Monday, 20 July 2026

Sridevi with her Army co-star Sudesh Berry: Rare pic

In the mid-1990s, Bollywood’s promotional stills often captured more than just star power—they froze moments of transition. One such image from the 1996 action film Army shows Sridevi alongside Sudesh Berry, who played the character Khan in the hit film. At the time of filming and release, the two actors embodied very different phases of a Hindi film career.
Sridevi, born on August 13, 1963, was 32 turning 33 during the production window that stretched through 1995 and into early 1996. By then she had already appeared in the vast majority of her remarkable total of 266 films, a tally built on an astonishingly prolific run that began in childhood in 1967 and peaked with double-digit annual outputs across multiple South Indian languages and Hindi cinema. In 1996 itself, Army was one of just three releases for her, alongside Mr. Bechara and the Malayalam film Devaraagam. She stood at the tail end of her peak stardom, with only a handful of later credits—including the 1997 hit Judaai—before a long hiatus.
Opposite her was Sudesh Berry, born July 20, 1960, who was 35 turning 36 while making the film. A supporting actor who had debuted in 1988, Berry had accumulated roughly eight to ten prior credits by the time cameras rolled on Army. His 1990s work consisted mostly of action and drama roles, with 1996 bringing several releases including Army. By the end of that year, his filmography had reached about 10–12 titles.
The contrast was telling. Sridevi, one of Indian cinema’s most enduring superstars, was winding down an era of near-constant output. Berry, a reliable character actor, was steadily building a résumé in a crowded industry. 
Army, released on June 28, 1996, captured both at a precise point: one legend nearing the close of her dominant phase, the other a working professional in the thick of his supporting-actress years.
Decades later, the still remains a snapshot not just of a film, but of two careers moving at very different speeds. Its funny how everyone assumed Sridevi was much older than Berry, when she was in fact three years younger. But a thespian and "living legend" (as Shahrukh Khan said of her back in 1996), while young Sudesh Berry was a relative newcomer, even though both were of the same age bracket. 
Today, Berry remains a working actor, and Sridevi, alas her tragic and untimely death, cemented her already legend status as one of the truly greats of not just Indian cinema, but cinema itself.  

The first frame of Dhadak: 20 Jul 2018: The Sridevi tribute by Janhvi Kapoor


The first frame of Dhadak: 20 Jul 2018: The Sridevi tribute by Janhvi Kapoor. I remember watching this and tearing up.... 

Just five months after Sridevi's passing, the fact she didn't get to see her first-born's completed film (legend has it that she did see bits and parts of the movie prior to release)... It was all too much... 

Shahrukh Khan's Zero was another film that opened with a Sridevi tribute... 




Sridevi

Rakesh Shreshta could always make Sridevi laugh on cam. 

Outtake from early 90s photoshoot. 

The denim, casual look was refreshing. Sridevi not in an elaborate costume and makeup for a change. 
 

Sridevi on the cover of MOVIE magazine: Madhuri Dixit in bed: April 1990


 

The cover tags of MOVIE magazine in April 1990 were... just wow!

Sridevi, "I can't sleep alone!" Sridevi gets intimate! 

Salman Khan's love life exposed by his own brother! 

Superstar Anil Kapoor, "It's a lonely world..."

Madhuri's confessions on the price she paid for stardom! 

Sunday, 19 July 2026

Joy: Sridevi in Lamhe: The Happiest She's Ever been on Set. Until....

Sridevi was just 27 when she shot Lamhe - one of her finest hours on film in a career defining double role and performance that garnered her one of her many awards. 

These rare glimpses of Sridevi as Pooja shows the actress just bubbling with joy. Sridevi famously told Yash Chopra during the making of the movie in London, it is the happiest she's ever been in her life... until tragedy stuck when suddenly, her father passed away. 

In documented interviews (most notably a famous conversation with Karan Johar), Yash Chopra spoke extensively about a profound personal tragedy that struck Sridevi precisely while they were shooting Lamhe in London.

When the film's London schedule was nearly 90% complete, Sridevi’s mother called Yash Chopra to inform him that Sridevi's father had suddenly passed away. Chopra recounted the emotional weight of that moment:

"I couldn’t tell her [the news of his death]. I told her he's very serious. You have to take the flight."

Sridevi flew back to India and discovered the truth, remaining there for 16 days to complete the mandatory funeral and mourning rituals.

Her Acclaimed Professionalism

What Yash Chopra marvels at in his quotes - and what is frequently cited as a defining moment in her career- is what happened on her very first day back on set (the 17th day). Due to scheduling constraints and a co-star waiting to leave, the very first scene Sridevi had to shoot upon her return from mourning her father was a highly energetic comedy sequence (the iconic mud pack scene with Waheeda Rehman).

Chopra recalled:

"The next morning when she got up, I told her, 'Sri, there is a problem... This scene is a comedy scene'. She said, 'no problem, acting is acting'... At that time, I thought she is so professional. Such a wonderful artist. At that moment, she forgot everything. She did a wonderful scene. I understood then that is reason, the secret for her success."



A trending meme: In a word No.


 


The Meaning of Janhvi in Hinduism

In Hinduism, the name Janhvi (more traditionally spelled Jahnavi or Jāhnavī) is a direct reference to the River Ganges (Ganga), which is personified as a sacred goddess.

According to Hindu texts, when the celestial river Ganga descended to Earth, her roaring torrents swept away the sacrificial fields and hermitage of a powerful sage named Jahnu. Angered by the disruption, Sage Jahnu used his yogic powers to swallow the entire river.

After the gods and King Bhagiratha pleaded with the sage to release her for the salvation of humanity, Jahnu relented. He allowed the river to pour out from his ears. Because she emerged from him, the river was symbolically reborn as his daughter and given the name Jahnavi (meaning "Daughter of Jahnu").

Culturally, the name carries deep spiritual connotations of:

  • Purity and a pure soul

  • Divinity and holiness

  • Life-giving energy and cleansing power

How Sridevi Named Her Daughter

There are two parallel, famous stories regarding how Sridevi and Boney Kapoor decided on the name for their eldest daughter, Janhvi Kapoor (born in March 1997).

1. The Bollywood Movie Connection (Judaai)

For a long time, the most popular piece of Bollywood trivia was that Janhvi was named after Urmila Matondkar’s character in the 1997 hit film Judaai. The film starred Sridevi and Anil Kapoor, and was produced by Boney Kapoor. Because Sridevi was pregnant around the time the movie was being finished and released, the public and press widely believed she chose the name because she loved the character or the name from the project.

2. Sridevi’s Obsession with the Meaning (The True Reason)

Janhvi Kapoor clarified the actual story behind her naming, stating that while the timing lined up with Judaai, she wasn't named after the character. Instead, her parents simply loved the name independently.

Specifically, Sridevi was deeply moved by the name's meaning of purity. Janhvi recalled that her mother was completely "obsessed" with the idea of a pure soul. Sridevi would often look at her as a child and tell her that she possessed a pure soul, which is why the name resonated so profoundly with her as a mother.

Fun fact: The couple followed a similar pattern of loving names associated with Boney's filmography for their second daughter, Khushi, whose name means "happiness." Khushi was also a film produced by Boney Kapoor with Kareena Kapoor in the lead and title role. 

Sridevi in Bollywood: 1984