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Watch: Anne Hathaway Tears Up at The Devil Wears Prada 2 Event in Shanghai
onmynews.com

Watch: Anne Hathaway Tears Up at The Devil Wears Prada 2 Event in Shanghai

An overwhelmed Anne Hathaway couldn’t hide her tears at The Devil Wears Prada 2 event in Shanghai. The actress, along with Meryl Streep, attended a grand fan event in Shanghai on Friday, April 10. Hathaway was seen walking up a red carpet set up, which looked inspired by the annual MET Gala. In a video shared online, the actress donned a gorgeous gown and greeted fans. As she walked up the stairs, she looked emotional and even teary-eyed.
She admitted she was moved by the love she received at the fan event and couldn’t hold back her emotions. “I am overwhelmed. I wasn’t expecting to feel emotional but there are so many of you. Thank you for all of this,” she said.
Watch the video below:

The Devil Wears Prada 2 reunites the original cast — Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tuccu, with director David Frankel and writer Aline Brosh McKenna. The film also introduces a new lineup of characters played by Kenneth Branagh, Simone Ashley, Justin Theroux, Lucy Liu, Patrick Brammall, Caleb Hearon, Helen J. Shen, Pauline Chalamet, B. J. Novak, and Conrad Ricamora. Tracie Thoms and Tibor Feldman also reprise their roles as Lily and Irv from the original film.
The final trailer of the film, which was released earlier this week, opens with Andy telling Simone that she once held the very job Simone has now. Andy reflects on her journey, from going to Paris and working under Miranda to eventually walking away to pursue a career in journalism. Simone, now Miranda’s new assistant (read: the new Emily), is visibly stunned to learn that Andy gave up Chanel!
The trailer then cuts to a series of montages, before Miranda, played by Meryl Streep, tells Andy that she needs her help navigating a current scandal. Miranda remains the same icy, stiletto-clicking force, unwavering in her pursuit of control. We also catch glimpses of Miranda’s former assistant Emily Charlton, who delivers a striking line: “May the bridges I burn light my way.” Once loyal to Miranda, she has now turned into her rival.
Based on Lauren Weisberger’s novel, The Devil Wears Prada was a box-office hit and earned two Oscar nominations. The Devil Wears Prada 2 arrives in theatres on May 1.

Also Read: Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep on Crazy Fan Moments on The Devil Wears Prada 2 Sets

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Exclusive: Rick Roy on Acting Debut With Dil Dosti Dilemma Across Formats and Bollywood Fashion
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Exclusive: Rick Roy on Acting Debut With Dil Dosti Dilemma Across Formats and Bollywood Fashion

Rick Roy has long been one of Bollywood’s most sought-after costume designers and stylists. With an instinct for visual storytelling and a keen understanding of both character and celebrity branding, Roy has styled some of the industry’s biggest names, such as Akshay Kumar, Emraan Hashmi, Sonam Kapoor, Vidya Balan and Malaika Arora, among others. 
Now, he is stepping into the spotlight himself. Roy made his acting debut with the Amazon series Dil Dosti Dilemma, marking a new chapter in his journey. 
The transition wasn’t something he had meticulously planned. Instead, it emerged organically. “Before Dil Dosti Dilemma, I actually did a one-line part in Fashion as Kangana Ranaut’s character’s friend. But this was my first proper, scripted role. I never consciously decided, ‘Okay, now I’m going to act,’ but I’ve always enjoyed the process. People kept telling me I have a natural on-camera persona, so when this opportunity came along, I thought, why not? It felt like a fun extension of my creative expression rather than a career shift.”
Coming from a styling background, Roy brings awareness to his on-screen presence. For him, performance begins with how a person occupies space within the frame.
rick roy
“As a stylist, I understand what works on screen silhouettes, colours, textures, body language, all of it. So when I’m in front of the camera, I’m already aware of how I present myself and how it will translate visually. It definitely makes a difference because I understand both sides of the frame.” 
His on-camera presence isn’t limited to this show. Roy was also seen in the international series Rob & Romesh Vs, a BAFTA-nominated show, where his role grew in an unexpected yet organic manner. Initially brought on board purely as a stylist for the Bollywood episode, his natural charisma quickly made him a part of the narrative.
Recalling the incident, he said, “They first approached me to style the Bollywood episode. But once I met the producers, we ended up having these hilarious conversations on set, and they said, ‘We need you on camera.’ I think my role even expanded because the interactions were so fun, it made for great content, and it just organically became part of the episode.”

rick roy

Now that he is into acting, is he looking forward to exploring further? Roy says that he is open to anything fun. “Acting isn’t my day job; it’s another way for me to express myself as an artist. I know that because of my flamboyant persona, I’ll probably be offered certain types of roles initially, and I’m okay with that. But who knows, maybe I’ll surprise everyone with how good an actor I actually am! (laughs)”

