Actor sara khan biography of barack
Actor Sara Arfeen Khan, who is seen in the show Love Ka Hai Intezaar, says that she has never tried to rate herself as an actor. She says that instead of judging her acting abilities, she has always concentrated on improving them. “I cannot rate myself. I think it's the fans and the audience's job to rate an actor. I would say that I am getting better by the day but there's always room for improvement,” says the actor, who is seen alongside Keith Sequeira and Sanjeeda Sheikh in the show.
Sara never wanted to play a stereotypical version of a vamp and her character in Love Ka Hai Intezaar is exactly the type of role she was looking for. She says, “Love Ka Hai Intezaar fetched me a lot of appreciation and I completely credit Siddharth P Malhotra for this. I did not believe in the role as much as he did. Playing the character of Vijayalakshmi was and is very challenging.”
She likes actor Hrithik Roshan. “Hrithik Roshan is my favorite because he's a true hero on screen as well as off-screen. The challenges, in his life, have been enormous, but he has always overcome them,” she says.
Sara Khan: Don’t understand why makers want to repeat roles or stories on TV
Feb 12, PM IST
Bidaai actor Sara Khan, who has been in the TV industry for 17 years, rues being stereotyped; adds she wants to do more positive roles now.
She shot to fame with Sapna Babul Ka Bidaai, since then Sara Khan ’s career trajectory has seen a lot of fluctuations. Along with acting, the actor is also delving into music after she received a lot of positive response to her single, Blackheart and is working on her next: “I love singing. If I hadn’t been an actor, I would have been a singer. I’m not professionally trained, but I sing from my heart, and my fans love it.”
Having starred in a few grey roles of late, the actor hopes to do more positive roles henceforth. “When I started my career, I played a protagonist and was offered only positive roles, as is the case with television. Later, I took up some grey roles, and since then I’ve had only such offers,” she explains.
The year-old doesn’t know “if it’s a good idea to repeat oneself”. She adds, “I don’t understand why makers on television want to repeat the same things. The mindset in the industry is that if an actor looks glam in one show, then they should do the same role again and again. Of late, I’m not taking up anything because most of the offers I’m getting are for negative roles, which I don’t want to do… I know I have more in me as an actor [that can be] explored.”
Having been a part of the TV industry for 17 years now, for the actor, who was last seen in Spy Bahu and Palkon Ki Chhaon Mein 2, “waiting for the right role is a challenge”. She adds, “Of course, you have to wait, but working and being seen is also important. Today, there are so many TV channels, yet TV shows find it tough to survive and even complete one year on air. Shows come and go and there’s no recall value of so many of them. So many serials wrap up within three or six months. There’s competition among channels and also due to OTT cont
Sara Khan (activist)
English human rights activist (born )
For other people named Sara Khan, see Sara Khan. For the British television personality, see Saira Khan.
Dame Sara KhanDBE (born January ) is a British human rights activist and the chief executive officer of Inspire, an independent non-governmental organisation working to counter extremism and gender inequality. Khan is a contributor to The Guardian and The Independent newspapers, as well as The Huffington Post and has made appearances on British television and radio. She has been interviewed for the BBC's HARDtalk and Desert Island Discs.
Early life
Khan was born and raised in Bradford to immigrants from Pakistan. She worked as a hospital pharmacist and was president of an Islamic youth organisation before launching the Inspire charity in , with the aim of challenging extremism and promoting gender equality.
In September , after the London bombings, she sat on the Home Office's Tackling Extremism and Radicalisation Working Group and has also worked with the education department and the Department for International Development.
Chief executive officer of Inspire
Khan is the chief executive officer of Inspire, an independent non-governmental organisation working to counter extremism and gender inequality, which she co-founded in
Inspire has delivered a considerable amount of work in the educational sector. Khan partnered with the Association of School and College Leaders to deliver training to headteachers and senior leaders about safeguarding pupils from extremism. At Inspire, she spearheaded the organisation's efforts in to challenge Universities UK's guidelines which advocated for gender segregation on Britain's universities. Inspire has produced anti-extremism counter-narrative videos which have been watched thousands of times to help refute ISIS propaganda. One video by
The actress, who has been a student of history, recently spoke with Ians ahead of the release of her period film and shared that she finds it very interesting how landmark moments in Russia from the rise of Vladimir Lenin to the fall of the Soviet Union happened within a span of years.
She told Ians: “I like 20th-century Russian history a lot. I think it’s very interesting how they went from Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, Nikita Khrushchev, and Mikhail Gorbachev to the fall of the Soviet Union, ye sab salon mein hua hai. It’s very interesting to observe it that way.”
In fact, Nikita Khrushchev was the one who denounced his predecessor Joseph Stalin