logo
Fatima Sana Shaikh Talks About Umrao Jaan, Says Everytime Rekhaji Appeared, All Of Us Gasped

Fatima Sana Shaikh Talks About Umrao Jaan, Says Everytime Rekhaji Appeared, All Of Us Gasped

India.com7 hours ago

Mumbai: Actress Fatima Sana Shaikh attended the 'Umrao Jaan' screening and even shared a candid picture of herself with veteran star Rekha. Taking to Instagram, where she shared a monochrome picture.
In the image, Rekha, exuding classic grace and poise, was seen holding on to Fatima, as she sat on the veteran actress' lap as they looked at a coffee table book featuring the yesteryear diva's portrait. She also shared pictures posing with Jackie Shroff, Tabu and Vijay Varma. 'Watched Umrao Jaan on the big screen..and what a surreal experience it was. Every time Rekhaji appeared, all of us gasped.
Her eyes, her stillness, her grace… uff! it's impossible to look away. I am in love with her she is magic. And It was beautiful to see the industry come together to celebrate her.' Released in 1981, 'Umrao Jaan' is a period musical drama film directed by Muzaffar Ali and starring Rekha. Based on Mirza Hadi Ruswa's 1899 Urdu novel Umrao Jaan Ada, the film tells the story of a Lucknow tawaif and poet, and her rise to fame.
Considered one of the best Indian films of all time, Umrao Jaan won many accolades. At the 29th National Film Awards, it won 4 awards, including Best Actress. It was on June 2, when it was announced the film 'Umrao Jaan' starring Rekha has been restored in 4K resolution, and will be re-released. The immersive big-screen revival begins June 27. Muzaffar Ali also showcased a limited-edition coffee table book that offers a rare behind-the-scenes look into the making of 'Umrao Jaan'.
It features never-before-seen photographs, costume sketches, calligraphy, poetry, and personal anecdotes from the set, the book is both a collector's item and a deeply reflective tribute to the film's artistic vision. Ali had shared, ''Umrao Jaan' was not just a film, it was a journey into the soul of a lost culture, a forgotten tehzeeb.
Through her pain, poetry, and grace, we tried to resurrect the elegance of an era where love and longing spoke in verse.' 'I had actors who brought a lot of heft to their characters, and then there was Rekha, who lived Umrao Jaan and truly immortalised it. I am thrilled that the film is back on the big screen for a whole new generation to discover a time and culture that's very much a part of our being'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Virat Kohli earns massive amount of Rs... from Instagram, more than Neymar, Katy Perry but Ronaldo, Messi get...
Virat Kohli earns massive amount of Rs... from Instagram, more than Neymar, Katy Perry but Ronaldo, Messi get...

India.com

time19 minutes ago

  • India.com

Virat Kohli earns massive amount of Rs... from Instagram, more than Neymar, Katy Perry but Ronaldo, Messi get...

Image credit: Source: Instagram In these collection of pictures, we find out about star cricketer Virat Kohli's massive earnings from Instagram platform and how it compares to others like Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi. Image credit: Source: Instagram Virat Kohli's latest earnings from Instagram have been revealed. Kohli has over 274 million followers on Instagram. Image credit: Source: Instagram Virat Kohli reportedly charges Rs 12 crore per post on Instagram, according to a report released by Influencer Marketing Hub. Kohli has made it into the No. 20 position in the Global list. Virat Kohli announced his retirement from Test cricket last month. From MRF Tyres, Puma, Myntra, Tissot, Audi India to Nestle and Boost, Kohli is a brand magnet for all the top companies. He has reported net worth of Rs 1050 crore. Image credit: Source: Instagram Brazilian football superstar Neymar earning from Instagram is below Virat Kohli. With 229 million followers, Neymar reportedly gets Rs 9 crore per post. Image credit: Source: Instagram Australian pop singer Katy Perry is also below Virat Kohli. She has 204 million followers on Instagram and charges Rs 10 crore per post on social media platform. Image credit: Source: Instagram Cristiano Ronaldo holds No 1 position in earning from Instagram. Portugal and Al Nassr superstar charges Rs 27 crore per post as he has 658 million followers on the social media platform. He has reported net worth of $1 billion. Image credit: Source: Instagram Lionel Messi is in 2nd place in Instagram earning as he reportedly charges Rs 22 crore per post with 505 million followers. He has reported net worth of $850 million.

