A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Make way for Anya Singh and Aadar Jain!
'This year happens to be a very high performance year, and I have got appreciation for my characters.' 'I don't want to do a role in which I don't have anything to contribute.' 'I can't do a role just because I want to look glamorous; I am glamorous anyway!'
It was the year 'anti-national' became the 'it' gaali, and our humble haldi-doodh became the toast of the West's wellness brigade as 'Tumeric Latte.' It was the year 'cash' became unholy and 'fake news' became real. Shuma Raha looks back.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'Without even knowing me, people have trolled me for being the person I am, for the way I look.' 'Why put myself in a negative space, you know?'
Bollywood doesn't care for the fading star, says Syed Firdaus Ashraf.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'We, the audience, listen to stories that have nothing to do with us and we cry, just from the truth of those stories.' 'And Anvita is one of those people who makes this happen.'
Putting an interesting spin on Bollywood's power jodis...
'It's nice that so many different visionaries can imagine me in their stories.' 'I feel proud of that.' 'Ultimately, only a director can add value to your career.'
Before Shah Rukh Khan and his Happy New Year team wins us over with their dancing skills, read this.
'This film was being made when I was pregnant, so even if they wanted, I couldn't do the role.' 'The film went to another actress, but she made them wait for a year.' 'After Adira was four months old, they decided that if I am going to start acting again, they should approach me.'
'The honest truth is, after Tiger Zinda Hai released, the next time I was in contact with Salman again was on the sets of Bharat.'
'Politics has risen around Padmavati, but the film has nothing political in it.'
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'Shah Rukh Khan is a great actor. To be the only other actor that a great director selects after him is a matter of great pride.'
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Did you like Chennai Express, Goliyon Ki Raasleela: Ram Leela and 3 Idiots?
Pakistani actor Ali Zafar explains why he wants to change his romantic hero image.
Love them? Then vote for them!
'My last two films didn't do well... I was so hurt that I am scared of laughing or being happy now.' Director Pradeep Sarkar discusses Mardaani with Patcy N.
'The money and the exposure on television are great. People love you, and recognise you because you are on television. I am a choreographer but I have become a celebrity,' Farah Khan tells Rajul Hegde.
Paris spells r-o-m-a-n-c-e, oodles of it. Those who've visited cannot get enough. Those who haven't cannot stop wishing
'Having worked in this space for 25 years, I have become larger than life. It is difficult to get out of it at times. There was a lot of help to remove the shahrukhiyat out of me.'
Kicking off our Valentine's Day special, filmi style!
The men who made all the money in 2015!
For a show that prides itself on being of the people, by the people and for the people, it's strange how in its moments of success, the 'people' were missing, says Sukanya Verma.
Long before Prem Ratan Dhan Payo, Rajshri made some beautiful movies.
Riteish Deshmukh on movies, Genelia and what he'd like to teach his sons.
On the actor's 54th birthday on November 2, we write another tome about the boy with big dreams and a regrettable haircut, who defied incredible odds to become one of the most loved actors on the planet.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Bombay Velvet spends too much time on period details and loses focus, notes Aseem Chhabra.
'Preparation is not something Salman will admit to because I think it's not "cool" enough to do that.' 'This is the first time I saw him prepare for a role.' 'This is the first time I saw him struggling to get a hold of this character.'
'A friend said there was a new phenomenon occurring during every screening. Audience members were mouthing the dialogues with the characters on screen.' 'It was a truly amazing experience. It was impossible to hear what was being said on the screen. There was so much noise, laughter and celebration in the theatre. And the film was not even a month old.' Aseem Chhabra remembers seeing Sholay twice in the couple of weeks after it opened.
'Don't do it if you only want to wear good clothes and drive a flashy car. Get into banking, then.'
Bollywood has realised the value of portraying the complexity, necessity and changeability of modern-day marital unions.