There’s an old show business adage, attributed to the early Hollywood
comic W.C. Fields, that says “never work with children or animals.”
What Fields meant is that kids and animals are scene stealers and
completely unpredictable.
Actor Salman Khan and his fellow producers cheerfully and thoroughly ignored this advice when they made the hit Bollywood melodrama Bajrangi Bhaijaan. At various points in the film Khan shares the screen with sheep, camels, goats, chickens (cooked ones, anyway), and one very human little girl.
And it’s a good thing, too. The girl in question, 7 year-old actress Harshaali Malhotra, nicely holds her own acting in numerous scenes opposite India’s superstar Khan, and manages to steal quite a few scenes while she’s at it.
Bajrangi Bhaijaan tells the story of a simple, religiously devout Indian man played by Khan who promises to reunite a mute Pakistani girl (Malhotra) with her parents. At its heart it is a story about love and devotion, though it also carries a strong message about the need for reconciliation between India and Pakistan. The contrast between the Indian and Pakistani cultures is often played for laughs, and is nicely captured in Khan’s character’s bewildered reactions to the young girl’s preferences in food and in sports teams. The vast differences between the two characters are underscored by the young girl’s worldly, common sense reactions—convincingly played by Harshaali—to the naïve Indian’s good-natured honesty, which often gets the pair into trouble.
India’s critics and film pundits have universally cheered the bright-eyed cherub’s winning performance. “India Today” proclaimed: “Harshaali Malhotra, not Salman Khan, is the real star of Bajrangi Bhaijaan.”
The Hindustan Times effuses: “The biggest weapon in director Kabir’s artillery is the angelic Harshaali Malhotra. She’s refreshinglingly unaffected. She seems unfazed by Salman. Harshaali has a heart-breaking innocence. For the viewer, it’s love at first sight.”
And Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan singled out Harshaali in his praise for the film with this tweet: ”That little girl is too too good! Just steals your heart!”
Born in Mumbai in 2008, Harshaali was only 6 when she filmed Bajrangi Bhaijaan, but she had already racked up a long list of credits in TV series and commercials. She last appeared on television with actress Bhagyashree Patwardhan in her comeback show Laut Aao Trish. She has acted in series such as Qubool Hai (2014) and Jodha Akbar and Savdhaan India, and appeared in TV commercials and print ads for brands including Fair & Lovely, Pears, Haier, HDFC Bank and Horlicks.
Salman Khan has reported that when he first met the then 6 year-old Harshaali she asked him, apparently without irony, whether he was going to make her a superstar. Khan was at a loss for words at the time, astonished by the little girl’s adult-sized ambition. Now, after the film’s hugely successful opening week, Khan can honestly answer her question by saying, “you’re well on your way, Harshaali.”
More News,
Surprise Surprise! Well no surprises there, this kid is the new peeve in town. Yes, we get it, she’s like all those kids who love to have a sibling younger to them but she takes her fixation to her brother to a whole new level & oh boy! Even though her younger brother is just an infant, I am worried about him because he doesn’t know he has a sister who’s obsessed with him *creeps*. As funny as it gets, there have been a couple of episodes that have ‘only’ revolved around how Saman’s parents are going to fetch a bhai for her & in the end, her aunty in fact her papa’s dusri biwi swooped in to provide her with one. I think when the writer had no idea about how to move the story forward; she tried to use a younger character not worrying an ounce about how annoying she will get for the viewers. The writer thought by using Saman, she will cute her way into our minds but she ended up annoying us beyond our imagination. Yes, the kid playing the role of Saman is pretty but then her character is any drama-watcher’s nightmare.
Actor Salman Khan and his fellow producers cheerfully and thoroughly ignored this advice when they made the hit Bollywood melodrama Bajrangi Bhaijaan. At various points in the film Khan shares the screen with sheep, camels, goats, chickens (cooked ones, anyway), and one very human little girl.
And it’s a good thing, too. The girl in question, 7 year-old actress Harshaali Malhotra, nicely holds her own acting in numerous scenes opposite India’s superstar Khan, and manages to steal quite a few scenes while she’s at it.
Bajrangi Bhaijaan tells the story of a simple, religiously devout Indian man played by Khan who promises to reunite a mute Pakistani girl (Malhotra) with her parents. At its heart it is a story about love and devotion, though it also carries a strong message about the need for reconciliation between India and Pakistan. The contrast between the Indian and Pakistani cultures is often played for laughs, and is nicely captured in Khan’s character’s bewildered reactions to the young girl’s preferences in food and in sports teams. The vast differences between the two characters are underscored by the young girl’s worldly, common sense reactions—convincingly played by Harshaali—to the naïve Indian’s good-natured honesty, which often gets the pair into trouble.
India’s critics and film pundits have universally cheered the bright-eyed cherub’s winning performance. “India Today” proclaimed: “Harshaali Malhotra, not Salman Khan, is the real star of Bajrangi Bhaijaan.”
The Hindustan Times effuses: “The biggest weapon in director Kabir’s artillery is the angelic Harshaali Malhotra. She’s refreshinglingly unaffected. She seems unfazed by Salman. Harshaali has a heart-breaking innocence. For the viewer, it’s love at first sight.”
And Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan singled out Harshaali in his praise for the film with this tweet: ”That little girl is too too good! Just steals your heart!”
Born in Mumbai in 2008, Harshaali was only 6 when she filmed Bajrangi Bhaijaan, but she had already racked up a long list of credits in TV series and commercials. She last appeared on television with actress Bhagyashree Patwardhan in her comeback show Laut Aao Trish. She has acted in series such as Qubool Hai (2014) and Jodha Akbar and Savdhaan India, and appeared in TV commercials and print ads for brands including Fair & Lovely, Pears, Haier, HDFC Bank and Horlicks.
Salman Khan has reported that when he first met the then 6 year-old Harshaali she asked him, apparently without irony, whether he was going to make her a superstar. Khan was at a loss for words at the time, astonished by the little girl’s adult-sized ambition. Now, after the film’s hugely successful opening week, Khan can honestly answer her question by saying, “you’re well on your way, Harshaali.”
More News,
Surprise Surprise! Well no surprises there, this kid is the new peeve in town. Yes, we get it, she’s like all those kids who love to have a sibling younger to them but she takes her fixation to her brother to a whole new level & oh boy! Even though her younger brother is just an infant, I am worried about him because he doesn’t know he has a sister who’s obsessed with him *creeps*. As funny as it gets, there have been a couple of episodes that have ‘only’ revolved around how Saman’s parents are going to fetch a bhai for her & in the end, her aunty in fact her papa’s dusri biwi swooped in to provide her with one. I think when the writer had no idea about how to move the story forward; she tried to use a younger character not worrying an ounce about how annoying she will get for the viewers. The writer thought by using Saman, she will cute her way into our minds but she ended up annoying us beyond our imagination. Yes, the kid playing the role of Saman is pretty but then her character is any drama-watcher’s nightmare.
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