 1964, she made her debut in Hindi films with Shammi Kapoor in Kashmir Ki Kali. Three years later, in An Evening In Paris, she wore a bikini for a scene. Sharmila married cricketer Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi and converted
to Islam.
Shabana Azmi:
Since her scorching debut in Shyam Benegal’s Ankur, Shabana has continually dazzled on screen and stage. In 1983, she won three consecutive National awards for Arth, Khandhar and Paar.
She married poet-lyricist Javed Akhtar in 1984. She’s also played
conscience to the Hindi film industry through her role as a social
activist. She was awarded the Padma Shri in 1988. In an interview she
said about her identity, “If I’m asked to put into words my identity,
I’d say, woman, Indian, actress, Muslim, daughter, wife.” Her film Fire
where she played a lesbian shocked the country. In 1997, she became a
Rajya Sabha MP. She won a National Award for her role in Godmother again.
Protima Bedi:
She didn’t live her life to please anyone
else, but she made everyone who mattered to her proud: children,
lovers, students and dance gurus. Protima lived a life filled with
passion and had a lot to show for it. She started her modelling career
in 1969, and started living in with Kabir Bedi. She had dated Pandit
Jasraj, Vijaypath Singhania, French artist Jacques Lebel, barrister
Rajni Patel and conservationist Rom Whitaker. In 1974, Protima ran naked
on Juhu beach in Mumbai to publicise the launch of a film magazine. She
started Nrityagram, India's first free dance school near Bangalore. She
died in a landslide in the Himalayas while on a pilgrimage to Kailash
Mansarovar.
Neetu Kapoor:
As an actor who left filmdom to marry her
co-star and recently made a comeback of sorts, Neetu has courted
stardom at her own pace. She made an appearance as a child artiste in
Dus Lakh. She played one of her most popular roles as Salma Ali in Amar, Akbar, Anthony.
In 1980, she married Rishi Kapoor after a much-publicised engagement.
“
she been brought up very strictly. She had no boyfriends and had a very
touch-me-not attitude. But when Rishi told her he was in love with her, She
started feeling for him.” In 2010, she starred in Do Dooni Chaar with him.
Rekha:
She’s a diva in the old-fashioned sense of the
term: reclusive, glamorous and even by Bollywood standards of
eccentricity, unfathomable. This lovechild of Tamil actors Gemini
Ganesan and Pushpavalli started her career at the age of 12, in the
Telugu movie Rangula Ratnam. She made her debut in Hindi films as a lead
actor in the hit Sawan Bhadon. Rekha stays in secluded
splendour in her bungalow by the seaside. The gate is rarely opened to
visitors. Her private telephone number is given only to Amitabh Bachchan
and foreign journalists.
Qurratulain Hyder:
Often referred to as the first lady
of Urdu literature, Hyder was one of the most prolific writers of the
20th century. Known for being ahead of her time, she wrote novels before
the form really took root in the poetry-oriented world of Urdu writing.
Although she migrated to Pakistan in 1947, she moved back a decade
later. Her first novel was Mere Bhi Sanam Khane (My Lover’s House) that came out in 1947. But her magnum opus came out in 1959 and was called Aaag Ka Dariya (River of Fire). She never married. In 2005, she was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the Government of India.
Persis Khambatta:
Born and brought up in a middle-class
family in one of Mumbai's Parsi colonies, Miss India Persis Khambatta
went on to become something of a legend in Hollywood-complete with an
action figure modelled after her-for her role as Lieutenant Ilia in Star Trek.
She became the first Indian to present an Academy Award. She married
Hollywood actor Cliff Taylor in 1981, but the marriage lasted only two
months. She wrote a coffee table book in 1996. Persis died of a heart
attack in the year 1998.
Bhanu Athiya:
The first Indian to bring home an Oscar,
Bhanu has a repertoire of over 150 films. She was assigned to design
Nadira’s costumes in Shree 420. She made her debut with Guru Dutt’s C.I.D. in 1956. She’s also credited for creating Waheeda Rehman’s iconic look in Guide. She created Zeenat Aman’s controversial look in Satyam Shivam Sundaram.
The highlight of her career was when she received an Academy Award for
Costume Design for Gandhi. She said in her acceptance speech, “This is
too good to be true.” Her first national award was for the film Lekin,
and the second for Lagaan. She turned author with the book The Art of Costume Design.
