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Hamari Devrani

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Hamari Devrani
GenreDrama
Written byRaakesh Paswan
Amitabh Singh
Pawan K Sethhi
Screenplay byMrinal Tripathi
Amitabh Singh
Bhavna Vyas
Pawan K Sethhi
Directed byVikram Ghai
Manish Mistry
Santosh Bhatt
Pawan Sahu
Manchan thakur vikal
Vikram Labhe
Swapnil Mahaling
Suraj Rao
Praveen Sudan
Creative directorManish Mistry
Starring
Opening themeGaurang Vyas
Country of originIndia
Original languageHindi
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes951
Production
Executive producerSuprita Purkayastha Reena Manjrekar
ProducerShobhana Desai
CinematographyAnil Mishra
EditorsManish Mistry Jaskaran Singh
Rajnikant Singh
Inderjit Singh
Satyaprakash Singh
Camera setupMulti-camera
Production companyShobhana Desai Productions
Original release
NetworkStar Plus
Release26 May 2008 (2008-05-26) –
3 February 2012 (2012-02-03)

Hamari Devrani (Our Daughter-in-law) is an Indian soap opera, which was broadcast on Star Plus during weekday afternoons from 2008 to 2012.[1][2]

Plot

Bhakti (played by Krishna Gokani) is a poor girl living in a beautiful and wealthy village in Qatar. Everyone sees her as unlucky because her mother, Gayatri, eloped with her ex-husband after giving birth to Bhakti, and Bhakti's father Hasmukh refused to see her face or recognize her beauty. Bhakti's maternal grandmother, Kashiben, raises her single-handedly and tries to protect her from love to prevent emotional pain. As Bhakti grows up (now played by Jyotica Dholabhai), the show associates her with unluckiness and she becomes lonely. Whenever Bhakti asks about her parents and childhood, Kashiben says that they are in Ahemadabad. Meanwhile, she is presented with an idol of a baby, Lord Krishna, and is told that this will protect her in any situation. Bhakti accepts wholeheartedly and calls the baby Laddoo thief. Later, Kashiben takes Bhakti to Ahemadabad where Bhakti's father Hasmukh lives. Hasmukh, and his second wife, insult Bhakti and banish her from Ahemadabad.

Meanwhile, in Ahemadabad, Devkiben, an elderly widowed woman, heads a rich and popular family known as the Nanavatis, with her six sons and five daughters-in-law. The eldest daughters-in-law of the family (Manjula, Parul, Apla, Jalpa, and Rajeshwari) want Mohan (played by Madhav Deochake), Devkiben's youngest son, to marry a woman who will demand anything from the family and act like an overlord. Bhakti marries into this family when her would-be elder sisters-in-law (jethanis) see her in Ahemadabad and choose her for their brother-in-law after seeing Bhakti's educated, gullible, and sensitive nature. The story flows onward, where viewers witness how she is treated in this family by her sisters-in-law. Manjula, Parul, Apla, Jalpa, and Rajeshwari try not to love Mohan and Bhakti, but in the end, good wins over evil, and they indeed start loving Mohan and Bhakti.

The character of Padmini is introduced with her seven-year-old daughter, Shikha, who people believe is Mohan's illegitimate child. Padmini wants to marry Mohan, and obtain the assets of the Nanavati family. She plays many tricks to fulfill her evil intentions. In one scheme, she kidnaps Bhakti (now pregnant) to blackmail and marry Mohan, but she is caught by the police.

The show then takes a seventeen-year leap, and now the story focuses on Mohan and later, Bhakti's daughter, Aastha (played by Vidhi Sindhwad), and Padmini's daughter, Shikha (played by Ekta Saraiya).

The story then moves forward twenty years. This is after Bhakti and Mohan died from giving birth to a mentally-ill daughter, Aastha who the Nanavati family adopted. Aastha is raised by all her aunties with love and care and is a sweet and bubbly girl. Meanwhile, Shikha grows up to be ill-mannered like her mother. The show introduces Raj, Shika's love interest. Raj and Shikha love each other but cannot marry because an astrologer predicted Raj's first wife will die. They create a plan so that if Raj marries Aastha, it won't matter if she dies. After the marriage, Aastha shows no sign of death so Raj, with the help of Shikha and his aunt Rasila, plans to murder Astha and 'get-it-over-and-done-with'. Somehow, Aastha miraculously survives, and the five daughters-in-law succeed in taking their revenge from Raj and Rasila.

After that, Mohan marries Vrinda. Even though she is a genuine and loving woman, the Navavati bahus think she is here to steal her money. They eventually realize that Vrinda is a nice woman. Then comes another twist; the family of the Nanavati's only daughter comes to steal money from the Nanavati house. They kidnap Aastha, but Vrinda rescues her and the kidnappers go to jail. The story ends with the Nanavati family celebrating Vrinda's pregnancy.

Cast

Production

Speaking about the series Producer Shobhana Desi said, "Nothing works as well as a Gujarati family on Indian television and that is the reason why Hamari Devrani is centred around a family living in Gujarat."[4]

In November 2008, the shootings and telecast of all the Hindi television series including this series and films were stalled on 8 November 2008 due to dispute by the technician workers of FWICE (Federation of Western India Cine Employees) for increasing the wages, better work conditions and more breaks between shootings.[5] FWICE first took a strike on 1 October 2008 when they addressed their problems with the producers and production was stalled.[6] A contract was signed after four days discussions and shooting were happening only for two hours content in a day then after which differences increased between them while channels gave them time until 30 October 2008 to sort it out.[7] Failing to do so lead to protests again from 10 November 2008 to 19 November 2008 during which channels blacked out new broadcasts and repeat telecasts were shown from 10 November 2008.[7][8] On 19 November 2008, the strike was called off after settling the disputes and the production resumed.[9] The new episodes started to telecast from 1 December 2008.[10]

In May 2011, the storyline took a leap while the lead Krishna Gokhani quit when her character was killed and Eva Ahuja, who was cast Bhakti's daughter Aastha became the lead.[11]

References

  1. ^ "Star Plus to replace Bhabhi with Hamari Devrani". Indian Television.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Afternoon slot: Siesta time for GEC's". Indian Television.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Krishna's a family person". Times of India.
  4. ^ "Pressing for primetime". The Telegraph.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Cine technicians go on strike". The Indian Express.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Work hit as 1.5 lakh cine workers strike work". Outlook India.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ a b "Strike off, TV shooting to resume". The Indian Express.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ "No more repeat of TV soaps as TV industry strike ends". India Today.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "No more repeat telecast of TV soaps as strike ends". Live Mint.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ "New look return". The Telegraph.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ "Hamari Devrani completes 4 years; gets a New Devrani". The India Post.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)