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Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah: Lisa Christiansen Channels Five Generations of Genius in a Dazzling Heirloom
Hollywood

Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah: Lisa Christiansen Channels Five Generations of Genius in a Dazzling Heirloom

by jummy84 December 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Some art catches your eye. This catches your breath. Lisa Christiansen’s “Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah” is not the kind of thing you wear out of the house  unless you’re prepared to stop every crowd, hush every room, and maybe make a few people cry in the process. In an art world awash with spectacle, here is something different: a physical memory, a living elegy, a vibrant, heart-shaped flash of what it means to live awake inside your inheritance.

 The story behind the piece is as intricate as its design. Christiansen’s artistry isn’t just technical mastery, although there’s enough of that in any inch of her work to stop even the most jaded expert. What truly sets this pendant apart is the gravity of her presence and the presence of those who came before her. Lisa Christiansen is the fifth great-granddaughter of Sequoyah, the man who gave the Cherokee Nation its written syllabary, giving an entire people continuity and voice when the world challenged their right to exist and persist. Legacy isn’t a marketing trope in her hands; it’s the spark that sets the gold singing.

 

And there’s so much gold, but not in the showy, overdone sense you sometimes see flashing beneath the spotlights at auction houses. The 24.5 grams at this pendant’s core are precious because of how Christiansen chooses to use them: not polished to the edge of anonymity, but left rustic, even wild the way nature, and heritage, intended. She draws out the gold’s original hues, its subtle irregularities, the memory of its hidden patient years in the earth. In her words, “Nothing discarded, nothing forgotten.” The process is painstaking, and every decision deliberate. She melts down, re-works, and saves each fragment. No cast-off sliver of gold or wayward flake is lost. In a very real sense, the artist redeems every bit of material, just as she redeems and honors her people’s fractured traditions through her craft.

 A work like this practically refuses waste, and that’s not just about thrift. It’s about responsibility. It’s a principle driven by history  the Cherokee story is full of loss and endurance, of learning how to hold onto what matters no matter what you’re forced to leave behind. Christiansen’s care is a quiet act of defiance. She insists that value is never simply a matter of material, but of memory, effort, and meaning. The pendant is not just an object, but a philosophy, a testimony shaped from what other hands  less careful, less loving  might have thrown away.

 There are diamonds, of course, bright as distant stars yet understated, as if the pendant is guarding some private knowledge. One .12 carat gem presides near the bail, winking at anyone curious enough to search for secrets. Turn the piece over as every good collector will  and you’ll find a reverse bail encrusted with .05 carats of smaller diamonds that catch stray light in ways that seem almost accidental, almost mischievous. It’s a reminder, maybe, that true value often asks for more than a first glance.

But then there’s that unmistakable heart: the 34.5-carat Ithaca Peak turquoise, cut not with brute force but with reverence, transformed into a heart that is both symbol and spirit. Turquoise from Arizona’s legendary Ithaca Peak is a prize in itself, treasured by jewelers for its deep blue hues shot through with a rare, golden pyrite matrix. To Indigenous peoples, especially those of the Keetoowah, turquoise is sacred: a stone for healing, dignity, and protection. Here, Christiansen treats it as a living thing, never letting a single chip go to waste as she shapes it into the bold emblem at this pendant’s core. It’s the kind of work that suggests conversation not conquest  between earth and artist. You feel, seeing it, that the stone consented to be changed only because it trusted the one holding it.

 Christiansen’s heritage gathers around this moment. The heart is more than decorative it’s an idea, a plea, a homecoming. It stands in for the Keetoowah spirit: enduring, wounded, resilient. For centuries, the Keetoowah Cherokee have used the heart both as metaphor and symbol for cultural survival. In Christiansen’s hands, it becomes a literal vessel, something solid and remarkably delicate a thing to be guarded, respected, and passed on.

 There’s more. One of the quiet triumphs of this piece is its refusal to settle for a single beauty. Christiansen’s signature, for those in the know, is a sapphire this one tiny, radiant, and delicately seated inside a rose that looks almost too fragile for reality. She forms the rose herself, petals swirling from white and yellow gold in a balance that never seems forced. The division between tenderness and strength between tradition and invention is the line the artist walks, and you see evidence of it everywhere you look.