J Jayalalitha:
The fiery actor-turned politician
continues to take the male-dominated political arena by storm. Due to
financial constraints, she debuted in the Kannada film, Chinnada Gombe,
at 16 under the guidance of her mother. In 1965, she made her first
Tamil film Vennira Aadai which helped her establish a career in the
Tamil film industry. In 1968, she starred in her first Bollywood film Izzat opposite
Dharmendra. After quitting films in 1989, Jayalalitha worked her way to
the top pf the political ladder with AIADMK. A landslide victory by
AIADMK in the 1991 general elections led to her becoming the first
woman CM in Tamil Nadu.
Sridevi:
After ruling Telugu and Tamil film industries, Sridevi made her debut in Bollywood with the film Julie.
Drama, comedy, dance - there was little she couldn't do. Sridevi won
her first Filmfare Best Actress Award (Tamil) for the film Meendum
Kokila (Sadma, in Hindi) opposite Kamal Haasan. Riding high on the
success of the films Janbaaz and Mr India, Sridevi won her first Hindi Filmfare Best Actress Award for Chaalbaaz. She married director, producer Boney Kapoor in 1996. After almost a decade, she comeback again with English Vinglish film.
Juhi Chawla:
Under Juhi’s bubbly exterior lies an
award-winning actor, dedicated mother and shrewd businesswoman. After
winning the Miss India pageant in 1984, she made her Bollywood debut in
Sultanat in 1986. Her big break however came in 1988 with Mansoor
Khan's Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak opposite Aamir Khan. The film won
the Filmfare Best Movie Award. She married industrialist Jay Mehta in
1998. In 2008, along with her husband, she became co-owners of IPL team
Kolkata Knight Riders.
Madhuri Dixit:
She ruled the roost in Bollywood, and
then gave it all up to get married. Madhuri made her debut in Abodh
opposite Tapas Pal. After a handful of mediocre films, she achieved
major success for Tezaab in 1988. The actor’s performance was much appreciated in the song Ek Do Teen. The film also went a long way in fuelling the Madhuri-Anil Kapoor equation. With hits like Ram Lakhan, Parinda and Tridev,
she firmly established herself as a ‘hit’ actor. At 32, Madhuri got
married to US-based doctor Sriram Nene.
Mira Nair:
Mira Nair’s first film on Bombay’s street children, Salaam Bombay
in 1986, created ripples that are still felt today. Besides an Academy
Award nomination, the film won a National Award, the Golden Camera and
Audience Award at Cannes, and three awards at the Montreal World Film
Festival. Her career has given us beautifully crafted films like Monsoon Wedding and The Namesake.
Talking about the former, “I have no recipe for universalism;
my recipe is to enter human hearts.” After her plans to film Shantaram
with Johnny Depp got shelved, she has brought the rights to The
Reluctant Fundamentalist, which is her current project.
PT Usha:
PT Usha made her international debut at the
age of 16 in the Moscow Olympics. Although she didn’t win any medals,
she was the first Indian sports woman to enter the Olympics final under
the age of 20. In 1984, although PT Usha finished first in the
semi-finals of the 400 m hurdles in the Los Angeles Olympics, she
faltered in the finals. After a nail-biting photo finish for the third
place, she lost the bronze by 1/100th of a second. She got married in
1990 and has a son named Ujjwal.
Anjolie Ela Menon:
Hers was a talent that blazed so
bright, it required no corporate patron or PR stuntman to get noticed on
an international stage. Menon’s work has found expression on canvas, in
ceramic and through murals, and its influence has survived five decades
of changing tastes in art. Born in India, she is of Bengali and
American parentage. She started holding solo exhibitions in Bombay and
Delhi in the late 1950s while still in her teens. In the 1970s, Anjolie
exhibited in Calcutta, where she’d been living for a while with her
father. She was awarded the Padma Shri in 2000.
Neena Gupta:
An NSD student, Neena Gupta has fought for
creative and intelligent entertainment throughout her career. She
played the niece of the Mahatma in the film Gandhi. Her big break came
thanks to her role in the TV series Khandaan. After a
short-lived affair with West Indies cricketer Vivian Richards, Neena
gave birth to their daughter Masaba in 1989. “Love can never get over.
