Latest news with #Part2


NDTV
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- NDTV
A Throwback Gem From Bobby Deol And Tania's Wedding, Shared By Dharmendra
New Delhi: Bobby Deol and his wife Tania Deol marked 29 years of marriage on Friday (May 30). What On his 29th anniversary, Bobby Deol shared a heartfelt post on Instagram. He captioned the photo, "Hey my love, happy anniversary. Forever yours." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Bobby Deol (@iambobbydeol) Earlier that day, veteran actor Dharmendra also took to social media to extend his wishes to the couple. He shared two throwback photos from their wedding and wrote, "Happy Anniversary, my darling kids. Wishing you the best of the best in life. Enjoy this very, very SPECIAL DAY." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dharmendra Deol (@aapkadharam) Background Bobby and Tania Deol got married on May 30, 1996. The couple have two sons, Aryaman and Dharam. On the work front, Bobby Deol was last seen in Ek Badnaam Aashram Season 3 - Part 2, which premiered on Amazon MX Player on February 27. Directed by Prakash Jha, the series starred Bobby Deol alongside Aaditi Pohankar, Darshan Kumaar, Chandan Roy Sanyal, Vikram Kochhar, Tridha Choudhury, Anupriya Goenka, Rajeev Siddhartha and Esha Gupta. He also recently made his Telugu debut in Daaku Maharaj, where he shared the screen with Nandamuri Balakrishna, Urvashi Rautela and Pragya Jaiswal. The film was directed by Bobby Kolli. In A Nutshell Bobby Deol and Tania Deol celebrated their 29th wedding anniversary with heartfelt messages on social media. Bobby shared a loving note for Tania, while Dharmendra posted throwback wedding photos on social media.


Time of India
26-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
BTS to comeback with HYYH era after reunion? ARMY try to decode mysterious Instagram account with new pics of members
When one talks about global sensation that is BTS, their discography stands as a testament to the group's emotional depth and artistic growth. Each of the seven members—Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, V, and Jung Kook—have poured their Blood, Sweat and Tears into music that spans a wide range of themes. Among the many eras in their career, none is as deeply cherished by ARMY as the HYYH era. So, what is HYYH? Short for Hwa Yong Yeon Hwa or The Most Beautiful Moment in Life, HYYH represents a defining chapter in BTS' musical and narrative journey. It encompasses three albums: The Most Beautiful Moment in Life, Part 1, Part 2, and Young Forever—a trilogy that holds deep emotional resonance for fans. Why does HYYH mean so much to ARMY? The era began with Part 1 (April 29, 2015), continued with Part 2 (November 30, 2015), and culminated in Young Forever (May 2, 2016). This period marked a turning point for BTS, both musically and thematically. Moving away from their earlier youthful exuberance, the group embraced a more introspective and mature sound. The lyrics delved into the fragility of youth, the pain of growing up, and the bittersweet beauty of fleeting moments. a thread of threads for hyyh storyline explanation and theories 🧵 Beyond the music, HYYH introduced a layered and emotionally rich storyline, intertwining each member's fictional narrative into a shared universe. This narrative would later evolve through albums like WINGS and the Love Yourself series, but it was during HYYH that BTS first invited fans into this complex, symbolic world—one that blurred the lines between reality and fiction, and between artist and audience. BTS making a comeback with HYYH after reunion? The 7-member group is set to make a highly anticipated full-group comeback in June 2025, following the completion of their mandatory military service. While ARMY eagerly awaits their reunion, BigHit Music previously announced that a special album is in the works to celebrate the 10th anniversary of BTS' iconic HYYH era. HYBE founder Bang Si-hyuk also confirmed that BTS will release a commemorative album in 2025 to honour this milestone chapter in their discography. New Instagram profile emerges While all this is happening, a new Instagram account has emerged under the name "s07_220502," featuring a single line in its description: "Youth never comes back" or "Youth is never coming back." The same line also appears in a link shared on the profile. The account has posted a series of seven photos featuring seven men standing near a vehicle. However, as one goes through each picture, one person disappears at a time until only one remains. While it's unclear whether the individuals in the images are BTS members, ARMY believe it is them as BTS has similar photos in HYYH era and are actively trying to decode the meaning behind the posts. ARMY try to decode new photos The BTS fandom quickly turned into detectives and began sharing their theories on X (formerly known as Twitter). The majority, however, believe it is connected to the HYYH era. The display picture on the Instagram account also seems to say "HYYH 3". helloo??????? HYYH??? YALL THIS IS SO SUS😭 Guysss omggg GUYSSS‼️‼️This is definitely a hyyh project u can't tell me otherwise. The characters in the pfp stand for HYYH 3??? STREETS SAYING THIS IS RELATED TO THE HYYH COMEBACK OR THE FESTA AND THE ACCOUNT ONLY FOLLOWS BOMNAL (SPRING DAY) BOOKSTORE 😭😭😭 What are the odds of me getting a suggestion for a hyyh account related to bts on instagram just when we were waiting for festa schedule update????? SKSKSKSKKSKSKSK All Namjoon stans can we decode this???? YOUTH IS COMING BACK??!@?,,?!?&?HYYH IS COMING BACJ?##%?!?! About BTS reunion The group is expected to officially reunite on June 21, 2025, when Suga—the final member completing his mandatory military service—is set to be discharged. However, some fans speculate the reunion could happen earlier, possibly around the group's debut anniversary on June 13, especially if Suga uses his accumulated vacation days. For all the latest K-drama, K-pop, and Hallyuwood updates, keep following our coverage here.