 It’s hardly surprising that the art world took notice  and not just the usual roster of critics and high-end collectors. Word moved with rare speed from Oklahoma to New York and London, bringing with it a sort of reverence usually reserved for newly discovered masterworks. It wasn’t just the $600,000 valuation, though that number is enough to make anyone’s head spin. The real shock was the feeling. Even veteran art broker Derrick Wallace, who’s brokered pieces between billionaires and museums, described the pendant’s first unveiling as “a kind of religious experience. You could hear people stop breathing. This wasn’t a luxury good. This was something sacred made solid.”

 He isn’t alone. Dr. Carla Dorsey, a respected scholar in Indigenous American art and culture, puts it simply: “A piece like this bridges worlds. Lisa Christiansen is working at the summit of technical skill, but she’s also telling a story that goes back centuries. Every line, every stone, every bit of gold contains a history  personal and shared  and you can feel the weight of it, the permission given by ancestors, the determination to create something lasting and real.”

 The ancestral stories woven into this pendant feel very much alive when you listen to Christiansen herself. She’s unpretentious about her talent  “I listened to what the stones wanted to become,” she told one interviewer. “The design came in pieces, the way you remember a song from childhood. It never felt forced.” It’s a deceptively simple way to describe a method that merges the best of old and new worlds: hand-forged settings, custom gold alloys, and goldsmithing skills refined over countless careful hours, paired naturally with a Cherokee tradition of letting the material  be it metal, stone, or story  guide the hand.

But Christiansen isn’t interested in solo glory or in treating her bloodline like a museum placard. She does her work the way her fifth great-grandfather Sequoyah did: as part of a larger mission  keeping memory alive, protecting what has survived, and transforming old wisdom into something with present-tense power. If Sequoyah gave language form, Christiansen gives form a voice. Both acts, in their time, are radical.

For those familiar with the Cherokee story, looking at this piece evokes both pain and pride. The Keetoowah name conjures tragedy and endurance: the forced migrations, the violence of loss, and the resilience of a people still fighting to keep their knowledge and beauty intact. To “redeem” the heart is not to fix what happened, but to insist that hope, meaning, and art are the real legacy. “Every cast-off flake has a purpose,” Christiansen insists. “Every memory, when saved, redeems the future for the next generation.”

That sense of purpose is what leads her to refuse all offers to purchase the work. Collectors line up  internationally even, lured by reputation and mystique. But the answer is always a gentle no. “Some things are meant to be seen and remembered, not owned,” she told one reporter frankly. “This isn’t just art. It’s a piece of who we are.”

This isn’t just marketing; it’s rare and, frankly, refreshing. In an art market where nearly everything can be acquired for the right price, a work that cannot be bought only becomes more precious. It builds its own mythology, a modern legend for those who still believe that some things are more important than money. “Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah” exists on its own terms  a piece to be witnessed, not simply possessed, the sort of treasure that, if we’re lucky, will be passed down, generation to generation, along with all it means.

You can see it  if you’re in the right place, with enough respect  at Blue Wolf Fine Jewelry in Lawton, Oklahoma. The display isn’t gaudy. It’s almost understated, as if the gallery is daring you to stop rushing, to stand still, and to really see. People have described the experience as transformative, and it isn’t hyperbole. You come away changed: reminded of what lasts, what matters, and what it means to turn suffering and survival into beauty that endures.

Christiansen’s pendant is more than just the sum of its gilded weight and radiant stones. Its value grows with every story it revives and every viewer willing to linger long enough to listen. It stands as living proof that tradition, in the hands of someone who understands its worth, is not static or frail. Instead, it’s a forge  old fires made hotter, spirits made visible, and a people’s endurance pressed into permanent form.

Pieces like this do not come along often. For art historians, jewelers, collectors, and, most crucially, the living descendants of those who walked the Trail of Tears and survived, “Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah” stands as both sanctuary and challenge. It is a keeper of flame, a signal to anyone who forgets that beauty is as much about memory and meaning as it is about shimmer and shine.

In a world bent on forgetting, Christiansen reminds us that true artistry has a longer memory. And maybe, just maybe, it’s the work that refuses erasure  the work that gives back what was lost, and redeems what still waits to be found  that matters most.

Visit “Redeemed the Heart of the Keetoowah” at Blue Wolf Fine Jewelry, 1103 SW. C Ave. Suite 2, Lawton, OK 73501 a masterpiece for the ages, alive with ancestors, ready to be seen, and impossible to forget.