However, the only problem is when in spite of the love, you can’t get
along. This is because it involves a lot of compromise.” She is now
married to Delhi-based CA, Vivek Mehra .
Sushmita Sen:
Sushmita Sen caught the nation’s fancy
because in a world full of perfect plasticity, she seemed real. Even
after winning the Miss Universe title, she may not have achieved the
success some of her beauty pageant contemporaries did, but she’ll always
be the people’s choice. In 2000, she adopted daughter Renee.
Sushmita was nominated for the Filmfare Best Supporting Actress award
for Filhaal, where she played a surrogate mother. She adopted her second daughter Alisah in 2010.
Anu Aga:
Fondly called the ‘grand old businesswoman of
India’, Anu Aga is a rare tycoon with a heart of a reformer. She joined
her husband Rohinton Aga’s company Thermax in 1985, and since his death
in 1996, took over as the chairperson. In Femina’s January 1997 issue,
she said: “Popular theories that men think and women feel are nonsense.
Both sexes think and feel. And a woman may or may not bring in a little
more feeling to the job. In 2010, she
was awarded the Padma Shri and made it to the Forbes’ Heroes of the
Philanthropy list.
Arundhati Roy:
Arundhati Roy shot into the news when she won a Booker Prize for her debut novel The God Of Small Things.
Her writing has since moved from sensuous fiction to fierce political
outrage, delighting fans and infuriating just everyone else. She’s been
charged with obscenity and even sedition, but the barbs just glide off
the sharp edge. In 2006, she refused to accept the Sahitya Akademi Award
for The Algebra Of Infinite Justice in protest against India toeing the
US line on the Lebanon war. She’s donated her Booker prizemoney to the
Narmada Bachao Andolan.
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan:
She has lived out most young
girls’ fairytale dreams: she has beauty, fame, success, adulation and a
doting prince. She got home India’s second Miss World crown in 1994,
after Rita Faria in 1966. Mani Ratnam’s Iruver was her film debut. Her first Bollywood film was Aur Pyaar Ho Gaya. Her first successful film was Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam.
She started dating her co-star Salman Khan during the shooting.
However, they broke up in 2001. In 2004, she was chosen by Time magazine
as one of the world’s 100 most influential faces. She got married to
Abhishek Bachchan in 2007.She given birth to beautiful child.
Barkha Dutt:
Her reportage from ground zero of the
Kargil war made her a household name. Barkha was born to journalist
Prabha Dutt, a pioneer among women journalists, who has influenced her
ideologies. After the war, Indian Navy Chief Admiral Sureesh Mehta
insinuated that Barkha had compromised the troops’ security by
disclosing their locations. Barkha was recently implicated in the 2G
scam and is accused of liaising with the Congress on behalf of lobbyist
Niira Radia to broker deals for the 2G spectrum sale. She has denied all
the allegations.
Mehr Rampal:
A former Miss India and one of India’s
first and finest supermodels, Mehr Rampal has been a muse to topmost
designers. Today, she partners her husband, Arjun Rampal and friends in
her restaurant venture. Mehr was born in a Parsi family on November 30,
in Kolkata. Her father, Homi Jesia, was a former Mr India. She was asked
to replace Isabella Rossellini as the international face of Lancôme,
which she refused. She set up Face One, a modelling agency, and quit
modelling at the peak of her career.
Ritu Beri:
She was the first Indian designer to show at
a Parisian haute couture show and even though her designs are Indian by
heritage, her identity is shared between the two countries. “When I
design something, it’s just my way of thinking. It’s not a revolution,
only my point of view.” In 2002, she became the first Indian to create a
new image for prestigious fashion label Jean-Lois Scherrer. In 2004,
she tied the knot with long-time friend Bobby Chadda. In 2010, she
celebrated 20 years of being in the business of fashion. She was also
awarded one of France’s highest civilian awards, the Chevalier Des Arts
et Des Lettres.
Sonia Gandhi:
Sonia Gandhi went from dutiful
daughter-in-law to supportive wife to widowed campaigner in full public
glare. Sonia met Rajiv Gandhi at Cambridge while working as a waitress.
Both the families had not exactly approved of the match, but the adamant
couple won over all. Sonia said “When you are in love with somebody,
that love gives you a strange strength and then you are not afraid of
anything.” After her husband’s assassination, she was elected leader of
the opposition. Today, as head of Congress, it’s no secret who has the
last word.
Kareena Kapoor:
She’s always had the famous last name,
but she’s earned the star value. At 30, Kareena is at the top of her
form and has worked with the best directors in Bollywood. She’s also one
of the highest paid in terms of movies and endorsements. In 2000,
Kareena made her debut opposite Abhishek Bachchan in Refugee. Chameli
released in 2004, winning Kareena much critical acclaim for her role as
a streetwalker. Kareena began seeing co-star Saif Ali Khan during the
making of Tashan in 2007. “Saif is the man I’ll marry,” she said. In
2009, Kareena starred in 3 Idiots, the highest grossing Bollywood hit of
all time. Finally Kareena Saif geeting Marry.
Chanda Kochhar:
At only 49, Chanda Kochhar is credited
with revolutionising the way women are looked at in the finance world.
In 1984, she joined The Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of
India (ICICI) as a management trainee after completing her Master’s
degree. In April 2001, Chanda took over as executive director and under
her leadership, ICICI won The Asian Banker’s Best Retail Bank Award in
India. The bank won the award successively in 2003, 2004 and 2005. Kochhar had believes always there are four
quadrants in a woman’s life, and in that order — work, family, self and
lastly, others. Sania Mirza:
Sania is India’s highest ranking female
tennis player — she reached world number 27 in 2007. Sania was awarded a
Padma Shri, India’s fourth highest honour for her achievements. “It’s
great to know that there are people who pray for her to win, but at the
same time it’s tough being stared at,” Sania married Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik
following a storm of controversy (he was allegedly married already). The
couple lives in Dubai. They continue to pursue their respective sports
careers.
Sunita Williams:
NASA astronaut Sunita Williams is
proof that there is no stopping a woman on her way up. The only NRI to
be awarded the Sardar Vallabhai Patel Vishwa Pratibha Award, she is
never far from her roots. On board the Discovery space shuttle she
carried a copy of the Bhagvad Gita, a small Ganesha figurine and some
samosas to ward off homesickness. Sunita received her Bachelor of
Science degree in Physical Science from the US Naval Academy and began
her career as a helicopter pilot. She met her husband Michael Williams
there.
Vidya Balan:
Vidya Balan holds her own in an industry
where chiselled features and a bikini-bod are considered prerequisites
to stardom. Producer Vidhu Vinod Chopra spotted her at a concert and
several screen/make-up tests later, she made her Bollywood entry in Parineeta
in 2004. She took home her first Filmfare Award for Best Debut Female.
In 2006, she moved up the Bollywood elite with the success of Lage Raho Munna Bhai. Her role in No One Killed Jessica was widely acclaimed. Now, she’s busy preparing for The Dirty Picture based on the life of controversial actor, the late Silk Smitha. She’s rumoured to be dating UTV CEO Sidharth Roy Kapoor.
Anoushka Shankar:
Anoushka Shankar has more than
outgrown her days as sitar legend Ravi Shankar’s daughter. She has
established herself as a performer and composer, exploring various
genres, including electronica, jazz, flamenco and western and Indian
classical music. In 2001, she became the youngest ever nominee in the
World Music category at the Grammy’s for her Live at the Carnegie Hall
album. In 2006, she became the first Indian to play at the Grammy
Awards. In 2008, she was featured on the cover of the Indian edition of
Rolling Stone. She tied the knot with British filmmaker Joe Wright in
2010, and has a son named Zubin.
Priyanka Chopra:
Between brand endorsements,
performances, films with top banners, directors and actors, this former
beauty queen keeps herself very busy. Priyanka’s first Hindi film to hit
the screens, Andaaz, won her the Filmfare Best Female Debut Award. In
2004, her portrayal of a sex-starved and manipulative Mrs Sonia Roy in Aitraaz won her critical acclaim. Priyanka wooed fans and critics with her performance in Vishal Bhardwaj’s caper thriller Kaminey and Saat Khoon Maaf. A self-confessed Twitter-addict, the actress will be heard singing with Lady Gaga soon.She Started her Own Album also.