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Betty White, America’s Sweetheart, Was an Ageless TV Star

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Betty White was the wicked sweetheart of America. She enchanted millions of viewers decade after decade with an innocent grin and a naughty joke, ascending from $50-a-week to an ageless superstar who admonished her admirers, “Don’t attempt to remain young. “All you have to do is open your mind.”

Even in her 90s, she enjoyed a martini before dinner, a monthly poker session, and a wide-eyed curiosity in the world around her, defying time and expectations. “There are so many things I’ll never know about because I won’t live long enough to find out about,” she claimed.

The fact that she only required four hours of sleep per night helped.

White, who died two weeks before her 99th birthday, began her career in television while it was still in its infancy and never lost touch.

Her sassy, can-do attitude established her as a television staple. Her mix of sweetness and spice gave life to a slew of oddball characters in shows ranging from the sitcom “Life With Elizabeth” in the early 1950s to man-crazy TV hostess Sue Ann on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in the 1970s, from loopy housemate Rose Nylund in “The Golden Girls” in the 1980s to the courtroom drama “Boston Legal” from 2004 to 2008.

But all of it was just a warm-up for even greater stardom in the new millennium when White’s stardom blossomed in a way it had never erupted before, thanks to public desire.

She played an energy-sapping male getting tackled during a backlot football game in a Snickers commercial that aired during the 2010 Super Bowl telecast.

“Mike, you’re acting like Betty White out there,” one of his pals mocked. “That’s not what your girlfriend said!” retorted White, who had been knocked down on the ground and was coated in dirt.

The viral video sparked a Facebook campaign called “Betty White to Host SNL (please?)!” that resulted in her co-hosting “Saturday Night Live” in a much-watched, much-applauded episode on Mother’s Day weekend, with a half-million followers. She earned her sixth Emmy for her performance.

A month later, TV Land debuted “Hot In Cleveland,” its first original scripted series, starring Valerie Bertinelli, Jane Leeves, and Wendie Malick as three show-biz veterans who go to Cleveland to escape Hollywood’s youth obsession. They settle into a house run by an elderly Polish widow, played by White, who was only supposed to appear in the pilot episode.

White, on the other hand, did her thing once more. Elka Ostrovsky, a salty character, became a pivotal figure in the series, which was an instant hit.

After that, members of The Associated Press elected her Entertainer of the Year. “It’s ludicrous,” White laughed at the honour, mockingly.

“They haven’t figured me out yet, and I pray they don’t.”

White’s fame grew to the point where her 90th birthday became a national event, with NBC airing “Betty White’s 90th Birthday Party” as a star-studded prime-time special in 2012. She worked well into her 90s, notably as one of the voices for the toys in “Toy Story 4,” including “Bitey White.”

White’s ability to be raunchy or mischievous but still exuding niceness was one of the things that made her look eternally young.

Her characters’ unusually salty vocabulary was noticeable in the horror spoof “Lake Placid” and the comedy “The Proposal.” On “Boston Legal,” her character Catherine Piper killed a man with a skillet.

In 1973, she came close to not being cast as “Happy Homemaker” Sue Ann Nivens in “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” Moore and Moore’s then-husband, producer Grant Tinker, were good friends of her and her husband, Allen Ludden. It was afraid that if White did not succeed on the show, which was already a tremendous success, it would be embarrassing for all four of them.

However, CBS casting director Ethel Winant believed White to be the obvious option. Sue Ann’s character was originally intended to be a one-shot appearance, but it remained until Moore cancelled the series in 1977.

“She’s kind of a creep,” Sue Ann said sweetly, “but she’s got a pool,” White made hilarious hay as Sue Ann with a statement stating that she planned to spend Christmas with a sister in Florida: “She’s kind of a creep,” Sue Ann noted sweetly, “but she’s got a pool.”

She won two Emmys for her performance as a supporting actress in a comedy series for the part.

“The Golden Girls,” starring Bea Arthur, Rue McClanahan, and Estelle Getty, premiered on NBC in 1985.

In a youth-obsessed industry, its ensemble of mature actors playing single ladies in Miami retirement was a risk, but it paid off with a strong hit that lasted until 1992.

Rose was played by White, who was a sweet, dim-bulb widow who managed to misjudge the majority of situations. Her off-the-wall tales of her childhood in the mythical rural village of St. Olaf, Minnesota, drove her housemates insane.

Rose, for example, explained the yearly talent show, which featured a herring juggling act:

Her friends were suspicious. “Someone actually juggled herring?”

“No!” Rose reprimanded them. “The juggling was done by the herring: tiny little Ginseng knives.”

She received another Emmy for the role, which she returned in a short-lived sequel called “The Golden Palace.”

“Mama’s Family,” in which she played Vicki Lawrence’s irascible mother; “Just Men,” a game show in which women attempted to guess answers to questions directed at male celebrities; and “Ladies Man,” in which she played Alfred Molina’s catty mother.