December 2, 2025 0 comments
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Kate Middleton Channels Princess Diana as Prince George Makes His Festival of Remembrance Debut
Fashion

Kate Middleton Channels Princess Diana as Prince George Makes His Festival of Remembrance Debut

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Kate Middleton channelled Princess Diana in a black dress with a white frill collar as she brought Prince George to the Royal British Legion’s Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall for the first time.

Making her first public appearance in three weeks, the Princess of Wales looked elegant in the black Alessandra Rich dress, which she wore with her favourite Scottish Silver Thistle Brooch and poppy pin. Rather than arriving on the arm of her husband, Prince William, Kate Middleton arrived with her son Prince George, 12, who looked smart in a suit and tie and dutifully shook hands as he arrived at the central London concert venue.

In a dramatic shift from her traditional all-black Remembrance ensembles, the Princess of Wales opted for the somber black dress with contrasting prairie collar. The outfit was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival, although many of the late royal’s looked featured the distinctive oversized collar.

Kate Middleton was accompanied not by her husband, Prince William, but by her son Prince George as she arrived for the Royal British Legion’s Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

WPA Pool/Getty Images

The dress was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival

The dress was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival

Tim Graham/Getty Images

Middleton added sparkle with her Bahrain Pearl Drop Earrings, which once belonged to Queen Elizabeth II. The Princess of Wales has worn the jewels on a number of previous occasions—and they have a fascinating history. The then Princess Elizabeth created from a cache of seven pearls, which she received as a wedding present in 1947 from the Hakim of Bahrain. The earrings are comprised of round diamond studs, from which are suspended round and baguette-cut diamonds in an Art Deco style, plus two of of the Bahrain pearls.

In the earl years of her marriage, the Queen wore these earrings often for gala occasions and official portraits, including one taken in the 1950s—when she teamed them with two other wedding presents, including the Girls of Great Britain and Ireland Tiara and the City of London Fringe Necklace. In 1982, the Queen loaned the earrings to Princess Diana, who appeared to like them just as much, often teaming them with Queen Mary’s Lover’s Knot Tiara, which was another favourite.

It marked Prince George’s first appearance at a Remembrance event and a major moment in his preparation as a King-in-waiting.

Kate Middleton with Prince Goerge at the Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

Kate Middleton with Prince Goerge at the Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

WPA Pool/Getty Images

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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bollywood's halloween 2025 party
Bollywood

Halloween 2025: Deepika Padukone-Alia Bhatt Pose As Lady Singham-Lara Croft, Nita Ambani Channels Audrey Hepburn Energy And More Bollywood Celebs Dance On Spooky Night- Watch

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Bollywood stars marked Halloween with a glamorous and spooky celebration, hosting a star-studded party attended by luminaries like Alia Bhatt, Deepika Padukone, Nita Ambani, and more. This year’s Bollywood Halloween was nothing short of spectacular, with social media influencer Orry sharing a highly anticipated video capturing the festivities in Mumbai.

Here’s How Bollywood Celebrated Halloween This Year

The clip features Orry dressed as Sebastian the crab from The Little Mermaid. Following him, Nita Ambani stunned everyone by channelling Audrey Hepburn’s iconic look from Breakfast at Tiffany’s, sporting a black off-shoulder dress, a diamond tiara, and classic bangs, resembling the late Hollywood legend.

Alia Bhatt embraced her adventurous side as Lara Croft, donning a black t-shirt, shorts, and a braid. Deepika Padukone wowed in her Lady Singham costume, bringing her character to life for the special night. Ranveer Singh made a bold entrance as Deadpool, although Orry humorously mistook him for Spider-Man. Meanwhile, Akash Ambani and Shloka Mehta transformed into Gomez and Morticia Addams from The Addams Family. Even Aryan Khan, usually more reserved, made an appearance dressed as Jake Gyllenhaal’s character from Brokeback Mountain.

In his caption, Orry asked his followers to choose the best-dressed. Several celebrities and fans chimed in, with Ananya Panday and Khushi Kapoor both voting for Nita Ambani, calling her “Nita aunty,” while Janhvi Kapoor praised her, saying, “Nita aunty committed.”

What Is Halloween And Who Celebrates It?

