Winner of Best International Actress at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival, MADLY explores six stories of modern.
Radhika Apte Bollywood Actress New Short Movie 2017 Radhika Apte (born 7 September 1985) is an Indian film and stage actress.[1] Hailing from Pune, Apte began her acting career in theatre, working with the theatre troupe Aasakta in her home town, before venturing into films. She made her feature film debut with a brief role in the Hindi fantasy Vaah! Life Ho Toh Aisi!
Apte's first starring role was in the 2009 Bengali social drama Antaheen. She made her Marathi film debut in 2009 with the tragic romance Samaantar.[2] Her Bollywood breakthrough came in 2015, following acclaimed performances in the thriller Badlapur and the comedy Hunterrr—and received wide appreciation for the psychological thriller Phobia (2016).[3][4][5] The 2014 Marathi thriller Lai Bhaari and the 2016 Tamil movie Kabali are her biggest commercial successes. Radhika Apte first appeared in a small role in the Hindi film Vaah! Life Ho Toh Aisi!
In 2005, a project she did 'just for fun' while still being in college.[11] Actor Rahul Bose, who had seen Apte perform in Anahita Oberoi's play Bombay Black, suggested her name to director Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury who cast her in his Bengali film Antaheen along with Aparna Sen, Sharmila Tagore and Rahul Bose. She played the role of Brinda Roy Menon, a TV journalist, in Antaheen.[9] Riddhima Seal, writing for The Times of India, called Apte a 'revelation', further adding 'With eyes that speak a thousand words, her passion for work and the loneliness of her heart as she waits to chat every night with that special stranger just strikes the right chord'.[13] In 2009, Apte had her first Marathi release, KBC productions' Gho Mala Asla Hava by Sumitra Bhave and Sunil Sukthankar in which she appeared as Savitri, a village girl. She later collaborated with Bhave and Sukthankar again on the Hindi docufiction Mor Dekhne Jungle Mein.[8] That year, she had also worked on Jatin Wagle's Ek Marathi Manoos,[14] Akash Khurana's Life Online, about 'a bunch of youngsters working in a BPO' and Amol Palekar's Marathi film, Samaantar.[9] In 2010, she was seen in Maneej Premnath's thriller The Waiting Room[15] and later appeared in a significant role in Ram Gopal Varma's Rakta Charitra and its sequel.
Winner of Best International Actress at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival, MADLY explores six stories of modern.
Radhika Apte Bollywood Actress New Short Movie 2017 Radhika Apte (born 7 September 1985) is an Indian film and stage actress.[1] Hailing from Pune, Apte began her acting career in theatre, working with the theatre troupe Aasakta in her home town, before venturing into films. She made her feature film debut with a brief role in the Hindi fantasy Vaah! Life Ho Toh Aisi!
Apte's first starring role was in the 2009 Bengali social drama Antaheen. She made her Marathi film debut in 2009 with the tragic romance Samaantar.[2] Her Bollywood breakthrough came in 2015, following acclaimed performances in the thriller Badlapur and the comedy Hunterrr—and received wide appreciation for the psychological thriller Phobia (2016).[3][4][5] The 2014 Marathi thriller Lai Bhaari and the 2016 Tamil movie Kabali are her biggest commercial successes. Radhika Apte first appeared in a small role in the Hindi film Vaah! Life Ho Toh Aisi!
In 2005, a project she did 'just for fun' while still being in college.[11] Actor Rahul Bose, who had seen Apte perform in Anahita Oberoi's play Bombay Black, suggested her name to director Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury who cast her in his Bengali film Antaheen along with Aparna Sen, Sharmila Tagore and Rahul Bose. She played the role of Brinda Roy Menon, a TV journalist, in Antaheen.[9] Riddhima Seal, writing for The Times of India, called Apte a 'revelation', further adding 'With eyes that speak a thousand words, her passion for work and the loneliness of her heart as she waits to chat every night with that special stranger just strikes the right chord'.[13] In 2009, Apte had her first Marathi release, KBC productions' Gho Mala Asla Hava by Sumitra Bhave and Sunil Sukthankar in which she appeared as Savitri, a village girl. She later collaborated with Bhave and Sukthankar again on the Hindi docufiction Mor Dekhne Jungle Mein.[8] That year, she had also worked on Jatin Wagle's Ek Marathi Manoos,[14] Akash Khurana's Life Online, about 'a bunch of youngsters working in a BPO' and Amol Palekar's Marathi film, Samaantar.[9] In 2010, she was seen in Maneej Premnath's thriller The Waiting Room[15] and later appeared in a significant role in Ram Gopal Varma's Rakta Charitra and its sequel.