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes appear to confirm marriage rumors
NEW YORK — The controversial romance between Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes may have reached its apex with wedded bliss. The former 'GMA3' co-hosts, who sparked engagement rumors earlier this year, seemingly confirmed that they're married on the latest episode of their podcast. 'I'm T.J. Holmes — alongside my friend, my partner, my podcast co-host, Amy Robach. My person, my partner, my spouse,' he introduced his lover during the opening of this week's 'I Do, Part 2.' The couple, who became the subject of public scrutiny when their secret relationship was uncovered while they were both legally married to other people, have seemed to relish in the scuttlebutt in the aftermath of the scandal. Their affair first made headlines in late 2022, prompting ABC to launch a probe that ultimately ended with the two getting axed from their high profile gigs. They've since gone on to work together on multiple podcast projects. More than a year after saying they were considering marriage, they fueled engagement rumors when Robach brandished a beautiful bauble on her wedding ring finger when they attended the 2025 iHeartRadio Music Awards in March. In a strange twist of fate, their former spouses, attorney Marilee Fiebig and 'Melrose Place' actor Andrew Shue, bonded over their shared marital strife and began dating one another in 2023.


Los Angeles Times
20-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
Ibsen's 1879 play left audiences shocked. Now in Pasadena, the door opens to ‘A Doll's House, Part 2'
In 'A Doll's House, Part 2,' playwright Lucas Hnath cheekily proposes an answer to a question that has haunted the theater for more than a century: Whatever happened to Nora after she walked out on her marriage at the end of Henrik Ibsen's 1879 drama, 'A Doll's House'? The door slam that concludes Ibsen's play ushered in a revolution in modern drama. After Nora's exit, anything was possible on the stages of respectable European playhouses. Conventional morality was no longer a choke hold on dramatic characters, who were allowed to set dangerous new precedents for audiences that may have been easily shocked but were by no means easily deterred. 'A Doll's House, Part 2,' which opened Sunday at Pasadena Playhouse under the direction of Jennifer Chang, is a sequel with a puckish difference. Although ostensibly set 15 years after Nora stormed out on Torvald and her three children, the play takes place in a theatrical present that has one antique-looking shoe in the late 19th century and one whimsical sneaker in the early 21st. The hybrid nature of 'A Doll's House, Part 2' isn't just reflected in the costume design. The language of the play moves freely from the declamatory to the profane, with some of its funniest moments occurring when fury impels a character to unleash some naughty modern vernacular. More crucially, comedy and tragedy are allowed to coexist as parallel realities. Hnath has constructed 'A Doll's House, Part 2' as a modern comedy of ideas, divided into a series of confrontations in which characters get to thrash out different perspectives on their shared history. Chang stages the play like a courtroom drama, with a portion of the audience seated on the stage like a jury. The spare (if too dour) set by Wilson Chin, featuring the door that Nora made famous and a couple of rearranged chairs, allows for the brisk transit of testimony in a drama that lets all four characters have their say. Nora (played with a touch too much comic affectation by Elizabeth Reaser) has become a successful author of controversial women's books espousing radical ideas about the trap of conventional marriage. She has returned to the scene of her domestic crime out of necessity. Torvald (portrayed with compelling inwardness by Jason Butler Harner), her stolid former husband, never filed the divorce papers. She's now in legal jeopardy, having conducted business as an unmarried woman. And her militant feminist views have won her enemies who would like nothing more than to send her to prison. Nora needs Torvald to do what he was supposed to have done years ago: officially end their marriage. But not knowing how he might react to her reemergence, she makes