Deepa Venkat Sister



  • Revathi Sankaran

    Tamil television personality / film actress, Harikatha story teller. In 2010, she received Kalaimamani award.Wikipedia

  • Bombay Gnanam

    Tamil stage and television / film actress. She started her acting career as a stage artist in 1989 when she found Mahalakshmi Ladies Drama Group.Wikipedia

  • Vadivukkarasi

    Indian film and Tamil television actress. She made her acting debut in the Tamil film Sigappu Rojakkal (1978) and has acted in more than 350 films and 10 television serials in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam.Wikipedia

  • Lakshmi Priyaa Chandramouli

    Tamil film and television actress. A post graduate in human resource management from Madras School of Social Work, she joined the English theatre company Evam as a full-time employee, before venturing into the Tamil film industry.Wikipedia

  • Devadarshini

    Indian actress appearing in Tamil films and television series. She began her career as a television anchor before venturing into acting, first in television and later in films.Wikipedia

  • Roopa Sree

    Indian film and television actress who appeared in Tamil and Malayalam films and television soap operas. She made her acting debut with the Malayalam film Kallanum Polisum (1992) with Mukesh in the lead.Wikipedia

  • Latha (actress)

    Indian film and Tamil television actress, who played leading roles in South Indian films from 1973 to 1983. Also known for her roles in various serials in Tamil language.Wikipedia

  • Bhagyalakshmi (actress)

    Indian film heroine and Tamil television actress. Prominent heroine during the 1980s to 2000 in Malayalam, Tamil, Kannada, and Telugu films.Wikipedia

  • Shwetha Bandekar

    Indian film and Tamil television actress who has starred in Tamil and Telugu films and Tamil serials. She has appeared in films, including Aalwar, Valluvan Vasuki as well as in the Sun TV series Chandralekha.Wikipedia

  • Hemalatha

    Indian film actress, leading Tamil television actress and dancer. Acclaimed for her roles as Raghavi in the popular soap opera Kana Kaanum Kaalangal on STAR Vijay and as Deepa in the superhit Tamil drama serial on Sun TV Thendral.Wikipedia

  • Sonia (actress)

    Indian film and television actress in Malayalam and Tamil movies and serials. She debuted, at the age of three, as a child artist in the Malayalam film Ival Oru Naadodi.Wikipedia

  • Sukumari

    Indian film actress best known for her work in Malayalam and Tamil films. She began acting at the age of 10.Wikipedia

  • Nithya Ram

    Indian television and film actress who works in Kannada, Tamil and Telugu productions. Actress in Kannada television soap operas.Wikipedia

  • Viji Chandrasekhar

    Indian film and Tamil television actress. She has appeared in several Tamil, Malyalam, Telugu and Kannada films.Wikipedia

  • Uma Padmanabhan

    Tamil film and television actress. Uma Padmanabhan had her early education in Chennai born on 1965 and had graduated in commerce from SIET, Nandanam.Wikipedia

  • Meera Jasmine

    Indian actress who appears in South Indian films, primarily Malayalam and Tamil films. Popular lead actress during the 2000s.Wikipedia

  • Sathyapriya

    Indian film and television actress. She has acted in over 300 films, 50 of which she played the heroine.Wikipedia

  • Asin

    Former Indian actress who mostly appeared in Tamil films. She also appeared in lead roles in Hindi, Telugu and Malayalam films.Wikipedia

  • Abitha

    Indian film and television actress who appeared in Tamil language films and teleserials. She appeared in notable productions including Sethu alongside Vikram.Wikipedia

  • Meena (actress)

    Indian film actress who works in the South Indian film industry. Meena debuted as a child artist in the Tamil film Nenjangal in 1982 and has later appeared in films produced by various regional industries.Wikipedia

  • Vatsala Rajagopal

    Tamil film and television actress. She started her acting career as a stage artist in 1979 and has acted in 450 plays in 25 years.Wikipedia

  • Meera Krishnan

    Tamil actress, who has appeared in films and television serials. She started her career as announcer in Doordarshan and later became a newsreader in Sun TV before acting in films and teleserials.Wikipedia

  • Tharika

    Indian Tamil actress who has appeared in Tamil films and television serials. She first appeared in a character role in P. Bharathiraja's Eera Nilam before she shifted to item numbers.Wikipedia

  • Srithika

    Indian actress who has appeared in Tamil films and television serials. Businessman, before she settled in Chennai.Wikipedia

  • Sulakshana (actress)

    Indian film and television actress who has performed in Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, and Kannada films and Tamil serials. Credited as Dolly.Wikipedia

  • Aparna Pillai

    Tamil film actress, who has appeared in Tamil films. Probably best known for her performances in Pudhukottaiyilirundhu Saravanan and Nenjil Jil Jil.Wikipedia

  • Yashika Aannand

    Indian film actress, television personality and model, who predominantly works in Tamil cinema. Born on the 4th of August 1999 in New Delhi to a Punjabi family.Wikipedia