She received a Daytime Emmy for “Just Men,” and a fourth prime-time Emmy in 1996 for a guest appearance on “The John Larroquette Show.”

She also starred in a number of miniseries and television films, including Otto Preminger’s 1962 Capitol Hill drama “Advice and Consent,” in which she played a U.S. senator.

Betty Marion White was born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1922, and relocated to Los Angeles as a youngster.

She told The Associated Press in 2015, “I’m an only kid, and I had a mother and father who never drew a straight line: They just thought funny.” “We’d sit at the breakfast table for a while and then start kicking stuff around.” My father worked as a salesman and was always full of jokes when he got home. ‘Sweetheart, you may take THAT one to school,’ he’d remark. ′However, I would not accept THIS one.′ “We had a fantastic experience.”

Her childhood dream was to be a writer, and she created her elementary school graduation play, in which she played a major part.

Her desire shifted to acting at Beverly Hills High School, and she appeared in several school productions. Her parents had hoped she would attend college, but instead, she worked in a small theatre group and appeared in radio dramas in minor roles.

Then, in 1949, she was cast in a local midday TV show featuring Al Jarvis, Los Angeles’ most famous radio jockey.

She was given the advice to start lying about her age at that point.

In a 2011 interview with The Associated Press, she observed, “We are so age-conscious in this society.” “It’s ridiculous, but that’s how we are.” ‘Knock four years off right now,’ I was informed. ‘Down the road, you’ll be thanking yourself.’ I was born in the year 1922. ‘I must constantly remember that I was born in 1926,’ I reasoned. But then I’d have to figure out the math. Finally, I decided to abandon the project.”

White was an obvious choice for the new media. With a dimpled, eye-crinkling smile, she was bright, attractive, and charming. “Betty White Hailed as TV’s Busiest Gal,” read a headline in the Los Angeles Times in 1951.

“I did that show for 412 years, 512 hours a day, six days a week,” she said in 1975. Jarvis was replaced by actor Eddie Albert, and she took over the show when he departed to Europe for the film “Roman Holiday.”

“Life With Elizabeth,” a syndicated series based on a sketch she did with Jarvis, won White her first Emmy. She used to do daytime interviews on “The Betty White Show,” nighttime filming, and frequent appearances on late-night talk shows. She has also performed in advertisements and narrated the Pasadena Rose Parade in the New Year.

She was a welcome guest on “I’ve Got a Secret,” “To Tell the Truth,” “What’s My Line,” and other game shows, all the way up to the 2008 “Million Dollar Password,” which revived the game once hosted by Ludden, whom she had met as a contestant on the original “Password,” with her glib tongue and quick responses cultivated during the Jarvis years.

That was in 1961, and the following year, while travelling in summer theatre during television’s off-season, she co-starred in the comedy “Critic’s Choice” with Ludden, who was by then a widower with three children.

White’s determination faded after marriage in the late 1940s when she claimed to be “militantly unmarried.”

In 1963, she told a reporter, “I had always said on ‘The Tonight Show’ and everywhere else that I would never be married again.” “However, Allen outnumbers me. He got started, and even the kids joined in. And I happily submitted.”

His marriage lasted from 1963 to 1981, when he died of cancer.

White worked tirelessly behind the scenes to generate funds for animal charities such as the Morris Animal Foundation and the Los Angeles Zoo. She conceived, produced, and hosted “The Pet Set,” a syndicated TV show on which celebrities brought their dogs and cats from 1970 to 1971. Betty White’s Pet Love: How Pets Take Care of Us was released in 1983, and “Betty & Friends: My Life at the Zoo” was published in 2011.

She turned down a starring role in the successful 1997 film “As Good As It Gets” because she was so dedicated to animals. She was offended by a scene in which Jack Nicholson threw a tiny dog down a laundry chute.

White recounted the beginnings of her affection for dogs in her 2011 book, “If You Ask Me (And Of Course, You Won’t).” Her father sold radios to supplement his income during the Great Depression. But, because no one could afford the radios, he readily swapped them for dogs, which, housed in cages in the backyard, numbered as many as 15 at times and added to White’s joyful upbringing.

Is there anything in particular that she despises?

In 2011, White told the Associated Press, “No.” “Anything with a leg on each corner,” says the narrator.

What about snakes, then?

“I adore snakes!” exclaims the narrator.

“I just make it my business to get along with people so I can have fun,” she said with a dimpled smile when asked how she had managed to be widely appreciated by humans throughout her life, not just by animals. That’s all there is to it.”

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Navi Mumbai : The Singing Showcase Star Voice 2022’s grand finale Goes Sky-high

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Star Voice 2022

The Singing Showcase Star Voice 2022’s grand finale  was successfully held on Sunday, Nov. 6, at Wheelhouse Lounge in CBD Belapur, Navi Mumbai.

