Tag: winners

  • Baillie Gifford winner of winners James Shapiro: ‘I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction’

    Baillie Gifford winner of winners James Shapiro: ‘I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction’

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    Serendipity dictated that the American writer and academic James Shapiro received the Baillie Gifford prize for nonfiction’s Winner of Winners award, given to celebrate its 25th year, at a ceremony in Edinburgh. In his teens and early 20s, Shapiro tells me as we talk over Zoom the morning after his victory, he would often hitchhike from London to the Edinburgh festival as part of his immersion in the plays of Shakespeare. This period in his life sowed the ground for his acclaimed book, 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare, first published in 2006. He was, he explains, recovering from the “awful experience” of studying the playwright in middle school; every summer for several years, he would save up enough money to come to the UK on a Freddie Laker plane, “where you could fly from New York to London for $100 round trip and sleep in church basements and for 50p see spectacular productions”.

    In London, Stratford and Edinburgh, he’d see 25 plays in as many days, “and they’re all tattooed inside my skull to this day. The greatest one I saw was Richard Eyre’s Hamlet at the Royal Court in 1980 or so. Richard wrote me a note this morning, and it was so moving to me because that’s where it came from, seeing productions like his.”

    Shapiro is passionate about viewing Shakespeare through the lens of performance, the better to understand how central political and social context is to his work. He is currently advising on Tony Award-winning director Kenny Leon’s production of Hamlet for the Public Theater in New York, set in a post-Covid 2021 and starring Ato Blankson-Wood as the prince. It is, says Shapiro, “a Hamlet that speaks to the now. And I have the street cred, as we say in Brooklyn, to tell Shakespeare purists, whatever that means, that these plays have always spoken to the moment. And to think that what Olivier did or Kenneth Branagh for that matter is where Shakespeare stops, is to be as unShakespearean in one’s thinking about Shakespeare as possible.”

    James Shapiro with his Baillie Gifford winning book 1599.
    James Shapiro with his Baillie Gifford winning book 1599. Photograph: The Baillie Gifford Prize

    His vision for 1599, a microscopic look at the critical year in Shakespeare’s life when he was working on Henry V, Julius Caesar, As You Like It and the first draft of Hamlet, was not initially endorsed. His application for a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in the US in the late 1980s was turned down twice, he remembers. “I wasn’t discouraged by that. I just felt they didn’t understand that I was trying to do something different.” The “something different” was to understand the immense anxieties of the age: the country poised on the brink of invading Ireland with a 16,000-strong force; the fear that Elizabeth I’s reign was approaching its end with no clear successor in sight; the strengthening possibility of another Spanish Armada. It’s no coincidence, says Shapiro, that Hamlet opens with men on the ramparts, nervously watching for hostile forces.

    He was also frustrated with an academic orthodoxy that relied on speculation and anecdote, as well as an outmoded concept of the playwright: “The Shakespeare that existed when I was writing that book was still very influenced by Coleridge’s sense that Shakespeare was from another planet, or Ben Jonson’s line: he was not of an age but for all time. And that just struck me as completely wrong.” Instead, Shapiro wanted to ground Shakespeare in reality, finding out what the weather was each day of that single year, who he met, where he travelled.

    Shapiro is also a judge on this year’s Booker prize for fiction, and he is fascinating on the distinction between his work and that of novelists. He admires “the way that creative minds can tease out things that are less visible to those of us who deal in facts”. How does he feel about historical novelists – indeed, about a work such as Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, a reimagining of Shakespeare’s family that has just been adapted for stage by the RSC?

    He reveres Hilary Mantel, who was, he says, “a great historian, as well as a great novelist.” And he is, he replies, very happy for O’Farrell: “She deserves great success for that and for her more recent book, but it’s not a book that I can read comfortably, because it’s fiction.”

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    “I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction,” he adds. “I think that the danger of fiction is to sentimentalise. So that’s one of the things that I’m extremely careful as a Shakespearean not to do. On the other hand, I understand how deeply people want to connect with Shakespeare the man, with Anne Hathaway, with Judith Shakespeare: they lived, they died, their internal lives went largely unrecorded. And it takes a talented writer to bring that to life. But that’s not the stuff that I do. I don’t write that; but somebody needs to.”