  • Rethika Srinivas

    Indian film and Television actress who has appeared in the Tamil film industry. Rethika graduated with a degree in electronic engineering from SRM University, before pursuing a master's degree in media studies in the United Kingdom.Wikipedia

  • Shanthi Williams

    Indian film and television actress who has played supporting roles in various Tamil and Malayalam movies and serials. Williams came into the industry as a child artist at the age of 12.Wikipedia

  • Devayani (actress)

    Indian actress who predominantly acts in Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu along with a few Kannada, Hindi and Bengali films. She received the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Actress for her performances in the films Surya Vamsam and Bharathi and a Special Award for Kadhal Kottai.Wikipedia

Sentences forDeepa Venkat

  • As most of the cast were non-native Tamil speakers, dubbing artistes were used with actresses Sukanya and Deepa Venkat lending their voices for Nandita Das and Simran respectively.Kannathil Muthamittal-Wikipedia
  • Television actress Deepa Venkat dubbed for the speaking voice of Amala Paul.Kadhalil Sodhappuvadhu Yeppadi-Wikipedia
  • Television actress Deepa Venkat dubbed the voice of the female lead.Mayakkam Enna-Wikipedia
  • The show starred Devayani, serial actresses(Manjari,Srividhya), Thiru selvam, Ajay Kapoor, Chandra Lakshman, Deepa Venkat and Poornima Indrajith.Kolangal (TV series)-Wikipedia
  • Anbu (Prabhu Deva) is a small time mimicry artist living with his only sister Bharathi (Deepa Venkat).Ullam Kollai Poguthae-Wikipedia
  • This film stars Prabhu Deva and Anjala Zaveri in the lead roles, while Karthik, Deepa Venkat, and Vivek play supporting roles.Ullam Kollai Poguthae-Wikipedia
Deepa
  • Simran dubbed in her own voice for the first time in this film with some dialogues dubbed by Deepa Venkat.Kovilpatti Veeralakshmi-Wikipedia
  • The show starring by Deepa Venkat,Nithya Ravindran,Deepak Dinkar, Rajasekar, Banumathi, Shilpa and Bharath.Geethanjali (TV series)-Wikipedia
  • • Deepa Venkat as Surya (Psychologist)Oththa Seruppu Size 7-Wikipedia
  • The serial starred Radika, Sivakumar, Deepa Venkat, Anju, Latha Sethupathi, Yuvarani, Subhalekha Sudhakar, Hemalatha, Poovilangu Mohan, Ajay Rathnam, Riyaz Khan, Vijay Adhiraj and Tharika.Chithi (TV series)-Wikipedia
  • Deepa Venkat, Nalini, and Ganja Karuppu play supporting roles.Kathai (film)-Wikipedia
  • The show starred Sivakumar, Raadhika, Jyothi Lakshmi, Kuyili, Viji Chandrasekhar, Ponvannan, Shanmugasundaram, Ajay Rathnam, Devadarshini, Shyam Ganesh, Vijay Adhiraj, Deepa Venkat and among others, produced by Radaan Mediaworks Raadhika and is directed by C.J. Bhaskar and Sundar K. Vijayan.Annamalai (2002 TV series)-Wikipedia

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Anbu (Prabhu Deva) is a small time mimicry artist living with his only sister Bharathi (Deepa Venkat). Ullam Kollai Poguthae - Wikipedia This film stars Prabhu Deva and Anjala Zaveri in the lead roles, while Karthik, Deepa Venkat, and Vivek play supporting roles. Santhoshi as Rajeshwari, sister. Vaishnavi as Bhuwaneshwari, Chamundeeswari's sister. Sanghavi as Lakshmi. Deepa Venkat as Chamundeeswari's friend. Amrish Puri as Tantrik. Special appearances in alphabetical order. Raghava Lawrence in a special appearance in 'Maya Maya' song. Ramya Krishnan as Neelambari3 Nassar as Suryaprakash.

Deepa Venkat Sister

Anbu (Prabhu Deva) is a small time mimicry artist living with his only sister Bharathi (Deepa Venkat). Ullam Kollai Poguthae - Wikipedia This film stars Prabhu Deva and Anjala Zaveri in the lead roles, while Karthik, Deepa Venkat, and Vivek play supporting roles. Kolangal is an Indian Tamil-language soap opera which aired on Sun TV.It is a Prime time serial that aired in weekdays. From 24 November 2003 to 4 December 2009 for 1,533 episodes. The show starred Devayani, Deepa Venkat, V. Thiruselvam, Ajay Kapoor, Poornima Indrajith, While Mohan Sharma, Sathya Priya, Abishek Shankar, Subhalekha Sudhakar, Nalini, Vanitha Krishnachandran, Kuyili, Bombay. Deepa is the niece of the former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Jayalalithaa, as her father Jayakumar was the brother of Jayalalithaa. She used to live with Jayalalitha in her Poes Garden home in Chennai, but after certain differences, she moved out of the home.