19 of the many individuals who pitched in were picked to perform, either with brand-new, energetic, and youthful tunes or with press mixes. According to reports,  the audience enjoyed the event. The performances appeared to have been well received by the  crowd, and the musical acts skill-fully combined traditional melodies with contemporary hip hop elements. Perhaps the modern tunes were more musically appealing to the  audience.

In his capacity as the event’s organiser, Mr. Pahuldeep Singh Garha of Brisque Events & Entertainment said to Drishti Bharat’s representative That he has planned to hold the event frequently under various verticals. His main goals include verifying participants’ identities, inviting them to the event, and ensuring they adhere to the rules.

A nicely anchored event was presented by Yasmeen Khan.

Mr. Pahuldeep Singh Garha of Brisque Events & Entertainment said  that We appreciate our Associates, Violet Studio, Wheelhouse Lounge, as well as our Media Partners, Airoli Varta, Maharashtra Majha, & Drishti Bharat.

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After the release of Runway 34 Ajay Devgn receives a handwritten message from Amitabh Bachchan

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Amitabh Bachchan, who also featured opposite Ajay Devgn in the aviation drama, has praised Ajay Devgn’s latest directorial Runway 34. Ajay, who earlier stated that he would not have done the film if Amitabh Bachchan had not agreed to feature in it, shared a handwritten message from the legendary actor on his social media pages on Saturday. After reading the handwritten message in which Amitabh termed it an “amazing honour” to be directed by Ajay in the film, Ajay said that he feels emotional.

Ajay posted a photo of Amitabh’s message with the caption, “It’s difficult to put into words the honour of having the legendary Amitabh Bachchan feature in your directorial debut. And when he writes a handwritten message with his passionate comments, it elicits a dizzying mix of appreciation and fulfilment. Thank you very much, Amit Ji! #Runway34.”

The letter was written on a notepad with the names of Amitabh Bachchan and Jaya Bachchan, as well as a logo in the shape of a B for Bachchan. It was dated April 29. In the letter, Amitabh wrote, “Hello, Ajay! Ajay! Ajay! It was an unbelievable honour to be a part of ’34’ and to get such a wonderful director’s gift. Your work is excellent. It’s amazing how well you’ve put everything together. They claim it’s your finest, but I’m confident there will be many more. Congratulations.”

“And, Amitji closed his message with these lines,” Ajay wrote in another letter from Amitabh. “PS: Your expressions and performance in the cockpit were pure brilliance,” the note stated.” “Well deserved words on both sides,” his wife Kajol said on his Instagram account after seeing the messages.

Runway 34 is based on a true story from 2015, in which a Doha to Kochi flight narrowly avoided disaster after having trouble landing at the airport owing to poor weather and limited visibility. Captain Vikrant Khanna, played by Ajay Devgn, is a flying prodigy, and Tanya Albuquerque, played by Rakul Preet Singh, is his co-pilot. In the case, Amitabh Bachchan portrays Narayan Vedant, the investigating officer. Ajay has directed and produced the film in addition to acting in it.

According to the film’s review, “Ajay, once again donning the director’s hat, does an outstanding job. I must say, he’s a fantastic storyteller. He creates an immersive experience with Runway 34, rather than just acting.”

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When Aamir’s mother dislikes his film she tells him hatao isko

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Zeenat Hussein, Aamir Khan’s mother, has explained how she reacts to his films that she dislikes. He said this during the premiere of a song from his next film, Laal Singh Chaddha. The actor also revealed how his mother reacted after seeing the Laal Singh Chaddha test screening.

Kahani is the first song from Laal Singh Chaddha that Aamir has released. Mohan Kannan has provided his vocals to the song, which was composed by Amitabh Bhattacharya.

“When Ammi dislikes a film, she will ask, “hatao isko ye kya banaya hai?” ‘Place it away.’ She says it in a sweet tone, “As to a story, Aamir said.

When asked about his mother’s reaction to Laal Singh Chaddha’s test screening, Aamir stated, “First and foremost, I always get my mother’s reaction. Then I wait for my children’s reactions. My mother was a big fan of the movie. ‘Aamir, don’t listen to anyone,’ she said after viewing it. The film is flawless; it should be released as is. ‘Don’t take anything out.’ As a result, I must know how Ammi feels.

Aamir explained why he opted to release the song rather than the video, saying, “The songs in Laal Singh Chaddha are, without a doubt, the heart and soul of the film, and this album has some of my greatest work.

Putting Pritam, Amitabh, the vocalists, and the technicians in the limelight was a deliberate decision because not only do they deserve to be in the spotlight, but the music does as well. I’m excited to see how the public reacts to the music that the crew has put their hearts and souls into.”

Laal Singh Chaddha stars Kareena Kapoor Khan, Mona Singh, and Chaitanya Akkineni and is an adaptation of Tom Hanks’ Forrest Gump. On August 11, the film will be released in theatres around the country.

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