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On The Fast Track

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The
correct number would be closer to 4,500.There must be as many or more women out
there, who deserve to be in here. But since we are celebrating our 45th
anniversary this year, we sifted through the young and upwardly mobile to find
45 women, who are making their presence felt on the fast track.
Mind our
words, we know how to spot talent. We have done it for 45 years. And today, most
of the ones who have stood the test of time, from a Shobhaa De to a Poonam Sinha
(nee Chandiramani) to a Madhuri Dixit and a Sushmita Sen will vouch for the fact
that they were celebrated by Femina much before they became full-fledged celebs
in their own
right.
We've
scanned various disciplines and scoured the length and breath of the country to
shortlist 45 fine young women who will burn bright in the coming years. Whose
grit, determination and inner strength, combined with their vision, will shape
their destinies and that of their universe
too.
More power
to
them!
Yamini
Reddy
Emerging as: A naturally
talented Kuchipudi dancer, the next generation from the Reddy
'gharana'.
Lineage:
Daughter of Raja and Radha Reddy, virtual institutions in Kuchipudi. But while
there are many who shy away from what their parents excel in, Yamini took to it
because, "Dance was part of my life, my growing up. I'd come from school and eat
my lunch in the practice room and see what they were doing. When I took to it, I
never realised I was dancing. To me, it was as natural as eating,
drinking...."
Why
we think she's special: Young Yamini has drawn applause at major dance festivals
including the Parampara National Festival of Music and Dance, 2003, Delhi, and
the Elephanta Festival at Pune. She has extensively toured abroad, performing in
the UK, Europe, the USA and Dubai. Recently awarded the 'Yuva Ratna Award' for
the performing arts, Yamini is also the proud recipient of the Key to the City
from the Mayor of Dublin and Fort
Lauderdale.
Miles
to go: "Art is something that you can never master, you'll have to keep
learning, keep practising. I would like to be one of the top dancers and carry
my parents' teaching
forward."
Ujjwala
Raut
Profession: Supermodel,
much sought after by international couture and cosmetics houses. Just graced the
cover of 'Time'
magazine.
In
1996, Femina unleashed the then 17-year-old Ujjwala on an unsuspecting world as
the Femina Look of the Year winner. Since then, she has regularly notched up one
success after another.
Why we
think she's hot: Ujjwala has walked the ramp for names like Emmanuel Ungaro,
Roberto Cavalli, John Galliano, Angelo Tarazzi, Paco Rabanne, Veronique Leroy,
Chanel, Claude Montana, Hugo Boss, Bally, Michael Kors, Victoria's Secret and
was selected the face of YSL cosmetics last
year.
Winning
attitude: "It's not easy to survive there, but it isn't
impossible."
Konkona
Sen-Sharma
Family tree: Daughter of
filmstar-director Aparna Sen and writer-editor Mukul Sharma. Grandpa is
well-known film critic and filmmaker Chidananda
Dasgupta.
Profession:
Acting
Why
Konkona is a hot bargain: She picked up a national award for her very third
film, 'Mr & Mrs Iyer'. For this, mommy sent her off to South India to learn
the way the Iyer women live their lives, their English accent and the Tamil
tongue. The hard toil paid off, though she admits, she was the most scolded
person on the
set.
Present
project: 'Page 3', almost near
completion
Life
so far: Childhood was spent mainly at school or travelling with mommy to film
festivals, reading or hanging around on film sets and being thrown in to act in
a scene because the child artiste didn't show up...
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Nandita
Basu
Get To Know
Her: A Delhi-based designer; works with Abhishek Gupta.
Why we think
she's got it: Her fashion is cutting edge and contemporary with an excellent
sense of fabric innovation, detailing and finish. All this is matched with
enough marketing savvy that finds her collections release to coincide with
global season timelines.
On the rocket
trail: A concealed pocket here and an eye-catching feature there - that's her
art! This NIFT graduate and student of Central Saint Martins School of Art and
Design, London, had a stint with Suneet Verma, one of our design gurus, for a
period of five to six years. She later went on to launch her
label.
Skirts,
T-shirts, shirts, tops, jackets, coats, trousers... You name it and
she
has it at her
flagship store in Delhi or in other design stores in
Bangalore,
Mumbai
or Hyderabad. And she would craft them for you in fabrics like denim, lycra,
cotton, silk, georgette, and even
linen.