© Provided by Firstpost RJ Balaji opens up on his Diwali release Mookuthi Amman: 'We have created some really powerful characters'

RJ Balaji was still in school when he saw his first saami padam (devotional film) on television. It was Thiruvilaiyadal, the 1965 film starring Sivaji Ganesan, Nagesh and Savithri, among others, which strung together stories that spoke of the greatness of Lord Shiva. “In today’s context, it would probably be called an anthology,” laughs Balaji, speaking after a long tiring day filled with interviews and IPL 2020 cricket commentary. “I loved the stories and how they all left you with hope.”

That hope is what he wishes his Nayanthara-starrer Mookuthi Amman, will spread. The film directly premieres on Disney+Hotstar on 14 November, on Diwali — a steep climb for someone who once waited to watch Deepavali releases. Mookuthi Amman, going by the trailer, seeks to push the narrative on what devotion means. It also speaks about issues such as the mental health within the elderly. The film could trigger controversy and debate, but that’s been Balaji’s style from his radio jockey days in Coimbatore. In a show high on entertainment, he would find a way to discuss something affecting society.

Two aspects of the film that Balaji, who co-directed it with NJ Saravanan, is very proud about are the mental health angle and the importance given to the film’s women. “We have created some really powerful characters, something I have missed seeing on screen for some years now. Also, while we speak of depression today, we rarely wonder if our mothers and the elderly women at home experienced it. They probably did not even know to give it a name, and suffered in silence. If my film adds to the understanding about depression, even if in a small way, I will be happy.”

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His previous film LKG, the writing credits of which read “RJ Balaji and Friends”, might have set off laugh bombs, but came with a message: If politicians are wrong to bribe voters, are voters who accept that bribe correct?

Balaji’s humour does not fall below a certain bar, a habit that’s ingrained in most RJs. That is something comedian Aiyyo Shraddha says too. A career in radio-jockeying trains you to speak in a particular way and make a point without antagonising anyone. “More than knowing what to say, I definitely know what not to say,” says Balaji. Mookuthi Amman, in his head, “is about this family that is led by a woman, which is in great difficulty, and how the family goddess helps them vanquish the villain”.

© Provided by Firstpost RJ Balaji and Nayanthara in Mookuthi Amman | Image from Twitter

Balaji wanted to be factually right too, like during his early days in RJ-ing when he would pore over the city supplements, to stay in tune with what was happening. “I watched films and documentaries, read books, went to government offices… and then wrote the film,” he says.

As an actor, while some films gave Balaji popularity, the artiste in him was not very satisfied. “I was not happy and felt like a misfit as an actor. Sometimes, all I did was stand next to the hero and do nothing. I started getting bored. I have always learnt on the job, and I decided that I shall do that again, in films too. I wanted to take a break before the audience decided it did not want to see me any more,” he explains.

Balaji decided the way forward was making a film where the hero is a normal person, someone you and I might meet on the road. “If not, most heroes have been either a rowdy or a police officer. I want my films to be about the husband who has lost his job, the engineer who is worried about life… even in Mookuthi, the mother-son relationship breathes, it is normal. I have not over-glorified the mother or the son. I wrote the characters as close to reality as I could.”

LKG gave Balaji the confidence that he could write a film that could retain viewer interest for two hours, without it looking awkward. And when he saw some rushes of Mookuthi Amman, he knew some of the learning had been put to use.

Once Mookuthi Amman releases, Balaji hopes to get back to the writing table after a break. As always, this too will involve a lot of prepping and multiple drafts before the script is locked, and a quick shoot. “We shot this film across 44 locations in 50 days. For the climax, we brought in 7,500 people and shot from 6 am to 2 am,” says Balaji. For the climax, he roped in local artistes, and many came by to tell him they’ve never been treated as well on a set. “I think that comes from wanting to offer others what I expect. I have to respect their time and talent, like others respect mine,” he says.

Balaji also takes the time to speak about the voice acting of Deepa Venkat, who has dubbed for Nayanthara in the film. “She matched and elevated Nayanthara’s performance. She is so dedicated, she came to the dubbing theatre a fortnight after she recovered from COVID-19, and gave her best,” he says.

While he tries to stay clear of tags and stereotypes, the RJ-turned-actor-turned director acknowledges that it is a steep learning curve and that he has to be on top of things to ensure he does not stick to doing the obvious.

And while learning, he hopes to become a better human being too. The kind that might act on passing conversations among artistes on the set and ensure that instead of tea, Horlicks and Boost and samosas are served. “Without a joy-filled set, you cannot make a good film. You have to treat people equally, and it matters that you are a good person too,” he says.

Deepa Venkat Sister

Watch the trailer of Mookuthi Amman here —

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Deepa Venkat Sister

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