    His next work is called Playbook, and will focus on America’s Federal Theatre Project of the 1930s, a progressive attempt to bring drama to mass audiences that was targeted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Then, as now, and as in the 16th century, theatre is powerful, and Shapiro intends to do everything he can to defend it.

    • 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare by James Shapiro (Faber & Faber, £14.99). To support The Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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    #Baillie #Gifford #winner #winners #James #Shapiro #draw #sharp #line #fiction #nonfiction
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • NFL draft 2023 winners: Texans and Eagles make all the right moves

    NFL draft 2023 winners: Texans and Eagles make all the right moves

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    After months of rumor and speculation, Thursday night’s first round of the NFL draft featured less chaos than anticipated. There were few eyebrow-scorching picks and, instead, a steady stream of sensible selections.

    Let’s look at some of the winners from the opening night.

    Seattle Seahawks

    Think about this: 12 months ago, John Schneider and Pete Carroll, Seattle’s chief decision-makers, were at a crossroads. They were almost run out of town by a Russell Wilson-led revolt. Instead, they traded the quarterback to the Broncos, receiving a bounty of draft picks in return. Wilson proceeded to set fire to everything in his sight in Denver. Then the pair crushed last year’s draft, selecting six starters from nine picks, including Charles Cross, Abraham Lucas, Tariq Woolen and Kenneth Walker III, all budding stars at their positions. Oh, and there was the small matter of them finding Geno Smith on the quarterback scrap heap and resurrecting his career.

    Now this. On Thursday night they were able to land the top cornerback prospect in the class and the top receiving prospect, grabbing Illinois’ Devon Witherspoon with the fifth overall pick and Ohio State’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba at No 20. Witherspoon is a quintessential Carroll corner: He’s quick, feisty, and plays with an aggressiveness bordering on violence. Smith-Njigba will serve as the perfect complement to the DK Metcalf-Tyler Lockett receiving duo.

    In the span of a year, Carroll has gone from hearing chatter that he should retire to overhauling the Seahawks roster. What looked like a long rebuild in the wake of the Wilson trade now looks like one of the most talented, youthful rosters in the craptastic NFC.

    Questions about whether Smith is a viable long-term option at quarterback will linger. But the rest of the Seahawks roster is now set up for sustained success.

    Houston Texans

    Heading into draft night, there were whispers of a split in the Texans’ camp. Did the owner want to select a quarterback? What about DeMeco Ryans, the new head coach, a defense-first guy? Did he want the top defensive player on the board? What would Nick Caserio, the Texans’ GM and the man stuck in the middle, do?

    First-round draft selections

    How about grabbing them both! Caserio deserves credit. He spent two months, and most of the last two weeks, painting himself out to be a doofus. The rumor mill had the Texans down to pass on a quarterback with the second overall pick. Then it had them taking Kentucky’s Will Levis, who the league decided was not worthy of a first-round selection at all. And then it had them opting for Tyree Wilson ahead of Will Anderson, the Alabama star who was the top defensive player according to most analysts.

    Wrong. Caserio was targeting a quarterback and Anderson. With the second pick, he selected the franchise’s quarterback of the future: Ohio State’s CJ Stroud. Of all the quarterback prospects, Stroud was the cleanest. He doesn’t quite have the pizzazz of Bryce Young, Anthony Richardson, or even Levis (though it’s there in spurts), but he does all of the stuff that really matters, that adds up to consistency, efficiency and wins at the highest level.

    Houston weren’t done there. They dealt the 12th pick in the draft and a first-round pick in next year’s draft with the Cardinals to grab the third choice in the draft, selecting Anderson, the top edge-defender on the majority of draft boards – and a linchpin for the team’s new-look defense.

    The Texans’ roster is still a long, long way from being good enough to compete for a division title. But by adding Stroud and Anderson they now have cornerstones on either side of the ball.

    Philadelphia Eagles

    At what point does Roger Goodell just walk to the podium and announce “‘I am vetoing the Eagles pick. Howie Roseman can’t keep getting away with this”?

    So long as Goodell suppresses his inner Jessie Pinkman, Roseman, the Eagles general manager, will continue to lord over the draft process.

    I mean, seriously? How? First of all, the Eagles’ made the aggressive move to jump up a spot to grab Georgia defensive lineman Jalen Carter, for the lowly price of a fourth-round pick.