Her take
on life: "Believe in yourself and the positive energies around you. Don't ever
get bogged down by the low phases in
life."
Rina
Shah
What she does: Owns the
designer store 'Rinaldi'.
Why we think
she's a champ: Five years after she launched Rinaldi Design (the only label for
designer shoes, handbags and belts in India), Rina has a roaring business on her
hands. But that's not all that makes it so hot - she's a member of PETA and
believes in non-cruelty to animals, so imports leather look-alike material for
her designs.
Why
she's so hot at her job: Trendy designs, durable quality and attention to detail
have won her quite an impressive clientele - Urmila
Matondkar and
Sonali Bendre, Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan, Saif Ali Khan, and Jackie Shroff.
Rina recently opened Rinaldi in Soho, New York. That makes her one of the few
Indian designers to have their own store in NY City. And this one's frequented
by celebrities like Goldie Hawn and Naomi
Campbell.
Monikangkana
Dutta
Who's she?
The supermodel-in-the-making that everyone is talking about. This half-Assamese,
half-Marathi girl called 'Moni' has set the ramps in Paris on fire. After all,
not everybody is 5.10" tall; boast a svelte figure, stunning features and a
glowing - "I love my dusky complexion" - look.
In the footsteps
of: But naturally Ujjwala Raut: "I love Ujjwala, she's my favourite model." Moni
has made a right beginning in the same direction. During her short stay in
Paris, she's walked the ramp for Chanel and Christian Dior, John Galliano.
What next? "I'd
love to shift base to New York, I'd love to do the Milan fashion week."
Shibani
Jain
Get to know her: An NID
(National Institute of Design) graduate in graphic design, she is the CEO of
Craftsbridge India, which designs and markets Indian
handicrafts.
Why
we think she's va-va-vroom: She turned around her dotcom venture (a victim of
the late '90s dotcom bust) into a Rs 2.5 crore company within four years. Thanks
to the design (NID and NIFT designers) and marketing (IIM grads) inputs,
Craftsbridge is able to provide a contemporary edge to artefacts sourced from
artisans at the grassroots level. Online shopping for handicrafts has never
looked (and been priced) so good before. Thanks to its tie-ups with about 25
NGOs and its aesthetically designed webpage (www.craftsbridge.com), you can shop
for those chic dhurries from your
home.
On
the rocket trail: Armed with a venture funding tie-up, Shibani plans to expand
to other states (right now, it is in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and
Orissa) and export to the US and the UK. "I want to bring to the customer the
best artefacts that our Indian artisans have to offer at the best prices, and
provide the artisans with round-the-year
employment."
She
says: "Time is short; do the most you can with what you
have."
Rajeshwari
Ayyar Karthik
She
is: A silversmith-cum-artiste who brings the yin and yang into her jewellery
ever so
subtly.
Why we
think she's got it: She has won prestigious prizes for her design work, and has
been finalist at the De Beers India International Jewellery Design Competition
of 1998. Now that she's no longer heading the design studio at Carbon, and is
an independent designer, she's often called on as consultant for her experience
on the domestic and export jewellery
markets.
Why
her jewellery is special: It's in the texturing, where she uses techniques like
granulation, twisting, surface texture creation and metal fusing. Rajeshwari
explains that the fusion of sterling silver with 24K gold in her pendant is
called 'knitting', which she does herself. She calls her collection, a
reflection of her personality, which is mix of trying to make a bold, different
statement, yet offering simplicity and grace to the wearer. "My aim is also to
go beyond the two-dimensional look of
jewellery.''
Anamika
Khanna
Get to know her:
Kolkata-based fashion designer who carries the she-dares-to-be-different image
on her shoulders with
flair.
Why we
think she has it: From an ingenious blend of Indian and Western wear, she has
done it all, in both natural and traditional fabrics.
On the rocket
trail: She started with designing for herself and advising her friends. Then
came along her Africa-inspired Shoowa line at the Damania Fashion Awards and the
Kingfisher Designer Of The Year Award. Both catapulted her to stardom. Her
flagship store in Kolkata and the off-the-shelf sales in the metros across the
country speak of her success. Sure enough, Boho, a UK company, is offering to
market her creations across
Europe.
Her take
on life: "Whatever you do, give it all you have and it will get you
results."
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Cover Story
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On The Fast Track |
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Pond’s Femina Miss India
2006
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Indiatimes
Modelwatch aClick to view
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