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Veteran actor-singer Sulakshana Pandit passes away at 71 due to cardiac arrest

Veteran actor-singer Sulakshana Pandit has passed away at the age of 71, her brother Lalit Pandit confirmed in a statement to PTI. Sulakshana was being taken to Nanavati Hospital when she passed away. According to Lalit Pandit, “She passed away due to cardiac arrest around 7 pm. She had complained of breathlessness and seemed a bit unwell. We were taking her to Nanavati hospital, but she died before we could reach the hospital.”The esteemed artiste died on Thursday, November 6, 2025, while being rushed to Nanavati Hospital in Mumbai after experiencing breathlessness the previous evening. Sulakshana Pandit achieved acclaim both as an actor and as a playback singer. She made her film debut in 1975 with Uljhan opposite Sanjeev Kumar and went on to work with leading stars such as Rajesh Khanna, Shashi Kapoor and Vinod Khanna. Her filmography includes titles such as Sankoch, Hera Pheri, Khandaan, Dharam Khanta, Do Waqt Ki Roti and Gora among many others. In parallel, she built a successful career as a playback singer, lending her voice to songs in Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Oriya and Gujarati. Some of her popular tracks include ‘Tu Hi Saagar Tu Hi Kinara’, ‘Pardesiya Tere Desh Mein’, ‘Bekrar Dil Tut Gaya’, ‘Baandhi Re Kahe Preet’, ‘Saat Samundar Paar’, ‘Somvaar Ko Hum Mile’, ‘Sona Re Tujhe Kaise Miloon’, ‘Yeh Pyara Lage Tera Chehra’, and ‘Yeh Pyar Kiya Hai’. Born into a musically inclined family from Hisar in Haryana, she was the niece of the legendary classical vocalist Pandit Jasraj. She began singing at the age of nine and launched her professional career alongside her brother Mandheer Pandit. Her siblings include Lalit Pandit, Jatin Pandit, and actor ­Vijayata Pandit. Her untimely passing leaves a void in both the world of acting and music. Tributes are expected to pour in from colleagues, fans and admirers across the industry.

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Baramulla producer Aditya Dhar on how real-life journeys shape a filmmaker’s stories: “Those who have had good life experiences become Sooraj Barjatya; difficult life experiences make you Anurag Kashyap”

A special screening for Baramulla was organized for the press at a preview theatre in Mumbai. This was followed by an interactive session with Ruchikaa Kapoor Sheikh, Director, Original Films, Netflix India, producers Aditya Dhar and Lokesh Dhar, director Aditya Suhas Jambhale, writer Monal Thaakar and actor Bhasha Sumbli. Aditya Dhar is one of the writers of the film as well, along with Monal. He explained, “For all of us filmmakers, whatever films we make, it all comes from our past and our life experiences. Those who have had good life experiences become Sooraj Barjatya! Those who go through difficult life experiences become Anurag Kashyap. Hence, Baramulla is something that is very personal to me, being a Kashmiri. But the whole point was that even a lot of Kashmiri Muslims have suffered. It would be absolutely wrong to say that only Kashmiri Pandits have felt the pain.”He added, “I know a lot of Kashmiri Muslims, who are my friends. They are in the police force and are doing a phenomenal job in Kashmir. One of the most difficult places in India to be a cop is Kashmir. In every other place in India, you don’t have a threat to life. Kashmir is the only place in India where any terrorist can come and shoot you from behind. This doesn’t happen anywhere else in the country. The cops out there are one of the patriotic bunch of people that I have seen.”Aditya Dhar further said, “I attempted to tell this story where I combine what Kashmiri Pandits experience and what these patriotic Kashmiri Muslims are experiencing right now, especially when the latter are being termed as traitors. This was a small thought and written way back in 2016. I even forgot about it as time passed. When I tried selling the script, toh kisi ne mujhe bahut gande paise offer kiye the. This is when I made up my mind that I would not sell this subject for a pittance and that I would make this film the right way.”Baramulla is backed by Jio Studios and B62 Studios and releases on Netflix on November 7. Also Read: Yami Gautam reacts to being labelled ‘nationalistic’; says, “Nationalistic hona kabse crime ho gaya?”.

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Civil War Erupts In Heritage Foundation Over Neo-Nazi Fuentes

One major conservative group is experiencing a massive rift in its workforce, and the source of the division is reportedly a polarizing far-right influencer. That’s according to a Monday article in the New York Post, which reported that insiders at the Heritage Foundation (the group responsible for the authoritarian Project 2025 playbook) are sharing stories of “revolt” within the GOP-aligned organization. Many within Heritage are alarmed after the group’s president, Kevin Roberts, refused to disavow right-wing podcaster Tucker Carlson after his friendly interview with white nationalist and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes.”We will always defend our friends against the slander of bad actors who serve someone else’s agenda,” Roberts said at the time. “That includes Tucker Carlson, who remains, and as I have said before, always will be a close friend of the Heritage Foundation. I disagree with and even abhor things that Nick Fuentes said,” Roberts continued. “But canceling him is not the answer either.”One source told the Post that Roberts’ statement was “the most embarrassed I’ve ever been to be a Heritage employee,” adding: “It’s not close.” Another accused Carlson of “playing footsie with literal Nazis.” A separate Heritage staffer said Roberts’ refusal to “cancel” Carlson amounted to “safe space wokeism. If we are labeled on the same side as Nick Fuentes, then we deserve to lose,” a fourth source said. “Talking with some of the interns I think that there are a growing number of them who actually agree [with Fuentes].”Fuentes, who has openly praised Adolf Hitler and repeatedly maligned the Jewish community, spent part of his interview with Carlson blaming Jewish people for the state of American politics. He also heaped praise on World War II-era Russian leader Josef Stalin, calling himself a “fan” of the dictator who killed millions of his own citizens.