    Carter was one of the most biggest questions in the draft. He was the finest lineman on the best defense in football for two straight years. On Georgia’s historic 2021 unit – four of whom now play for the Eagles! – he was the standout player. Had he entered the draft last season, he would have been a favorite to go first overall.

    Off-the-field issues and questions about his football character gave some teams reservations. On the field, there were no questions. He is, in essence, Thanos on a football field: Too big, too quick, too strong for any player to contain him.

    Roseman took a gamble on the upside. The Eagles have one of the two most talented rosters in the NFC. With Jalen Hurts locked in a long-term deal at quarterback, they expect to contend for titles for the next season five years, at least. They won’t be drafting anywhere near the Top 10 again in the near future barring, an injury to their star quarterback. Roseman used the rare opportunity to grab a blue-chip prospect at the top of the draft, who just so happens to line up at the team’s biggest position of need and may be the most gifted player in the entire class.

    And that wasn’t all. Nolan Smith, Carter’s teammate at Georgia, slipped all the way from a top-10 projection to the Eagles’ second first-round selection with the 30th. It was the steal of the night, and will add another weapon to the Eagles’ formidable defensive line. Smith is the most explosive get-off-and-go pass-rusher in the class, who is a little shorter and a hair lighter than the NFL prototype.

    This offseason, the NFL’s leader in pressures and sacks a year ago lost one stud (Javon Hargrave) along their defensive line and gained two potential stars. Good luck, everyone else.

    Running backs

    Call it a comeback. The Falcons selected Texas running back Bijan Robinson with the eighth overall pick before the Lions offered the shocker of the night, tabbing Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs at No 12. Robinson, at least, was expected to go in the Top 10. But Gibbs was considered by many to be a fringe first-rounder who could sneak into the 20s.

    It’s the first time a running back has been drafted in the Top 20 since Saquon Barkley in 2018. And on Thursday two! And they both went before any receiver.

    Will the football nerds ever recover? The notion that running backs don’t matter has become a staple of the data-driven movement within the NFL. It has some validity. In certain schemes, the running back is the most interchangeable position on the field – but only in those particular schemes. And the position does carry an outsized injury risk, which always makes a first-round investment risky.

    The modern history of selecting first-round running backs has been iffy. Often, teams wind up with good players, but get forced into either letting them walk or offering contracts that become an burden on their salary cap.

    Neither Robinson nor Gibbs are pure runners, though. They’re matchup pieces, offensive weapons who can flex across the formation and make an impact in the passing game as receivers.

    The NFL is a matchup league. Plenty of oxygen is spent on Xs and Os, but most teams in the NFL run the same stuff. It’s about having pieces that can create matchup chaos or who have the individual skills to separate one-on-one. The league has been really creative with how its uses fungible players who can move from the backfield to a receiver spot, whether that’s a running back pushing out or a receiver like Deebo Samuel moving into the backfield.

    Old-school, downhill, thumping running backs may not matter. They may be interchangeable. But talented, near-positionless offensive pieces are not.

    Buffalo Bills

    Adding tight end Dalton Kincaid feels a little like putting a hat on a hat for the Bills. They already have Dawson Knox, a receiver-first tight end with a good two-man rapport with quarterback Josh Allen.

    The Bills didn’t need Kincaid. But his selection feels like a signifier of something broader. It’s clear the Bills have hit on an idea: If they can’t slow and stop the Chiefs (or Bengals) offense in January, they’re going to have to outscore them.

    It’s never a bad idea to add more pieces around Allen. By the end of last season, the Bills’ offense looked stale. It relied too much on Allen and heroball. They’ll have time over the next two days to add extra pieces on the offensive line and defense, a necessity heading into next season. But grabbing an athletic matchup piece who can function, ostensibly, as a big receiver over the middle of the field will bring fresh ideas to an offense that’s in need of some.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Who won at Filmfare Awards 2023? See complete winners’ list

    Who won at Filmfare Awards 2023? See complete winners’ list

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    Mumbai: Filmfare Awards is one of the oldest and most prominent film events dedicated to Hindi film industry. The awards were first introduced in 1954 and on Thursday it marked its 68th edition. The latest event saw many young artistes fulfilling their dreams of winning the iconic Black Lady.

