Fan Blog Dedicated to Simone Singh

Fan Blog Dedicated to Simone Singh
Fan Blog Dedicated to Simone Singh

Tuesday 23 December 2014

On sets of Ek Hasina Thi - 7

Simone Singh with Ayub Khan, Kishwer Merchant, Bhupinder Singh, Sanjeeda Sheikh, Vatsal Sheth, Bhuvnesh Mann on sets of Ek Hasina Thi. Sakshi Goenka orhanised a puja at Goenka mansion and invited the Thakurs to expose Durga's real identity in front of everyone! Fun mood of team on the sets.














Simone Singh on sets of Ek Hasina Thi - 6

Simone Singh on sets of Ek Hasina Thi during the shooting of the promos in Jaipur in March 2014:











Promo introducing Simone Singh as Sakshi Goenka in Ek Hasina Thi, complete with her chiffon saree, side pearl necklace and piano!

Simone Singh on sets of Ek Hasina Thi - 5

Last day of shooting of Ek Hasina Thi. Simone Singh (Sakshi Goenka), Vatsal Sheth (Shaurya Goenka), Ayub Khan (Rajnath Goenka) with producer Prem Kishen and writer Sammeer Arora and rest of technical team of Ek Hasina Thi on location on last day of shooting of the show.








Tuesday 16 December 2014

MOVIES - Simone in Ek Rishtaa: A Bond of Love (2000)

Simone Singh starred in Ek Rishtaa A Bond of Love (2001). She played Priya Kapoor, charact of Amitabh Bachchan and Raakhee's daughter and Akshay Kumar's sister in the film.

Here are some pics:








Jampot Jalwa

An article on city of Jamshedpur and famous people from that city, featuring quotes from Simone Singh (Times of India, 2008):

Imtiaz Ali, the long-haired, dreamy-eyed director who rocked audiences with his Jab We Met last year, has something in common with Madhavan, Simone Singh, Priyanka Chopra and Tanushree Dutta. Yeah, they're all serious eye-candy. But that apart, they all come from a city where Bollywood is considered more than a little infra dig. 
Jamshedpur, a gleaming engineering oasis in the jungle of Bihar (now Jharkand), is a place where youngsters are traditionally bred to be managers and engineers courtesy leading institutes like NIT and XLRI. This is the town that Jamshetji Tata built, whose spotless roads denizens claim you can eat off (we'd take that with a pinch of salt). Most people here work for Tata affiliates TISCO and TELCO, and everyone knows everyone else. Jamshedpur has the highest per capita income in the country and is the only town whose municipality is governed by a corporate house. And then with all this, it has a serious flaw: it nurtures excellence and creativity and then presses the eject button.

The strange imbalance between an excellent school education and the absence of good colleges forces Jamshedpur's denizens to sever the umbilical cord with their birthplace in their late teens. Imtiaz Ali's passion for theatre drove him to Delhi; Madhavan walked the beaten path by taking a degree in engineering but veered to cinema. Simone Singh flew the nest early because her parents moved. "It was an idyllic existence that allowed you the leisure to look out the window and dream a lot," she smiles. "My husband laughs because I still recall the flavour of the meatballs and hamburgers I ate at Beldih Club in my childhood." 
Imtiaz points out that Jamshedpur is a small place that offers an enriched lifestyle (three golf courses, six swimming pools, billiards centres) and spawns talent but is walled in by a culture that does not allow for much interaction with the outside world. Summer Of 2007's screenwriter Bijesh Jayarajan, the newest Bollywoodian to emerge from Jamshedpur, feels the Tatas have taken care of everything except perhaps ambition. "There are few opportunities for progress," he says.

Madhavan explains the indifference to films here: though the "imperial culture" of the city is "in a class of its own", this translates into few cinema halls "so a career in films is not a highly rated option". Simone recalls that Beldih screened only English films; Tanushree remembers watching just four films during her growing years—Henna, Hum Aapke Hain Koun,Kuch Kuch Hota Hai and Virasat. "Seeing films was not encouraged at all," she says. "Only when my parents were away was I able to watch English films on TV. Later, once we moved to Pune, I mustered the courage to tell them that I wanted to join the glamour industry." Having bred their parenting skills in a place like Jamshedpur, they were "shell-shocked". Little wonder then that Tanushree is a rare Miss India contestant to emerge from this town. Imtiaz believes he is the first Hindi film director from Jamshedpur.
In Mumbai, the tribe comprising former schoolmates and basketball rivals meet occasionally, carrying forward a childhood bond forged over inter-school basketball games and "bird-watching". They appreciate one another's achievements whole-heartedly—the pitched rivalry between the highbrow Loyola students and the down-to-earth DBMS (Dabba Bartan Manjhnewala School, as the uncharitable joke goes) has evidently blurred in the struggle to make it outside Jamshedpur.

For a town that has no natives, for they all migrate after retirement, its once-denizens harbour a fierce loyalty, talking of 'Jampot' with much warmth and affection. Interestingly, Imtiaz, Madhavan, Tanushree, Simone and Bijesh are all polite to a fault, even in their phone messages. Tanushree laughs and describes it as an effect of the "hellishly strict" schools in the town.

This upbringing has inspired confidence in Imtiaz who says he holds no prejudice in life save one. "If two equally qualified people came to work for me and one was from Jamshedpur, I would choose him over the other," he says. "Simply because I know he will be hard-working and will know how to talk to people."

Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/stoi/Jampot-Jalwa/articleshow/3227448.cms

Telly Fan-atics!

An article from DNA India on fans of television stars (2006), includes excerpt on Simone Singh as Heena:
Tellynovas trigger fan reactions vacillating from ‘poojas for a long-life’ to ‘murderous assaults’! Mandira has a ‘darr’ing fan too.

  • dna

Fan hysterics are not the exclusive trappings of Bollywood royalty any longer. With small-screen stars invading drawing rooms 24/7, tellynovas trigger fan reactions vacillating from ‘poojas for a long-life’ to ‘murderous assaults’!

Iqbal Khan has an ‘outstation’ stalker who even seems to know the colour of his shirt on any given day. Once, she even called the star to reprimand him for going out in the rains. That evening Khan had indeed been to see off his brother and had gotten stuck in the 26/7 floods! Mandira Bedi has a ‘darr’ing fan too.

“This caller from Gurgaon texts me incoherent messages in Hindi and English. He even tells me not to wear revealing clothes! Once when I was at an event in Delhi, he showed up backstage. There was a crazed gleam in his eye. The police, after interrogation, said that he wasn’t normal. Since I recognise him, I make sure he doesn’t come anywhere close to me now!”

Brothers Ronit and Rohit Roy’s experiences, though not offensive, have been offbeat.  While a girl has dedicated an exhaustive website to Ronit, Rohit has an 87-year-old ‘Nani’ besotted with him! “I’ve visited her house. She has the glint of a 16-year-old whilst talking to me,” says Rohit. 

Telly diva Sangeeta Ghosh is not as perturbed with the countless marriage proposals that she receives as she is with the “lewd messages” and the “all-night” calls from abroad! Simone Singh even had to play shrink to a disturbed fan who believed that all her suffering as ‘Heena’ were true.

Singh had to act extra-jovial to help the lady get rid of her delusions! VJ/singer Sophie’s indecent proposal, however, takes the cake. At a show in Kolkata, a lady whispered to the VJ, “I’m dying to kiss you. You’re the sexiest woman in the world!”

But where fame and fortune come in dollops, dodging fan-quirks seems a pittance of a price to pay.

Source - http://www.dnaindia.com/entertainment/report-telly-fan-atics-1030830

Simone Singh in Heena (1998-2003)

Simone Singh is perhaps best known for her role as Heena. Heena was a weekly serial on Sony Entertainment Television aired every Friday from years 1998 to 2003. It was about trials and tribulations of young Muslim girl Heena Nawab Mirza and shed light on concept of Talaaq in Islam. Heena was the no. 1 rated show on Indian Television in the late 90s according to TAM and still holds place in Top 5 Most Watched Shows of the decade 2000-2009. It won lot of acclaim and awards.

Here are some pics of Simone Singh in and as Heena:









Monday 15 December 2014

Off screen pics from Ek Hasina Thi - 4

Simone Singh (Sakshi Goenka) with Kishwer Merchant (Raima Maheshwari), Jyoti Gauba (Suchitra Goenka) and Ayub Khan (Rajnath Goenka) on sets of Ek Hasina Thi, Star Plus TV serial.


Karva Chauth episode


With police after Shaurya killed Dr Dayal Thakur


Hospital scene,  Shaurya tries to kill Dev