arrangements to strategize privately with Anne Marie (Kimberly Scott), the old nanny who raised Nora's children in her absence and isn't particularly inclined to do her any favors. After Torvald and Anne Marie both refuse to cooperate with her, Nora has no choice but to turn to her daughter, Emmy (crisply played by Kahyun Kim). Recently engaged to a young banker, Emmy has chosen the road that her mother abandoned, a distressing realization for Nora, who had hoped that her example would have inaugurated a new era of possibility for women. Hnath works out the puzzle of Nora's dilemma as though it were a dramatic Rubik's Cube. The play hasn't any ax to grind. If there's one prevailing truth, it's that relationships are murkier and messier than ideological arguments. Nora restates why she left her marriage and explains as best she can the reasons she stayed away from her children all these years. But her actions, however necessary, left behind a tonnage of human wreckage. 'A Doll's House, Part 2' offers a complex moral accounting. As each character's forcefully held view is added to the ledger sheet, suspense builds over how the playwright will balance the books. Each new production of 'A Doll's House, Part 2' works out the math in a slightly different way. The play had its world premiere at South Coast Repertory in 2017 in an elegant production that was somewhat more somber than the Broadway production that opened shortly after and earned Laurie Metcalf a well-deserved Tony for her performance. The play found its voice through the Broadway developmental process, and Metcalf's imprint is unmistakable in the rhythms of Nora's whirligig monologues and bracing retorts. Metcalf is the rare actor who can lunge after comedy without sacrificing the raw poignancy of her character. Reaser adopts a humorous mode but it feels forced. More damagingly, it doesn't seem as if Hnath's Nora has evolved all that much from the skittishly coquettish wife of Ibsen's play. The intellectual arc of 'A Doll's House, Part 2' suffers from the mincing way Reaser introduces the character, with little conviction for Nora's feminist principles and only a superficial sense of the long, exhausting road of being born before your time. The early moments with Scott's Anne Marie are unsteady. Reaser's Nora comes off as a shallow woman oblivious of her privilege, which is true but only partly so. Scott has a wonderful earthy quality, but I missed the impeccable timing of Jayne Houdyshell's Anne Marie, who could stop the show with an anachronistic F-bomb. Chang's staging initially seems like a work-in-progress. The production is galvanized by the excellent performances of Harner and Kim. Harner reveals a Torvald changed by time and self-doubt. Years of solitude, sharpened by intimations of mortality, have cracked the banker's sense of certainty. He blames Nora for the hurt he'll never get over, but he doesn't want to go down as the paragon of bad husbands. He too would like a chance to redeem himself, even if (as Harner's canny performance illustrates) character is not infinitely malleable. Bad habits endure. Kim's Emmy holds her own against Nora even as her proposed solution to her mother's dilemma involves some questionable ethics. Nora may be disappointed that her daughter is making such conformist choices, but Emmy sees no reason why the mother she never knew should feel entitled to shape her life. The brusquely controlled way Kim's Emmy speaks to Nora hints at the ocean of unresolved feelings between them. The production is somewhat hampered by Anthony Tran's cumbersome costumes and Chin's grimly rational scenic design. Elizabeth Harper's lighting enlivens the dull palette, but I missed the surreal notes of the South Coast Repertory and Broadway stagings. Hnath creates his own universe, and the design choices should reflect this wonderland quality to a jauntier degree. But Chang realizes the play's full power in the final scene between Nora and Torvald. Reaser poignantly plunges the depths of her character, as estranged husband and wife share what the last 15 years have been like for them. 'A Doll's House' was considered in its time to be politically incendiary. Hnath's sequel, without squelching the politics, picks up the forgotten human story of Ibsen's indelible classic.