    From Alia Bhatt clinching the Best Actress trophy to Rajkummar Rao winning the Best Actor award, Filmfare Awards 2023 was mainly dominated by ‘Gangubai Kathiawadi’ and ‘Badhai Do’.

    Here is the complete winners list:

    MS Education Academy

    Best Film: Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Film (Critics’): Badhaai Do

    Best Actor in a Leading Role (Male): Rajkummar Rao for Badhaai Do

    Best Actor in a Leading Role (Female): Alia Bhatt for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Actor (Critics’): Sanjay Mishra for Vadh

    Best Actress (Critics’): Bhumi Pednekar for Badhaai Do and Tabu for Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2

    Best Director: Sanjay Leela Bhansali for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Director: Sanjay Leela Bhansali for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Male): Anil Kapoor for Jug Jugg Jeeyo

    Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Female): Sheeba Chaddha for Badhaai Do

    Best Music Album: Pritam for Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Dialogue: Prakash Kapadia and Utkarshini Vashishtha for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Screenplay: Akshat Ghildial, Suman Adhikary and Harshavardhan Kulkarni for Badhaai Do

    Best Story: Akshat Ghildial and Suman Adhikary for Badhaai Do

    Best Debut (Male): Ankush Gedam for Jhund

    Best Debut (Female): Andrea Kevichusa for Anek

    Best Debut Director: Jaspal Singh Sandhu and Rajeev Barnwal for Vadh

    Lifetime Achievement Award: Prem Chopra

    Best Music Album: Pritam for Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Lyrics: Amitabh Bhattacharya for Kesariya from Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Playback Singer (Male): Arijit Singh for Kesariya from Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Playback Singer (Female): Kavita Seth for Rangisari from Jug Jugg Jeeyo

    RD Burman Award for Upcoming Music Talent: Jahnvi Shrimankar for Dholida from Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best VFX: DNEG and Redefine for Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Editing: Ninad Khanolkar for An Action Hero

    Best Costume Design: Sheetal Sharma for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Production Design: Subrata Chakraborty and Amit Ray for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Sound Design: Bishwadeep Dipak Chatterjee for Brahmastra: Part One – Shiva

    Best Background Score: Sanchit Balhara and Ankit Balhara for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Choreography: Kruti Mahesh for Dholida from Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Cinematography: Sudeep Chatterjee for Gangubai Kathiawadi

    Best Action: Parvez Shaikh for Vikram Vedha

    The gala was hosted by superstar Salman Khan, Maniesh Paul and Ayushmann Khurrana.

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    #won #Filmfare #Awards #complete #winners #list

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 2023 Whitley awards for conservation – the winners in pictures

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    The 30th edition of the ‘Green Oscars’ was held at the Royal Geographical Society in London this week, celebrating seven grassroots conservationists identified after a worldwide search for locally led solutions to the global biodiversity and climate crises

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    #Whitley #awards #conservation #winners #pictures
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Kangana has her own list of ‘deserving’ winners before ‘nepo mafia’ takes ‘everyone ka haq’

    Kangana has her own list of ‘deserving’ winners before ‘nepo mafia’ takes ‘everyone ka haq’

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    Mumbai: After Ranbir Kapoor, Alia Bhatt and Varun Dhawan were named for major honours at the Dadasaheb Phalke International Film Festival, actress Kangana Ranaut objected to the same on her social media.

    She posted her own list of “deserving” winners and claimed that the ‘nepo mafia snatches everyone’s right.

    Kangana took to Instagram Stories and shared her own list of winners.

    k1 1

    She wrote, “Awards season is here before nepo mafia snatches every one ka haq (right) let me clarify this year’s Best actor – Rishab Shetty (Kantara) Best Actress- Mrunal Thakur (Sita Ramam) Best film – Kantara Best director- SS Rajamouli (RRR) Best supporting actor – Anupam Kher (Kashmir Files) Best supporting actress- Tabu (Bhool Bhulaiya).”

    “Yeh log jayein ya nahi awards inhi ke hain (the awards belong to them no matter they attend them or not)… filmi awards have no authenticity, after I finish work here, I will make a proper list of all those I feel are deserving… stay tuned … thanks.”