Beyond acting, the conversation also touched upon fashion, which remains central to his identity. When asked about recent standout fashion moments, Roy points to a young actor who, in his view, has struck the right balance.
“Definitely Ananya Panday. She and, more importantly, her stylist really understand her body and her vibe. She’s not trying too hard, but she’s putting in just the right amount of effort to hit that sweet spot of style. It’s balanced, clean, and very her.”
However, when it comes to the idea of “underrated” dressers in the industry, Roy flips the narrative entirely, suggesting that the real issue might lie elsewhere.
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“Honestly, I don’t think anyone is underrated. Everyone is trying to be a Style Icon these days, sometimes even more than an Acting Icon. If anything, a lot of people are slightly overrated. (laughs)”
That said, he does see promise in a new generation of actors and thinks that Sharvari is one of the actors he is curious to see where she goes with fashion. 
“Sharvari excites me right now. I’m curious to see where she goes with fashion. On the other hand, many celebrities start playing it very safe once they reach a certain point. They get conscious of opinions and stick to tried-and-tested looks. But fashion is meant to start conversations; if you play it too safe, it just gets boring.”
Roy now has three releases lined up this year and two new projects starting as a designer.
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Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa Review:Vinay Pathak Shines in This Whydunit
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Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa Review:Vinay Pathak Shines in This Whydunit

Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa finds director Rajat Kapoor, who also plays the catalyst in the film, in familiar yet finely honed territory. This is less a conventional whodunit and more a slow, deliberate excavation of human nature, of the resentments, insecurities and quiet violences that simmer beneath seemingly civil relationships. The film uses the scaffolding of a murder mystery not to deliver shocks, but to peel back layers of its characters, revealing how fragile the idea of “love” can be when placed under pressure.

Set almost entirely within a sprawling, old-world homestay, the narrative brings together a group of friends and acquaintances for what is meant to be a celebratory getaway. There is laughter, alcohol and the easy rhythm of people who have known each other for years. Yet, Kapoor establishes early on that something is amiss. The discomfort is subtle but persistent, largely emanating from the presence of Sohrab Handa, played with relish by Vinay Pathak. Acerbic, intrusive and disarmingly perceptive, Sohrab has an uncanny ability to prod at emotional fault lines, couching his barbs in humour that is as disquieting as it is incisive.

When Sohrab is found murdered, the film does not lurch into high-pitched suspense. Instead, it tightens inward. The investigation, led with admirable restraint by Saurabh Shukla’s weary inspector, unfolds almost as an afterthought, secondary to the emotional unravelling of those present. Kapoor resists the temptation to turn this into a puzzle-box narrative. The reveal, when it arrives, is not engineered for gasps but for reflection. In that sense, the film is far more invested in the “why” than the “who”, positioning itself as a study of relational fractures rather than a genre exercise.

What elevates the film is its acute understanding of interpersonal dynamics. Conversations overlap, silences linger, and awkward humour fills the spaces where honesty should reside. The writing captures the rhythms of real interaction, the defensiveness, the passive aggression, the sudden bursts of candour that leave everyone slightly exposed. Characters such as the introspective professor played by Ranvir Shorey and the observant psychologist embodied by Kapoor himself serve as conduits into the film’s deeper thematic concerns, gently dissecting the masks people wear in social settings.

The performances across the board are exemplary. Vinay Pathak, in particular, is magnetic. He makes Sohrab both repellant and compelling, a man whose inability to filter his thoughts renders him oddly honest in a room full of carefully curated personas. There is a fleeting moment of vulnerability that shows him in another light and Pathak handles it with remarkable sensitivity. Neil Bhoopalam and Palomi Ghosh, as the hosts struggling to maintain composure amid the chaos, lend the film an emotional anchor, while Koel Purie and Sadiya Siddiqui bring quiet nuance to characters who might otherwise have been relegated to the margins. It is also refreshing to see veteran MK Raina utilised in a role that carries a touch of ambiguity.

Technically, the film is equally assured. Despite being largely confined to a single setting, the cinematography is strikingly evocative. The camera navigates the interiors with a fluidity that mirrors the shifting dynamics between characters, finding new textures in familiar spaces. Light and shadow are used effectively to heighten the underlying tension, ensuring that the visual language remains as engaging as the dialogue-driven narrative.

Rajat Kapoor’s direction is measured and confident, even when the film risks overextending itself with a large ensemble. At times, the narrative threatens to lose focus, its thriller elements diluted by the sheer volume of interpersonal threads. Yet, it consistently regains footing through its sharp observations and compelling performances. Over the years, Kapoor has made a lot of actor friends and he knows their quirks and delightfully brings them to screen, with their consent, of course.

Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa may not fully satisfy as a traditional mystery but that is hardly its aim. It is, instead, a quietly unsettling reflection on the contradictions of human relationships, on how affection and resentment often coexist, and how, under the right circumstances, that uneasy balance can tip into something far more destructive. Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa is currently streaming on Zee5.

Also Read: Everything We Are Watching This Week (16-21st March): Dhurandhar: The Revenge and More

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