Halloween is an annual festival observed on October 31, rooted in the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. Traditionally, it signified the end of the harvest season and the start of winter—a time believed to thin the veil between the living and the dead. People lit bonfires and donned costumes to ward off wandering spirits. In recent decades, Halloween has gained popularity worldwide, embraced across cultures for its fun, imaginative, and creative spirit.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Halloween 2025: Kalyani Priyadarshan, Katrina Kaif To Kriti Sanon, Take Date Night Inspo From These Stunning Actresses

Akankshya Mukherjee

Akankshya Mukherjee is a dynamic and ambitious individual poised to make waves in the realm of Media and Communication. With a passion for creativity and a drive to contribute to forward-thinking organizations, Akankshya embodies adaptability and a hunger for learning. Having already garnered experience through involvement in various organizations, she has honed the skill of quickly adapting to new environments and challenges. She sees each opportunity as a chance for personal and professional growth, eagerly embracing roles in communications and content writing.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas 2025 Movies, TV Shows: Dates, Casts, More Details
TV & Streaming

Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas 2025 Movies, TV Shows: Dates, Casts, More Details

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s fall, so you know what that means: It’s time for Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas to officially begin. The holiday movies and TV shows kick off the festive season on Friday, October 17.

For 16 years, Hallmark Channel has been the place to go for 24/7 holiday viewing, and that will continue this year, with nearly 80 hours of all-new programming across 10 weeks. Original movies will premiere every Saturday and Sunday, series will air on Fridays and Mondays, and everything will be available to stream the next day on Hallmark+.

It all begins with the Hallmark Channel debut of the first season of Mistletoe Murders, the cozy mystery series starring Sarah Drew and Peter Mooney, on October 17. It will lead right into the Season 2 premiere, beginning November 7. Also among the series coming as part of Countdown to Christmas is Twelve Days ‘Til Christmas starring Mae Whitman and based on the popular book by Jenni Bayliss.

Hallmark has also teamed up with iconic brands, the NFL and Grand Ole Opry, for two films, Holiday Touchdown: A Bills Love Story, with cameos from Buffalo Bills players and legends, and A Grand Ole Opry Christmas, for which Brad Paisley wrote and performs original music and with appearances from other Opry members and country music artists.

Paul Campbell, Tyler Hynes, and Andrew Walker are back in their third movie as the Brenner boys in Three Wisest Men. Hallmark is reuniting Lacey Chabert and Andrew Walker for the first time in seven years (My Secret Valentine) with She’s Making a List, while Erin Krakow and Tyler Hynes will star in Christmas Above the Clouds (their first movie together since It Was Always You in 2021 and first Christmas film together).

As usual, Thanksgiving weekend will bring two movies on Friday, November 28, Saturday, November 29, and Sunday, November 30, at 6/5 and 8/7c. And every Sunday, beginning on October 19, Hallmark Mystery will feature movie merry-thons in festive, themed collections, including A Cozy Country Christmas, Thank You for Your Service, The Magic of Christmas, and A Little Christmas Faith. And every Tuesday night, starting on October 21, you can binge holiday movies with your favorite stars with back-to-back films starring Paul Campbell, Jessy Schram, Victor Webster, and more.

“It’s an honor that millions of viewers welcome Hallmark into their homes each year and make us part of their annual holiday traditions,” said Darren Abbott, Chief Brand Officer, Hallmark, in a statement. “Audiences turn to Hallmark Channel and Hallmark+ for programming that they can watch with their families that they know will fill them with hope and joy. This year promises an unforgettable slate of movies and series featuring fan-favorite actors that will deliver everything fans love about Christmas on Hallmark Channel.”

Watch the promo for Countdown to Christmas:

Scroll down to get all the details about Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas movies — and three series — from the casts and premiere dates to official synopses as well as photos. Then, head to the comments section below to tell us which movies you’ll be watching.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Play Too Much! Toosii Has The Internet Cracking Up After Sharing His Reaction To Touring With NBA YoungBoy (VIDEO)
Celebrity News

Toosii Channels His Inner NBA YoungBoy In Hilarious Video

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Toosii never fails to bring a good laugh to the timeline. Amid the chatter surrounding his joining NBA YoungBoy’s ‘Make Slime Great Again’ tour, it was only right that he channeled his inner YoungBoy.

RELATED: Don’t Play With Him! Toosii Reacts After Critics Claim He’s Being “Forced” On Fans At Concerts (VIDEO) 

Toosii Channels His Inner NBA YoungBoy

The rapper had the timeline in full tears as he popped out and channeled his inner NBA YoungBoy. From nailing the signature movements to matching the rapper’s Baton Rouge accent, Toosii was clearly in full actor mode. In his caption, he joked:

“I think tour wit YB changing me. I keep yelling for some reason. Earlier today I told a lady ’wassam b***  she said ‘who you calling a b**** I thought that just meant ‘hey.’ I been having fun doe, I’m happy to be back! I can’t wait to see y’all.”