    She added: “Life of nepo insects use parents name and contacts, do papa ji chaploosi to get work, agar koi self made aaye uska career sabotage kardo, if someone anyone, anyhow survives and complains about continues harassment they face, unko bikau mafia PR se jealous or mad bolke dismiss our discredit kardo…”

    “Yehi, yehi toh tumhari kartootein hain that I am determined now to destroy you all… one can’t just indulge in the beauty of life when there is so much evil around… Shrimad Bhagwat Geeta says destroying evil is the prime goal of Dharma.”

    On Monday, Ranbir Kapoor and Alia Bhatt won the Best Actor and Best Actress award at the Film Festival.

    Alia was named for the honour for her spectacular performance in ‘Gangubai Kathiawadi’, Ranbir was feted with the award for playing the lead in ‘Brahmastra Part One: Shiva’.

    Varun Dhawan also won the Critics Best Actor award for his performance in the film ‘Bhediya’.

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    #Kangana #list #deserving #winners #nepo #mafia #takes #haq

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Khelo India Winter Games concludes at Gulmarg; Nisith Pramanik distributes medals among winners

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    J&K transitioned into new era of prosperity, J&K players making nation proud: MoS

    J&K tops medal tally, bagging 26 Gold, 25 Silver, 25 Bronze medals

    Gulmarg, Feb 14: Five days National Event of 3rd edition of Khelo India concluded today at Gulmarg with a grand function attended by over two thousand participants including players, tourists and officials of different departments.

    Union Minister of State for Home Affairs and Youth Affairs & Sports, Nisith Pramanik, was the chief guest on the occasion of the concluding ceremony.

    Joint Secretary, Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports, Prem Kumar Jha; Secretary Youth Services & Sports and Tourism, Sarmad Hafeez; Secretary J&K Sports Council Nuzhat Gul; CEO, Gulmarg Development Authority besides Major General RK Sing and President Winter Games Rouf Trumboo, Officers of line departments, players and tourists were present on the occasion 

    Speaking on the occasion, the Nisith Pramanik remarked that the 3rd Khelo India Winter Games held at Gulmarg was a major event compared to the previous events. He said that the next event would be even bigger event which would be compared with other international events.

    He expressed gratitude to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Minister Anurag Thakur and Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha for the developing sports infrastructure in J&K which helps youth to excel in different sports.

    Union Minister said that players such as Sarfaraz Ahmad and Arif Khan who played in the winter Olympics made our nation proud.

    “In the last two years the government developed Indoor Stadium in every district of Jammu and Kashmir besides play grounds in every panchayat’, he said and underlined that J&K has transitioned into a new era of prosperity.

    While distributing medals among the winners of Junior Girls Snow Shoe sport and Sprint boys, Nisith Pramanik expressed pleasure over the exemplary performance of J&K players who bagged gold in these competitions.

    He thanked officials of various departments associated with Khelo India winter games including J&K Sports Council, Tourism department, Gulmarg Development Authority, Gulmarg Cable Car Corporation, hoteliers and Winter Games Association for smooth and successful organisation of the entire event.

    Sarmad Hafeez while speaking on the occasion thanked GoI for awarding the 3rd Khelo India winter games and termed the five days programme as a snow festival in wonder land of Gulmarg and said that Gulmarg is a capital of winter sports of the country.

    While presenting vote of thanks, Nuzhat Gul expressed gratitude to Union Minister Anurag Thakur and Lieutenant Governor for their support in organising the huge event and also thanked Chief Guest of the function besides officers of line departments for their cooperation in organising the national event and concluding it successfully.

    J&K topped the medal tally, bagging 26 Gold medals, 25 silver medals, 25 Bronze medals followed by Maharashtra with 13 gold, 8 silver and 6 bronze medals. The third position was achieved by Himachal Pradesh 10 Gold, 14 Silver and 7 Bronze while Army scored 10 gold, 10 silver and 9 bronze medals.

    medals received by Haryana are 8,10,13, Ladakh 7,3,7, Uttrakhand 6,6,4, Tamil Nadu 6,5,3, Karnataka 5,2,7, Gujarat 4,1,1, Delhi 3,3,6, ITBP 2,2,3, Telangana 2,1,3, HAWS 2,1,1, AIPSCB 1,0,0 and Kerala 1,0,0.(GNS)

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    #Khelo #India #Winter #Games #concludes #Gulmarg #Nisith #Pramanik #distributes #medals #among #winners

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Dancing cats, peeping owls and a field of fire: Sony World photography national winners – in pictures

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    Drunken festivalgoers, hot springs and Japanese photo booths all feature in this year’s list of national winners from across 55 different countries

    Continue reading…

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    #Dancing #cats #peeping #owls #field #fire #Sony #World #photography #national #winners #pictures
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Season 1 to 15: Look at Bigg Boss Winners and their prize money

    Season 1 to 15: Look at Bigg Boss Winners and their prize money

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    Hyderabad: Bigg Boss 16, that had kicked started with a bang 4 months ago, is finally coming to an end now. The much-awaited grand finale is scheduled to take place on February 11 and 12. 

