Ruskin Bond, happy birthday

Mr Bond, we started early. This was 1996. Bonding with you, your writing since then. Wishing you good health, joy, and a happy birthday, Ruskin Bond. Keep writing and keep spinning that charm. You have been kind to me, to us, with signed copies of almost all your works. The first book that you signed for me here at the British Book Fair at the British Council, still smells of your touch. This is the bonding of stars @Shashank.

#Ruskin Bond  

Ruskin Bond signing a copy of his book for Shashank Arora at the British Book Fair in Delhi.

Shashank Arora filmography

The Great Indian Murder (web series) – Feb 2022
https://www.hotstar.com/in/tv/the-great-indian-murder/1260079678

Made In Heaven (Web series)
https://mubi.com/films/made-in-heaven-2019

Brahman Naman (Eng. Comedy)
Shashank Arora (dir. Quashikq Mukherjee)
https://mubi.com/films/brahman-naman

Zoo (dir. Shlok Sharma, 2017)
https://mubi.com/films/zoo-2017-shlok-sharma

Titli (Butterfly)
Shashank Arora | (dir. Kanu Behl)
https://mubi.com/films/titli-2014

Bharat

Rock On 2

The Song of Scorpion

Manto

Penalty

Producer Steve Barron in front of the Brahman Naman film poster at Cannes Film Festival

The Great Indian Murder – web series Feb 2022

Shashank Arora as a petty mobile thief in the series ends up leaving an imprint in your head. He is subtle and has been characterised well, and in a series with not many characters living without moral bankruptcy, Munna’s (Arora’s) moral compass encircles the best that Dhulia has to offer. (Mukul Sharma in Jagran English) The web series is based on the famous novel Six Suspects by Vikas Swarup

https://english.jagran.com/entertainment/movie-reviews/the-great-indian-murder-review-disney-hotstar-pratik-gandhi-latest-richa-chadha-layered-plot-brilliantly-written-characters-10038958

Anup Singh on Sunny’s birthday 2018

​Shashank Arora
With this actor, it’s a fascinating yet unfathomable conjecture the path he might take next. Despite his well-known, rumbustious mockery of all kinds of masks he sees around him & his courage to keep tearing the masks off his own face that could have allotted his tempestuous talent a space within the film industry a long time ago, despite his lightning-quick ability, when needed, to dash through, but also his gift to slow down, nuance, stretch & spread the time of those moments when we begin to reveal ourselves to our own eyes, he remains secreted in his own being. 

His boisterous, irrepressible élan remains strangely coiled in a mystical intoxication, almost as though he’s spellbound by his own reverie of the world. His performances often evoke dreamlike rhythms, not really held by the gravity of our familiar world. His gestures are at times so quick that the emotion is not something expressed but created in the space around him. And, at times, the voluptuous unfolding from one posture to another is like watching a tree touched by the wind – it remains unmoving, but everything about it moves. I believe there’s an exceptional adventure that this actor is going to take us on – an adventure not only journeying through human emotions, but into the deeper cosmos within us where the blaze of our life takes on incandescent forms, rhapsodic, manifold, some momentary & others endlessly lingering, and always indeterminable. It is like Parvati’s dance of creation, where joy takes shape in the immediate apprehension of the life-affirming possibilities of what is to come into being.

Many joyous returns of the day, Shashank, and may you return for us with many more joyous performances.

Anup Singh is a renowned and awarded film director. His films include #Qissa and #The SongofScorpions

Star cast for The Song of Scorpions include: Irrfan Khan, Golshifteh Farahani, Waheeda Rehman, Sashank Arora

https://mubi.com/cast/shashank-arora