 

Social Media Reacts 

Folks quickly flooded the comments with laughing emojis as they reacted to Toosii’s NBA YoungBoy impression. While some weren’t amused, fans who bump YB on their playlists found his reenactment spot on and super relatable.

Instagram user @nenecapper wrote, “ he just glad to be there 😭” 

Instagram user @ezzye_ added, “The concert changed me too twin I get it “

While Instagram user @alexxus.cameron wrote, “YB either going to laugh at this or be pissed, no in between. 🤣🤣🤣🤣”

Instagram user @naanuchii wrote,”IM SCREAMING 😂😂😂 when he curse 😂 & yes cause I love when he curse so HARD!”

Instagram user @speakingoftori added, “Then he even doing the n**** emotes im deadd”

While Instagram user @itssalyssa_wrote, “Toosii pls not rn”

Instagram user @tharris139 wrote, “He obviously impersonating him wtftf y’all mad for in the comments ”

Instagram user @aceindependent added, , “lol relax cause everytime I hear yb lol I turn into him too”

While Instagram user @itzanna__ wrote, “Lmfaoaoaoaoaoo waittt toosii who wrote

the song “favorite song ” ? 😭”

Toosii The Family Man 

Before enjoying life on the road, Toosii was enjoying family life at home with his longtime girlfriend Samaria J, their son Ezrah, and their newborn daughter, Aliza. Since Aliza’s arrival, the family has shared nothing but heart-warming moments together. Anytime they share pictures of their two adorable kids, it’s pure cuteness overload for the timeline. Each video sparks sweet debates about whether they look more like Toosii or Samaria, when in reality, they’re the perfect little blend of both.

RELATED: Awww! Toosii Shares FIRST LOOK At His Baby Girl & Reveals Her Name In New Music Video

What Do You Think Roomies?

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Bugonia'
TV & Streaming

Emma Stone’s Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Bugonia’

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

With a shaved head, expert line deliveries and the assembly of another all-time memorable character, Emma Stone continues driving this golden age of cinema. She might just be our modern-day Katharine Hepburn.

Greek auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, Oscar-nominated director of “Poor Things” and “The Favourite,” has fully stepped into his Alfred Hitchcock era with “Bugonia,” which represents a bold new realm for the filmmaker. At the Telluride Film Festival, executive director Julie Huntsinger introduced Jesse Plemons as “Jesse F***ing Plemons,” and the actor lived up to the billing in every way.

After debuting at the Venice Film Festival, Lanthimos’ wildly audacious “Bugonia” unveiled itself to audiences at the Werner Herzog Theatre. The dark comedy presents the best kind of problem for distributor Focus Features for this Oscar season: how to shepherd two powerhouse contenders (the other being “Hamnet”) through the long, unpredictable marathon of awards campaigning and determine which narrative will resonate most with the Academy.

Adapted from Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 South Korean cult classic “Save the Green Planet!,” the film follows two conspiracy-obsessed men — played by Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis — who kidnap a high-powered CEO (Stone), convinced she’s an alien bent on destroying Earth.

Plemons, already an Oscar nominee for Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog” (2021), goes for broke in what may be his most audacious and riveting work yet. A best actor nomination feels not only possible but inevitable. It’s hard to pinpoint Oscar winners in history who embody this type of role, but the closest comparison seems a mixture of Anthony Hopkins (“The Silence of the Lambs”) and Geoffrey Rush (“Shine”).

Stone, a two-time Oscar winner for “La La Land” (2016) and “Poor Things” (2023), shows an almost frightening fearlessness in her craft. At 36, the actor-producer is still building what could become one of Hollywood’s most decorated careers. Like Hepburn, who won four Academy Awards over a lifetime of iconic performances, Stone seems poised to keep redefining what a leading lady can be.

Stone has already made history as one of two women nominated for acting and producing in the same year (“Poor Things”). The other was Frances McDormand for “Nomadland” (2020), who won both actress and best picture — her third and fourth Oscars. McDormand’s other two Oscars came for acting in “Fargo” (1996) and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017).

