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Mrs. Mukhyamantri (transl. Mrs. Chief Minister) is an Indian Marathi language television series which aired on Zee Marathi. [1] It starred Amruta Dhongade and Tejas Barve in lead roles. [2] It premiered from 24 June 2019 by replacing Lagira Zala Ji. [3] It is produced by Shweta Shinde under the banner of Vajra Production. [4]
Mukhyamantri (transl. Chief Minister) is a 1996 Bengali political drama film directed by Anjan Choudhury. This film's music was composed by Mrinal Bandhyopadhay. This film's music was composed by Mrinal Bandhyopadhay.
Mukhyamantri or Mukhyamanthri are romanisations of the word for chief minister in several Indian languages. It may refer to: Mukhyamantri, a 1996 Indian Bengali-language film; Mukhyamantri Chandru, an Indian actor and politician who worked in the Kannada film industry
Mihir Bhanage of The Times of India gave the film 2 stars out of 5 and wrote "The songs are nice and some parts of the movie are good. Other than that it’s a film that turns out to be just average". [3] Rohan Juvekar of Maharashtra Times gave the film 2 stars out of 5 and Says"Overall, the spectacle has come after a long time. Those who want ...
Mukhyamantri Chandru, Kalpana Naganath, Srinivas, B. V. Rajaram Play Mukhyamantri: 159 3 September 2016 H. G. Dattatreya, Vijaya Prasad, Hariprriya: Neer Dose [57] 162 18 September 2016 Shilpa Manjunath, Chandan Shetty, Neha Shetty: Mungaru Male 2: 170 23 October 2016 Ramya: Nagarahavu: 173 30 October 2016 Rachita Ram: Diwali special 173 30 ...
1 June 2024 () Related; Kayal: Majhi Manasa (transl. My People) is an Indian Marathi language drama series starring Janaki Pathak and Sainkeet Kamat in lead roles ...
1 February 2014 Original Tamil: Aval அவல் 7 November 2011 Star Vijay: 16 March 2013 Remake Kannada: Amma ಅಮ್ಮಾ 1 February 2016 Star Suvarna: 25 February 2017 Marathi: Lek Majhi Ladki लेक माझी लाडकी 2 May 2016 Star Pravah: 22 October 2018 Telugu: Kumkuma Puvvu కుంకుమ పువ్వు 18 ...
Tappa, as a significant genre in Bengali musical styles, reached levels of excellence in lyrics and rendition (gayaki), arguably unmatched in other parts of India. Hugely popular in the latter half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, tappa was the genre of choice of the wealthy elite as well as the classes with more modest means.