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SonyLiv s new offering Maharani , a political drama, to go live on May 28

Maharani is produced by Naren Kumar and Dimple Kharbanda, created by Subhash Kapoor and is directed by Karan Sharma. From four walls of her rural home Rani Bharti, played by Huma Qureshi, is hurled into the turbulent world of politics

Journey from being a Pawn to Queen: Huma Qureshi fights misogyny, contempt and corruption in Subhash Kapoor s Maharani, only on SonyLIV

A famous saying goes ‘The king may rule the kingdom, but it’s the queen who moves the board.’ From four walls of her rural home where her life revolves around being a dutiful wife, raising kids, milking cows, making cow dung cakes, and handling kitchen politics, Rani Bharti is hurled into the turbulent world of politics in a state that constantly grapples with corruption. Huma

Journey from being a Pawn to Queen; watch Maharani on SonyLIV

Journey from being a Pawn to Queen; watch Maharani on SonyLIV
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Coronavirus outbreak:Fires don t stop at lonely but public funerals

The lifeless are picked up from infected homes by exhausted volunteers, piled into ambulances by hospital workers or carried in the back of auto-rickshaws by grieving relatives. At the cremation grounds, where the fires only briefly cool off late at night, relatives wait hours for their turn to say goodbye. The scenes are photographed, filmed, broadcast. They are beamed to relatives across India. They are shown on news sites and newspapers around the world. Local residents record the fires from their roofs to show the world why they must wear masks even inside their homes. The smoke and smell of death is so constant, so thick, that it covers the narrow lanes for much of the day, seeping through shuttered windows.

At India s funeral pyres, COVID sunders the rites of grief

  Mujib Mashal, Sameer Yasir and Shalini Venugopal Bhagat, The New York Times  Published: 09 May 2021 11:03 AM BdST Updated: 09 May 2021 11:03 AM BdST Family members of COVID-19 victims perform a cremation ceremony in Delhi, India, May 6, 2021. At the cremation grounds, where the fires only briefly cool off late at night, relatives wait hours for their turn to say goodbye. (Atul Loke/The New York Times) The lifeless are picked up from infected homes by exhausted volunteers, piled into ambulances by hospital workers or carried in the back of auto-rickshaws by grieving relatives. ); } At the cremation grounds, where the fires only briefly cool off late at night, relatives wait hours for their turn to say goodbye. The scenes are photographed, filmed, broadcast. They are beamed to relatives under lockdown across India. They are shown on news sites and newspapers around the world, putting India’s personal tragedies on display to a global audience.

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