Umrao Jaan Reborn: Golden Girl Rekha Enchants In A Manish Malhotra Ensemble
Umrao Jaan Reborn: Golden Girl Rekha Enchants In A Manish Malhotra Ensemble

NDTV

time20 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Umrao Jaan Reborn: Golden Girl Rekha Enchants In A Manish Malhotra Ensemble

Inn aankhon ki masti ke mastaane hazaaron hain, sang Rekha as Umrao Jaan Ada, the courtesan and poet, 44 years ago wearing a white and gold anarkali in Muzaffar Ali's 1981 classic movie Umrao Jaan. At the time, the veteran star -- whose depiction of a pained courtesan longing for her lover who belonged to a higher class moved many in theatres -- wore a series of clothes created by costume designer Subhashini Ali. On Thursday, June 26, 2025, when Umrao Jaan took on a new life with its 4K restored release special screening in Mumbai, Rekha too was reborn wearing an ensemble by her favourite celebrity designer and friend Manish Malhotra. However, what remained the same was her aankhon ki masti and the ada in her Umrao Jaan. Dressed in an organza Chikankari and badla kurta with a gold tissue lehenga and a Banarasi dupatta (classic Rekha vibes) as drape with real gold and silver zari at the Umrao Jaan event, the 70-year-old actor humoured the paparazzi as she twirled in a Kathak -like chakkar harking back to her period film, a real moment to remember for the media. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Varinder Chawla (@varindertchawla) She posed for the photographers and made finger hearts for them, danced with Anil Kapoor, clicked a selfie with AR Rahman, and embraced Tabu in a bear hug -- Rekha indeed is a new Umrao Jaan, celebrating her rebirth. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Varinder Chawla (@varindertchawla) The actor wore her signature sindoor; statement gold chandelier jhumkas; a kundan passa; an intricately embellished necklace; a pair of chunky gold rings; and a pair of heavy kadas, all complementing her overall look. Eagle-eyed fans found out that she opted for a pair of golden platform heels, when she turned around on the red carpet for that unforgettable twirl. Fashion designer Manish Malhotra, who put together Rekha's look for this special evening, has been an ardent admirer of the star for a long time now. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Manish Malhotra (@manishmalhotra05) From her quintessential Kanjivaram silk sarees to power suits, Manish Malhotra is a diehard Rekha fan and also regards the actor as a dear friend. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Manish Malhotra (@manishmalhotra05) On October 11, 2024, on Rekha's 70th birthday, the designer shared a heartfelt tribute to his muse, his friend, and the eternal style icon. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Manish Malhotra (@manishmalhotra05) "Truly The One And Only REKHAJI.. Iconic, Superstar, Beautiful and an Original Style Maker from her movies to her appearances .. Birthday Wishes , Lots and lots of Love and Respect for someone who is not only supremely talented but is also an extremely Warm and a loving person. Her FABULOUS expressions to her performances to her dances the movie list is endless .. I am honoured to not only work with her but also know her closely .. Admiration and love," he wrote. Rekha is as immortal as Umrao Jaan Ada, both on screen and off screen.

Channapatna, barbies and now labubu: What our dolls say about us
Channapatna, barbies and now labubu: What our dolls say about us