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Business Standard
19-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Business Standard
Paresh Rawal confirms exit from 'Hera Pheri 3', leaving fans heartbroken
Priyadarshan's Hera Pheri 3 is one of the most eagerly awaited Bollywood movies. Fans of the franchise had been thrilled to hear the legendary trio of Paresh Rawal, Suniel Shetty, and Akshay Kumar returning to the big screen together. However, now the audience is upset by Paresh's unexpected revelation to Bollywood Hungama on his role in Hera Pheri 3. In a tweet on Sunday, Paresh Rawal, who plays the beloved character Baburao Ganpatrao Apte in the Hera Pheri franchise, announced that he will not be part of the upcoming Hera Pheri 3 sequel. The actor used social media to deny claims that he had left the film because of creative disagreements. Hera Pheri 3 Paresh Rawal: Actors in a post Rawal took to his X account on the morning of May 18, Sunday, and wrote, 'I wish to put it on record that my decision to step away from Hera Pheri 3 was not due to creative differences. I REITERATE THAT THERE ARE NO CREATIVE DISAGREEMENT WITH THE FILM MAKER. I hold immense love, respect, and faith in Mr. Priyadarshan, the film director.' Paresh also spoke earlier in an interview with Lallantop, about the impact of the character Babu Rao on him and stated, 'Woh gale ka fanda hai. Main 2007 mein Vishal Bharadwaj ji ke paas gaya tha. 2006 mein Part 2 release ho gayi thi. Maine kaha mere paas ek film hai, mujhe iski jo ek image hai na, usse chhutkara chahiye. Same getup ke andar alag kisam ka role. Woh aap kar ke de sakte hain mujhe. Jo bhi aata hai, uske andar Hera Pheri hai. Main actor hoon yaar, mujhe phasna nahi hai iss daldal mein (It's like a noose. I went to Vishal Bharadwaj in 2007, after the sequel was released in 2006. I told him I had a film and wanted to break free from that image—to play a different character in the same getup. Only he could do that. Everyone who approached me saw me through the Hera Pheri lens. I'm an actor, and I don't want to be stuck in that rut)." He further added, 'In 2022, I went to R. Balki. I asked him to give me something—maybe the same getup, but a different part. I feel suffocated. It does make me happy, yes, but there is a certain pull to it. I want to be free of that.' Actor Suniel Shetty on Hera Pheri 3 Paresh Rawal In a recent interview with Bollywood Bubble, Suniel Shetty even revealed that Hera Pheri would not be as good without Paresh Rawal and Akshay Kumar. He emphasised that the chemistry among the three is what makes Hera Pheri a classic film. He stated, 'If it was Hera Pheri, If it wasn't Babu Bhai (Paresh Rawal) and Raju (Akshay Kumar), Shyam (Suniel Shetty) wouldn't exist, and Shyam has no meaning. And you take any one of them out, and the film doesn't work". Hera Pheri 3 Paresh Rawal: Netizen reactions When fans found out that Paresh had left the project, they were disappointed; some even thought the picture would not be the same without him. Over the years, fans have come to love Paresh Rawal's performance in the Hera Pheri movie. On social media, his scenes and dialogues are still frequently shared as memes. One user tweeted, 'What? So all the fun has exited from Hera Pheri 3?' Another wrote, 'No Paresh Rawal, no Hera Pheri 3.' Another fan commented, 'It should not be made now… Let the cult remain a cult—don't destroy the series just for money.' One fan commented, 'If it's true, Akshay sir will bring him back.' Another fan commented, 'We can't imagine Hera Pheri without him… Please bring him back.' Paresh Rawal's upcoming projects Along with the actors Tabu and Akshay Kumar, Paresh also has Bhooth Bangla as his next project. The Priyadarshan-directed movie is presently in production and is expected to be released in 2026. In addition, he is working on 'Welcome to the Jungle'. About the franchise: Hera Pheri The original film, Hera Pheri, released in 2000 has earned its place as one of Bollywood's most cherished comedy franchises from its characters' sharp wit, and laugh-out-loud moments. Under the direction of Priyadarshan, the trio of Akshay Kumar, Suniel Shetty, and Paresh Rawal have become memorable for years alongside actress Tabu. In Neeraj Vora's 2006 sequel, Phir Hera Pheri, the trio plunged deep into yet another adventure, this time involving a questionable quick-money scam. The movie became a cult favorite after being a box office hit. Actors like Johny Lever, Rajpal Yadav, Rimi Sen, and Bipasha Basu are also included in part 2. The franchise is notable for its flawless fusion of humor, hardships, and 'unforgettable' dialogues.