Hrithik Roshan about his recent film War and why he loves action entertainers so much
A Place on the table: Even as we welcome the gods and make our peace with fasting and feasting during Karva Chauth, Dusshera, and Diwali, all the way till Guru Purab, Christmas, and Lohri, there’s an unmatched celebration of colour, food and festivity.
After 25 years of Apna Pash, a documentary on the celebrated poet Avtar Singh Sandhu ‘Pash’, director Rajeev Kumar looks to new audiences.
Exploding with flavour: Ritu Tangri, who left her profession as a school teacher after 24 years and then as a lecturer in biotechnology to pursue her passion for cooking, now runs her own cooking classes ‘Annapurna’.
Durga Puja pandals in the Capital stay eco-friendly and attempt to find an alternative to the Yamuna
Akarsh Khurana captures on stage, a sweep of emotions, from betrayal to redemption, and places, from Afghanistan to America, in The Kite Runner
A book by the Indian ambassador in the Netherlands highlights the historical and current exchanges that define the relationship between the two countries
Japanese high street brand enters India with fanfare and kurtas in tow
Actor Arun Govil to play Ram once more, this time on stage
A festival will celebrate the country’s treasure trove of musical traditions through baithaks, performances, discussions and films.
An immersive exhibition that integrates multiple art forms, from painting to textile, presents a panoramic view of Gandhi’s life and philosophy.
The Mahatma’s connection with the seven notes of the musical scale remained significant. Just like the one with the dream of a free India.
The first full-scale movie made on his momentous life and death was Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi (1982), a biopic with so much sweep and sway that you almost forgot that Gandhi, that most iconic of Indians, was being played by an Englishman, Ben Kingsley.
“Unfortunately, in India today, we don’t think enough about Gandhi. We should think of Gandhi every day because he had so much to say about quotidian life,” says Nalini Malani. The artist has turned to Gandhi on numerous occasions.
There are a couple of questions that I wished to explore when I began photographing Gandhi’s statues. One is how much of the images of Gandhi in the public space do we accept as Gandhi?
As World Mental Health Day draws close (October 10), a look at diverse individuals trying to help break the stigma by understanding, innovating and attempting to cure mental health issues
A children’s book that talks about caste, and inspires you to be a climate champ
His struggle for identity began in South Africa. He had to go to jail and his opinions were changing. Kasturba had to change with him.
It was the division of the country that refrained him from celebrating the Independence — something that he had spent the majority of his life fighting for.
Just because the ankle exists, doesn’t mean it should be highlighted
For those in the Capital who attended his 2014 exhibition “every broken moment, piece by piece” with the same gallery, the showcase, in more ways than one, takes forward the thought he presented back then — that history is not static.
Justice Prabhudessai said that woman, Shakuntala Maskar, attended to the daily needs of her husband and children and did other household chores.
Several citizens and volunteers have sent postcards to Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis urging him to shift the car depot project out of Aarey Colony.
There is a new tribe of home bakers that’s creating oven fresh treats besides a livelihood for itself.