Stone’s résumé already reads like the arc of an entire generation. From the sharp comic timing of “Easy A” to the aching vulnerability in “The Favourite,” and from her razor-edge balancing act in “Birdman” to the surrealist bravado of “Poor Things,” Stone has never repeated herself. Each performance arrives with a sense of reinvention — not unlike Hepburn, whose leap from screwball comedies in the 1930s to searing dramas in the 1960s charted an artistic evolution rarely equaled in Hollywood.

Both women also share a restless, almost defiant streak against the industry’s rigid expectations. Hepburn was notorious for refusing to play ingénues and insisted on characters with wit, grit and a pointed refusal to apologize for their ambition. Stone, in her own era, has forged a similar path — often playing women who are messy, intelligent, sensual and deeply flawed, making them magnetic nonetheless. The throughline between the two actresses is not imitation, rather an inheritance: a lineage of artistry where authenticity triumphs over convention.

Delbis, an autistic actor who prefers that term over “neurodivergent,” is remarkable in his screen debut. His portrayal of Don, a young man torn between loyalty and the yearning for truth, is raw, honest and is the emotional backbone. His presence alongside seasoned performers like Stone and Plemons gives the film a livewire quality — the sense that something unpredictable, and therefore thrilling, could spark at any moment.

Like many of Lanthimos’ films, “Bugonia” is a full-scale awards contender, with potential across acting, directing and screenplay categories, and strong prospects in every craft category — including visual effects.

In many ways, the film achieves what Adam McKay wanted “Don’t Look Up” to be: sharp, brittle social commentary on our world. The stark difference is that screenwriter Will Tracy never feels as though he’s talking down to the audience. He’s reflecting the world, holding a mirror up to our flawed selves.

But with the blend of multiple genres, I’d suspect the film to be polarizing to a select few (think “The Substance” last year). However, I think it will perform on par with “Poor Things,” which netted 11 nominations.

For Focus Features, this presents an enviable challenge of abundance: When your films are this good, the real art becomes deciding how to tell the story to voters.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Shilpa Shetty Channels Her Inner Chandni As She Remembers Sridevi With Love And Respect | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Shilpa Shetty Channels Her Inner Chandni As She Remembers Sridevi With Love And Respect | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Bollywood diva Shilpa Shetty Kundra recently turned heads on social media as she paid a heartfelt tribute to the late legendary actress Sridevi. Dressed in a radiant yellow chiffon saree reminiscent of Sridevi’s iconic Chandni look, Shilpa beautifully recreated the magic of Yash Chopra’s classic romantic musical.

Channelling the Spirit of ‘Chandni’

Taking to Instagram, Shilpa shared a graceful reel video from a photoshoot where she can be seen posing in the bright yellow saree, evoking the timeless elegance of Sridevi’s Chandni. The reel was accompanied by the instrumental title track of the 1989 film, which added to the nostalgic charm.

Captioning the post, Shilpa penned: “My Ode to my forever OG Sriji #Chandni #Chandnivibes.” admirers deluged the comment box with compliments, complimenting Shilpa for her beauty and for keeping alive the memory of one of Bollywood’s finest legends.

Chandni: The Film That Defined a Generation

Directed by Yash Chopra, Chandni became a benchmark in Indian cinema. The film, released in 1989, had Sridevi playing the central character of Chandni Mathur, a vivacious and romantic woman torn between two lovers—played by Rishi Kapoor and Vinod Khanna. Supporting actors were also some of the celebrated ones such as Waheeda Rehman, Anupam Kher, and Sushma Seth.

Chandni marked a change of heart for Yash Chopra, who had lost out on action films. Going back to his roots, Chopra produced a romantic musical that became a classic. The film was characterized by its heroine-oriented script, rich emotions, and melodious music, songs picturized in exotic overseas locations—initiating the “Yash Chopra style” which would be the hallmark for decades to come.

On the Work Front

Following her starring role in the 2023 movie Sukhee, a slice-of-life drama detailing a woman finding herself again over the course of seven days, Shilpa Shetty is set for her next biggie. She can be seen next in the forthcoming Kannada action drama KD: The Devil, helmed by Prem.

The movie boasts the lead role of Dhruva Sarja, supported by an impressive cast featuring Sanjay Dutt, V. Ravichandran, Ramesh Aravind, Reeshma Nanaiah, and Nora Fatehi. Shilpa’s character in the film remains a secret but is likely to infuse the action-packed storyline with the same energy and presence she has come to be known for.

August 30, 2025 0 comments
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