India Today

time20 minutes ago

  • India Today

Channapatna, barbies and now labubu: What our dolls say about us

When I was seven, my best friend wasn't human. She had no eyebrows, a bobbled head, and wore a hand-stitched lehenga made from an old dupatta. Every Sunday, I'd gather all my dolls-Channapatna wooden ones with clacking limbs, a bald plastic baby from Chandni Chowk, and that one prized Barbie knockoff-and host elaborate tea parties. My mother's steel katoris doubled as cups, Parle-Gs became biscuits, and the dolls sat in perfect formation, waiting for gossip and imaginary chai. We didn't have Pinterest-perfect dollhouses or curated Instagram shelves. Our dolls lived in shoeboxes. They travelled in schoolbags. They wore mismatched earrings made from fevicol and sequins. Most importantly, they were ours-silent witnesses to our dreams, dramas, and the days we wished we were to 2025-and things have gotten... kids and increasingly, young adults-aren't playing with dolls. They're collecting them. Enter Labubu: a bug-eyed, snaggle-toothed, slightly creepy creature with the cult appeal of a K-pop idol and the resale value of a Supreme hoodie. Born in the art labs of Hong Kong and sold through limited-edition "blind boxes," Labubu isn't made for tea parties. He's made for shelfies, unboxings, and envy-soaked Instagram Reels. Forget pink ball gowns and tiaras-Labubu wears skull-hoodies, devil horns, and an expression that says "I bite." And yet, Gen Z has embraced him like a totem. He's strange, edgy, and oddly adorable in a voodoo-doll-meets-mushroom-spirit sort of way. The shift is stark: from dolls that mimicked real life to dolls that reflect a surreal inner world. If our dolls were stand-ins for the people we aspired to become, Labubu is more like a plushy moodboard-part monster, part meme, part misunderstood alter happened to innocence? To hand-lathe toys and monsoon tea parties? Maybe nothing. Maybe, just like us, our dolls grew up-and got CLICK-CLACK OF WOODEN ANKLETS CHILDHOOD IN CHANNAPATNA Long before plastic turned playrooms neon-pink, Indian childhoods rang with the woody clatter of Channapatna dolls. In Karnataka's 'Gombegala Ooru' (Toy Town), artisans still spin hale-wood on hand-lathes, rubbing sticks of vegetable lac until the grain gleams like honey. The craft—patronised by Tipu Sultan in the late-18th century and protected today by a Geographical Indication tag—has survived wars, cheap imports and, lately, algorithmic 1980s and early-'90s kids, a Channapatna doll was more than a souvenir; it was the guest of honour at every bed-sheet tea-party. Fabric scraps became sarees, bindis were punched from notebook labels, and the doll sat primly while we poured imaginary chai from a plastic Milton flask. Play was slow, tactile and, in hindsight, wonderfully analog."When you dress a wooden doll, you're putting a story on a blank slate," recalls 52-year-old Bengaluru homemaker Meera K., who still keeps her lacquered couple in a glass case. Yet even in Toy Town, change was brewing. A 2024 field survey found only 1,500 full-time artisans left-and most of their children dream of coding bootcamps, not chisels. ENTER BARBIE: PINK PLASTIC & ASPIRATIONAL PLAY In March 1986, Barbie sashayed into Indian toy stores-initially an import for NRIs returning from the Gulf, soon a must-have at every kiddie birthday. Mattel localised fast: by 1992 we had "Navratri Barbie" in ghagra-choli, and later Katrina-Kaif-endorsed Bollywood 2023 Barbie film super-charged that nostalgia. The movie grossed ?1.44 lakh crore globally, spawned 100+ brand tie-ups, and spiked U.S. Barbie toy sales by 25 per cent within two months of release. Indian metros turned pink: cafs threw "Barbie-core" nights; college fests hosted best-dressed Kens and Barbies. Even Mattel's CEO admitted India is "one big collaboration we're courting next".But something subtle shifted. Our childhood dolls were props in stories we wrote; Barbie came with a biography, a Malibu Dreamhouse and a social-media afterlife. "Play began to look outward," says Delhi psychologist Dr Vandana Rao. "Children stopped serving the doll tea and started serving her content."advertisementTHE GEN Z PIVOT: LABUBU & THE RISE OF "VOODOO-CUTE" Fast-forward to 2025. The hottest doll on Instagram is Labubu-a gremlin-like, nine-toothed sprite born in Hong Kong artist Kasing Lung's sketchbook and mass-marketed by China's Pop Mart. With blind-box drops, 1-in-720 chase figures, and celebrity boosts from Rihanna to Dua Lipa, Labubu turned Pop Mart's revenue into a HK$310 billion juggernaut and pushed plush sales up 1,200 per cent last year. Walk through any Gen Z hang-out in Mumbai or Seoul and you'll spot a Labubu key-chain dangling off a Balenciaga tote. The aesthetic is a deliberate "ugly-cute": stitched scars, jagged grin, gothic colourways. It is as far from Barbie's symmetry as Channapatna is from molded plastic, yet the core impulse-projecting identity onto a tiny companion-persists."Labubu feels like a pocket mascot for grown-up anxieties," says 23-year-old Pune collector Ananya Patil, who unboxes her blind-bags live on Twitch. "He's creepy-cute, just like adulthood."advertisementWHY DOLLS KEEP EVOLVING (AND WHY WE KEEP BUYING) Economists call it the "Play-Value Arc": as disposable incomes rise, toys evolve from utility (rattles) to identity tokens (collectibles). Social media accelerates the cycle-every new doll comes with a built-in fandom and a secondary market. A 2025 StockX report ranks Pop Mart above Nike in daily trades. THE COUNTER-CURRENT: WOODEN TOYS 2.0Ironically, Barbie's sustainability pledges (100 per cent recycled plastics by 2030) echo the very virtues Channapatna never lost. A rising eco-parent cohort is now buying back into wooden toys-sometimes commissioning artisans to carve custom figures that nod to contemporary pop culture (think Spider-Man in lac-red and indigo).Start-ups like Bengaluru's "Toylogue" blend Channapatna techniques with Montessori principles and ship worldwide. In 2024, their turnover doubled, helped by EU regulations on micro-plastics in kids' products. FULL-CIRCLE CUPS OF TEASo, where does that leave the next generation? Perhaps at a crossroads where the sound of a spinning lathe meets the ping of an app notification announcing the next blind-box drop. Yet when eight-year-old Ira Sharma throws a tea-party for her Barbie in Gurgaon, she still invites a hand-painted Channapatna elephant as "chief guest." And on her backpack swings a miniature Labubu in bubble-wrap armour, waiting for its Instagram after all, has always been a mirror. From lacquered wood to plastic glamour to voodoo-cute vinyl, dolls simply reflect the eras we grow up in-our hopes, our fears, our aesthetic rebellions. The tea set may be silicone now, the guest list more eclectic, but the ritual remains: we gather our little effigies, pour an imaginary brew, and practice being credit: Generative AI by Vani Gupta - Ends

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store