    With its finale just around the corner, Bigg Boss is now getting a lot of attention in the reality show world, and fans are waiting to see who will be crowned the winner. There is both excitement and nervousness about who will take home the trophy.

    Priyanka Chahar Choudhary, Shiv Thakare, MC Stan, Archana Gautam, and Shalin Bhanot are the top five finalists in the battle.

    Many popular names of the TV and Film industry won Bigg Boss and took home hefty cash prize along with the coveted prize money. While the season one winner Rahul Roy won Rs 1 crore, Bigg Boss 15 winner Tejasswi Prakash took home Rs 25L only. 

    This year, the prize money is lesser than 15th seasom, it is Rs 21.85L only. Over the years, the prize money saw a nosedive from season 1 to 16.

    Let us take you back to the previous seasons and brush your memory on winners and their prize money.

    Bigg Boss 1  – Rahul Roy — His prize money was Rs 1 Crore 

    image 16 1

    Bigg Boss 2  – Ashutosh Kaushik — His prize money was Rs 1 Crore 

    image 17

    Bigg Boss 3  – Vindu Dara Singh — His prize money was Rs 1 Crore

    image 17 1

    Bigg Boss 4  – Shweta Tiwari — Her prize money was Rs 1 Crore 

    image 17 2

    Bigg Boss 5 – Juhi Parmar — Her prize money was Rs 1 Crore

    image 18 1

    Bigg Boss 6 – Urvashi Dholakia — Her prize money was Rs 50 Lakh  

    image 18 2

    Bigg Boss 7  – Gauhar Khan — Her prize money was Rs 50 Lakh 

    image 19

    Bigg Boss 8  – Gautam Gulati — His prize money was Rs 50 Lakh 

    image 19 1

    Bigg Boss 9  – Prince Narula — His prize money was Rs 50 Lakh

    image 20

    Bigg Boss 10  – Manveer Gurjar — His prize money was Rs 50 Lakh 

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    Bigg Boss 11  – Shilpa Shinde — Her prize money was Rs 50 Lakh 

    image 21

    Bigg Boss 12  – Dipika Kakar — Her prize money was Rs 30 Lakh 

    image 21 1

    Bigg Boss 13  – Sidharth Shukla — His prize money was Rs 50 Lakh 

    image 22

    Bigg Boss 14 – Rubina Dilaik — Her prize money was Rs 36 Lakh 

    image 22 1

    Bigg Boss 15  – Tejasswi Prakash — Her prize money was Rs 25 Lakh

    image 23
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    #Season #Bigg #Boss #Winners #prize #money

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Raveena Tandon, Vani Jairam, Suman Kalyanpur among Padma winners

    Raveena Tandon, Vani Jairam, Suman Kalyanpur among Padma winners

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    New Delhi: Actress Raveena Tandon, and singers Vani Jairam and Suman Kalyanpur were among those conferred Padma Awards on the occasion of Republic Day 2023.

    Among the nine Padma Bhushan winners were Vani Jairam and Suman Kalyanpur.

    The 91 Padma Shri awardees include M.M. Keeravaani, composer of “RRR” song “Natu Natu”, which is in contention for the Best Original Song in this year’s Oscars, and Bollywood actress Raveena Tandon.

    The awards recognise outstanding contributions are various disciplines/fields of activities – art, social work, public affairs, science and engineering, trade and industry, medicine, literature and education, sports, civil service, etc.

    Announced on the occasion of Republic Day every year, the awards are conferred by the President at ceremonial functions held at Rashtrapati Bhawan, usually around March/ April every year.

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    #Raveena #Tandon #Vani #Jairam #Suman #Kalyanpur #among #Padma #winners

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )