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Posted: 18 years ago
King of the castle

It was not the first time a king had visited Warwick Castle but there had never been one before quite like Shahrukh Khan

The Bollywood superstar - known to many as King Khan - dropped in at the Castle to officially open its newest attraction on Wednesday, and plenty of his fans turned out to greet him.

The legendary heartthrob - Bollywood's answer to Brad Pitt - officially opened Dream of Battle, a new battle experience set in the oldest parts of the castle, before he and his family were given a private tour, which included an archery display, a Birds of Prey show and the trebuchet firing.

The multi-award winning Indian mega-star helicoptered in to the castle grounds for a whistle-stop tour beginning with a sword slashing red carpet ribbon cutting ceremony, flanked by fully armoured medieval bodyguards.

The star actor said: "I love Britain and our visit to Warwick Castle has given us a wonderful and exciting taste of British history.

"The castle is spectacular, and there are so many stories and so much to do. We've had a truly memorable time."

Castle General Manager Sue Kemp said: "It has been an honour to welcome such an icon to Warwick Castle. Shahrukh Khan is one of the most popular actors in the world today and we were delighted he found the time to explore the castle - and officially open Dream Of Battle."

The new 1 million Dream Of Battle display turns the clock back to the war-torn 15th century when Warwick was the centre of English politics and the Earl the most influential man in the country with the power to install and depose kings. It tells the story of the Castle's most fateful conflict - The Battle Of Barnet - through teh eyes of a 12-year-old squire.

http://leamington.observertoday.co.uk/news.tvt?_ticket=3473V VXOBHSJ53J94NNAD0VHGKLAFS6DJQRFL1PAAUTKCNMDEOVMTRRITAXM9NTHN LL9CHUTVVQFIQ0CCMTECYNBBHSI7WYEIOPNOZSEAOW4UURGUU4ILSMAAQ48X 7KACK5FURXGHONHDMTEHOKACNXFURYJHONDLHI&_scope=Flow/Websites/ Leamington/News&id=326356
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Posted: 18 years ago
Aamir interview...

"Everybody has been asking me whether I am working in Mani Ratnam's Lajjo. But the truth is that I don't know. Bobby Bedi and Mani need to decide that. Then there's a buzz about SRK and me working together in Dhoom 3, but again, I don't know. "

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/
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Posted: 18 years ago
The highest earners and taxpayers of Bollywood

Many actors like Rani Mukherjee, Abhishek Bachchan have become household names thanks to the products they endorse. But there's a price attached to this 'benefit' - tax. Shah Rukh tops the list of taxpayers among brand ambassadors this year.

Shah Rukh Khan

The actor topped the list of taxpayers among brand ambassadors this year, beating even cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, who paid a service tax of Rs. 1.93 crores.

Brands SRK has endorsed:
Pepsi, Lux, Hyundai Santro, Omega, Bagpiper, Tag Heuer, Sunfeast, Airtel, Masterstroke Deluxe Whiskey, Compaq, Belmonte…

Shah Rukh Khan: Earnings per film

Actor Shah Rukh Khan, according to sources, earns approx. 6-8 crores per film, and about 6 crores through endorsement.

The actor, however, believes in paying tax, besides of being 'generous' to friends and colleagues. Shah Rukh is known to gift away cars and flats to his near and dear ones.

http://movies.indiatimes.com/quickies/msid-2138206.cms
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Posted: 18 years ago
Shah Rukh Khan to be honoured by French Govt.

By IndiaFM News Bureau, June 21, 2007 - 10:58 IST

Shah Rukh Khan will be awarded the Officier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters) by the French government for his prolific career and his contribution to the development of Indo-French cooperation in the field of cinema.

French ambassador Dominique Girard said that it gives the French Government has chosen to give the honour of the Officier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres to Shah Rukh Khan, who is a very talented actor with unmatched popularity. Shah Rukh will be given the honour on a later date.

The French government presents the Officier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres award to persons who have distinguished themselves by their creativity in the field of art, culture and literature or for their contribution to art in France and other parts of the world. Some other Indians like artist S.H. Raza and author Mahasweta Devi are the ones who have received this honour before.

http://indiafm.com/news/2007/06/21/9619/index.html
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Posted: 18 years ago
Promos of SRK's movie pulled off theatres

Promos of Chak De, produced by Yash Chopra's production house, will be drawn from cinema halls from all over India. The movie has Shah Rukh Khan playing coach to a girls' hockey team. According to a source, "The promo is not getting a good response from the public, Yash Chopra's production house is very sensitive towards audiences responses. They have been sending teams to various cinema halls to gauge the reaction which isn't positive. Therefore they might withdraw it by this weekend."

Manoj Desai, owner of a multiplex, said, "I haven't got any official intimation from them, but I have removed the promos as the public is hooting while the eight-minute promo is played before the film. As it is Jhoom Barabar Jhoom has not met with good response. I don't want the public to run away from my theatre." Another a cinema manager said, "A team from the production house did come to our theatre for a survey to know what the people think of the promo. But we haven't been informed about the withdrawal so we are still running it. If they ask us we will take it off."

However another trade expert informs, "I don't know if they will issue an official notification, they may request exhibitors to withdraw the promos from the theatres as they don't the audience to lose interest in the film even before its release."

TOI (Calutta Times) - Print
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Posted: 18 years ago
Fans eagerly waiting for SRK's Chak De! India and Om Shanti Om

By Deepak Kumar Mohanty
New Delhi


June 19: Bollywood Badshah Shahrukh Khan with his last release in August 2006, Kabhi Alvida Na Kehna, really doesn't bid goodbye. Shahrukh is back in news and this time for the buzz of his forthcoming films. Two of his most awaited films, Yash Raj's ChakDe! India and Farah Khan's OmShantiOm are set to be released sometime in the later half of this year.

Theatrical promos for Chak De! India have been released a week back. Based on the life of a hockey coach and how he took the job to coach 16 overlooked girls for this most neglected National Game of India.

This film is directed by Shimit Amin, once an assistant of Ram Gopal Varma (RGV) and the director of AbTakChhappan. It is a bit different from the earlier films under Yash Raj production as it is not a family drama. The film instead addresses the role of women through sports and focuses on one of the most ignored game of India, the National game. This is one of the new things that the story line is going to present.

Yash Raj Films have intended to premier the movie on August 9, at Somerset House in London. The premiere of Chak De! India is a part of the Film4 Summer Screen programmes that is being celebrated from a long time to mark the relationship between India and UK and the impact of Indian culture on London's life. The film will be released worldwide on Aug 10, this year.

Om Shanti Om produced by Shahrukh Khan himself and directed by Farah Khan is also ready for the release. Shahrukh Khan and ace ramp model Deepika Padukone are in the lead roles. Reportedly the story line is based on reincarnation. A large number of well known Bollywood actors have performed in the film as guest appearances including Amitabh Bachchan, Abhishek Bachchan, Salman Khan, Saif Ali Khan, Sanjay Dutta, Preity Zinta and Shabana Azmi. With good composition coming from Vishal and Shekhar, the music of the film is expected to attract a larger audience.

After the Bachchan family drama it is time for Shahrukh Khan to rock'n'roll. The fever of SRK's fans seems rising with the releasing date coming closer. These are not the only things to put Khan in news, as last week he was in London for a charity show with painter M.F Husain. Whatever the reasons but it is good news for his fans that he is coming with two different movies that hopefully will highlight good performances.

http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/341
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Posted: 18 years ago
AB interview: talks about SRK

'SRK did KBC 3 perfectly well'

Did Kaun Banega Crorepati 3 come as a shock?

I fell ill. I had surgery, and it took me a while to recover. Certain piquant situations arose as I left it in the middle. For KBC, each episode is planned two to three months in advance, as there's the whole thing about phoning in, competition that goes on and that's a structure one can't override.

I was unable to give an exact date on which I could resume. I thought I would resume in the middle of the year, but the process would have waited for eight months. They couldn't do that or put on another show in between, as the graphics of commercial considerations goes berserk and one can't do it for a limited period. There were many problems. I didn't say anything, but then they said they wouldn't be able to do it, so...

Were you disappointed?

No. I am truly happy Shah Rukh Khan did it and he did a very fine job. I told him so when I met him in London. I thought I was perhaps getting stale. One can't change the format. All one can change is your initial talk to the audience and many people I met said that after what I say in the beginning they switched off the TV! It's just as well I was not there.

Were the comparisons with SRK irritating?

Not at all. They asked me several times, but he gave it a new dimension and looked at it in a more light-hearted manner. He did it perfectly well.

What about the rivalry between him and you?

It's not only boring to talk about, but embarrassing too. Everything is fine. I don't know how this talk started.

Maybe because he was now doing your endorsements?

Just because someone does endorsements, are we going to start hating each other? Surely not. It's a wider and liberal world that we live in. There is great pleasure and delight to see a generation growing up in this manner. It's remarkable to see what Shah Rukh has done as a human being and in his career, and continues to do. You can only feel happy about it. I was very touched by a letter to the editor in a paper, where there was a comparison of Rajnikanth and myself. In the end he wrote, why are we going on about this? Why aren't we proud of the fact that in one country we have two such people? It's a remarkable thought. All the time we try to divide and antagonise each other, when we should appreciate the fact that there are such huge celebrities coming out of one country and industry. I wrote back to him, and said I applaud him for his thinking. This is what it should be.

http://specials.rediff.com/movies/2007/jun/22sld3.htm
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Posted: 18 years ago
'Chak De India' promos removed from 'JBJ'

By Raj Kumar, AllBollywood.com Staff
June 22, 2007


Yash Raj films had been continuing the trend of including trailers for it's next release with it's current film, and most recently screened the trailer for Chak De India, starring Shah Rukh Khan, during Jhoom Barabar Jhoom.

However, the strategy may not have worked this time. The trailer has not exactly received positive feedback, as most feel that the trailer is too lengthy and lacks excitement. This has prompted many people in the theatres to start hooting and jeering during the promo. Due to the audience's reactions to the trailer, the promos have been removed. One wonders why they simply did not replace the lengthy trailer with a shorter one?

For all news for Chak De India, which releases on August 10th

http://www.allbollywood.com/v2/bd/stc/nws/2007/6/22/24600.sh tml
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Posted: 18 years ago
Chak De India promos removed!

The promos of Shimit Amin's Chak De India have been pulled off air in the theatres. Reports have it that that the audience has booed at the promos of the film. Manoj Desai said, "I pulled out the promos of Chak De India because the audience hooted at it when it hit the screens. The current film, Jhoom Barabar Jhoom, running in my theatres has met with a poor response. I don't want the little audience that is there to walk out because of a poor promo." Reports also have it that the Yashraj camp have asked their team of people to visit theatres to gauge the response that Chak De India is getting from the audience. "If this is reaction to the promo of the film one wonders what will happen when the film will actually hit the theatres. Yashraj I think is desperately trying to save this film now," said a theatre owner

http://b4utv.com/showtime/newsbreak/070622chakde.shtml
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Posted: 18 years ago
Bollywood Rising: India's Biggest Movie Star Shah Rukh Khan

Move Over Brad Pitt, Shah Rukh Khan Wows an Audience Larger Than Top Hollywood Stars

By AMMU KANNAMPILLY
LONDON, June 23, 2007 —


He is the biggest movie star whose name you may never have heard.

Known as the "King of Bollywood" to his fans, 41-year-old Indian actor Shah Rukh Khan evokes hysteria among South Asians from Delhi to Delaware.

The estimated size of his audience is over 3.5 billion, according to BusinessWeek -- and it's growing.

To put his popularity in perspective, in 2002, the Hindi film industry sold 3.6 billion tickets. Hollywood films, on the other hand, sold 2.6 billion tickets.

Bollywood film stars enjoy a huge fan base in Asian countries like Afghanistan and Pakistan, where neither the Taliban nor the Pakistani government's ban on Hindi cinema has stemmed their popularity. Their films may not show at the local cinema, but massive sales of pirated DVDs suggest that official attitudes have done little to dim their appeal.

Bollywood's appeal is widening beyond South Asia, expanding to countries like Germany, Israel, and Gulf nations, where almost every Hindi film is dubbed into Arabic when it releases.

So what makes these films -- largely song and dance extravaganzas -- so popular all over the world?

According to Indian author and film critic Anupama Chopra, "Bollywood films are fairy tales for adults. That's their appeal."

In an interview with ABC News, Bollywood superstar Khan was more succinct. He said simply, "We sell dreams."

And to a country where reality is often grim and filled with unrelenting economic struggle, "the small and simple fantasies" offered by the Hindi film industry are vital, according to Khan.

"The world of Hindi films," he told ABC News, "is fantastical, kitsch, and loud. But at the bottom of it all, there are very simple desires. All the hero of a Hindi film really wants is a house for his family, a happy marriage, children who will listen to him. We are not interested in making Armageddon movies."

Nor, it seems in making movies that will successfully cross over to a Western audience. While his peers like the former Miss World, Aishwarya Rai are busy making films with foreign filmmakers, Khan has no intention of shifting his focus away from Bollywood.

In an interview with ABC News, leading Bollywood director and frequent collaborator with Khan, Karan Johar pointed out that "unless they are going to give Shah Rukh a parallel role to Tom Cruise's in a Hollywood film, why should he bother working there?"

"Quite simply," Johar said, "there is no need for him to cross over. He has a strong domestic base and his audience is already bigger than most Hollywood actors'."

When ABC News asked Khan about his prospects in Hollywood, he was more circumspect and modest.

"I don't know how to answer that," he said, "I haven't had any offers to work there. And anyway, they have plenty of their own actors already, they don't need me to come and work there."

Whether Khan is concerned or interested in crossover fame, Bollywood is making inroads into Western countries. Germany now has three magazines devoted to the Hindi film industry, "Bollywood Rapid Eye," "Indien," and "Ishq."

Reminiscing about his most recent trip to Germany, Khan said, "I asked the people there why they watched our movies, without even knowing the language or the culture necessarily."

He got an interesting answer. "One man said ... that German society is so mechanized, that we have a button for every job, but we have no button to help us cry. Bollywood films allow us to do that," Khan said.

Producers of Hindi films are beginning to show an interest in capitalizing on its growing appel. Chopra said, "there is some interest among filmmakers in reaching out to people outside India."

However, directors aren't turning away from their own audiences to build news ones.

"It is great to see people taking interest in our films worldwide," director Johar said. However, he added, "It's not a priority for us to win over new audiences. We are very happy with our audience and our audience numbers."

"Frankly," Chopra said, "Bollywood filmmakers are not going to change what they do best  the songs, the dances, the heightened emotions  in order to get the attention of the West."

Regardless of Western audiences, however, the films are changing, and perhaps no one is as emblematic of this change as Khan.

To Chopra, whose latest book, "King of Bollywood: Shah Rukh Khan," profiles the movie star's impact on the industry and on India, Khan is "the face of industrialized, millennium-era India."

"His films," Chopra told ABC News, "reflect how Bollywood has evolved in the 1990s."

After the 1980s, an era Johar described as "a total assault on aesthetic sensibilities in Bollywood," the 1990s brought something new to the scene.

To begin with, there was a generational shift at work.

Recalling her early days as a journalist covering Hindi films, Chopra said, "when I started working in 1991, the youngest director must have been some 50 years old!"

The Film That Changed Everything
But, in the mid-90s, the success of one film  "Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge" (known in India as DDLJ, and loosely translated as "The Brave-Hearted One Will Take the Bride") a romance set in England and in India  changed all that.

Marking the debut of 23-year-old director, Aditya Chopra (no relation to Anupama Chopra), and starring a young Khan, the film continues to break box office records, celebrating its 600th week at a local cinema in Mumbai in April.

"That film brought a new world into focus," Anupama Chopra said.

"With this film," she said, "we suddenly saw that a 20-something, a kid could make a movie and generate massive revenues at the box office."

"With DDLJ," she concluded, "the people making Hindi movies changed."

DDLJ was one of the first Hindi films to earn huge revenues outside the country, generating hysteria among the Indian diaspora in the United Kingdom.

Johar, who assisted Aditya Chopra on the film, "DDLJ was one of the first Hindi films to combine a Western look, a modern hip-ness, with Indian soul." Quite like Khan himself, the well-educated, secular Muslim boy from Delhi, who broke with convention by marrying a Hindu woman, he is still traditional enough to refuse to enact any kissing scenes in his films.

He started his career with a string of anti-hero performances: an early success showed him throwing a woman off a building in a bid to avenge humiliation by her father.

Today, he is known more for his oeuvre of romantic films  always emotional, usually funny, and occasionally heartbreaking.

To Johar, "the secret of Shah Rukh's appeal to the audience lies more in his off-screen persona than in his on-screen presence. He has a compassion, a vulnerability which pulls people in."

"How else," he continued, "could he have convinced an audience to empathize with him even when he was playing a murderer or a psychopath?"

Khan's own take on his success is more modest.

In an interview with ABC News, he said, "I think I de-mystify stardom to people. I am not like the larger-than-life heroes who dominated Hindi films before me. I am very casual, I remember people telling me to wear suits when I started working in the industry!"

Not all of the advice was so innocuous.

Khan recalled one director, whom he won't name, telling him to underplay his education. "He told me that he wanted to sell me to the public as an illiterate Muslim boy from Jama Masjid in Old Delhi."

Khan refused, and signed five films in his first year.

Since then, he has managed to avoid controversy, remaining unruffled by rumours suggesting that he is in fact gay.

"It doesn't bother me when people write that I am homosexual," he told ABC News.

"Recently they started calling me a metrosexual  I wasn't even sure what that word meant when I heard it for the first time. I looked it up and found out that it has something to do with getting regular manicures and so on  I think the state of my nails pretty much disqualifies me from being one!"

Warming to the subject, he continued, "maybe they say these things because I am not particularly macho. I have always been very comfortable around women, because my father died when I was very young and I spent a lot of time with my mother and sister."

"I am very impressed by how hard women work, and I have made it a point to do films that portray women positively, give them important roles. I worked with some incredible actresses early in my career and realized immediately that they are more talented than me, they work hard, and it's important to give them their due, it's better for the film," he said.

That sensibility is part of the reason Anupama Chopra sees Khan as the flag-bearer for today's Bollywood.

But the actor himself has few such pretensions.

"I am not attached to my legacy. I have never seen a film of mine twice. It's not that I am embarrassed, I am just not interested," he told ABC News.

"The only thing I want," he said, "is to someday make an Indian film which would make an impact in the world, which would go beyond the Indian audience."

For this Bollywood superstar it seems, taking his films to the world is more important than making a career in Hollywood.

Copyright 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

source: http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=3308169

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