Jump to content

Ek Veer Ki Ardaas...Veera

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ek Veer Ki Ardaas...Veera
Created byMamta Patnaik
Purnendu Shekhar
Written byRaghubir
Durjoy Dutta[1]
Soumyava Goswami
Sumrit shahi
Gajra Kottary[2]
Koel Chaudhuri
Directed byWaseem Sabir[3]
Jagrut Mehta
Creative directorAmit Bhargava
Presented byStarPlus
StarringSee Below
Opening themeVeera By Aashish Rego
Lyrics: Sharad Tripathi
Country of originIndia
Original languageHindi
No. of episodes896
Production
Executive producersSoumia Samadhiya
Karnika Saxena
ProducersYash Patnaik[4]
Mamta Patnaik
Mukesh Mishra
CinematographyDeepak Malvankar
EditorKshitija Khandagale
Running time20 minutes approx
Production companyBeyond Dreams Entertainment Private Limited
Original release
NetworkStarPlus
Release2 January 2012 (2012-01-02) –
30 August 2015 (2015-08-30)

Ek Veer Ki Ardaas... Veera (transl. A Brother's Prayer... Veera) is an Indian television soap opera that aired on StarPlus and streams on Hotstar, produced under Yash Patnik's Beyond Dream Production.[5][6] The series premiered on 29 October 2012 and ended on 8 August 2015.[7][8] It initially starred child actors Harshita Ojha and Bhavesh Balchandani and after a 15-year leap, the series starred Digangana Suryavanshi, Shivin Narang, Vishal Vashishtha, and Farnaz Shetty.[9][10]

Plot

[edit]

Rannvijay Singh, an eight-year-old boy, lives with his parents, Ratan and Sampooran Singh, who is the Sarpanch of the village. One day a lady named Amrita comes to the door and claims her daughter's father is Sampooran. Ratan insults her but Sampooran arrives and agrees with Amrita. Seeing this, Ratan is heartbroken and locks herself in a room. Guiltridden, Sampooran leaves the house and Amrita dies at the door due to terminal illness with the child in her arms. Rannvijay, not aware of the adults' history, takes in the infant and names her Veera, taking care of her like a mother. He soon sends her to the city to complete her education as she grows up to be a lively and brave girl.

15 years later

[edit]

Veera returns home and tries to open a solar plant in Pritampura. She reunites with her childhood bully, a grown-up, rowdy Baldev, whose righteous father Balwant is now the Sarpanch. Veera and Baldev fall in love during their training of farm equipment, and an aspiring singer Rannvijay also marries Baldev's sister Gunjan and Veera's childhood best friend who had always dreamt of visiting London.

Rannvijay wins an esteemed music competition, and the stardom gets to Gunjan's head as she accepts advertising offers and also begins gambling in order to obtain cash for her luxuries. Gunjan soon gets pregnant but miscarries the child, damaging her chances of getting pregnant forever, making her finally realise her mistakes.

After Baldev is mistakenly blamed of a crime arranged by the local policeman Rajveer who is obsessed with Veera, she marries Baldev to save him from her brother's wrath. Baldev is soon acquitted and their marriage is accepted by the family.

Pritampura further falls victim to terrorists which takes away Ratan's life, and a grieving Rannvijay and Veera struggle to come to terms with it. Veera soon discovers she is pregnant and vows to let Rannvijay and Gunjan raise the child as the serial ends on the day of Rakshabandhan.

Cast

[edit]

Main

[edit]
  • Digangana Suryavanshi as Veera Kaur Singh – Amrita and Sampooran's daughter; Ranvijay's half-sister; Gunjan's best friend; Baldev's wife (2013–2015)
    • Harshita Ojha as Child Veera Kaur Singh (2012–13)
    • Nishika Kataria as Baby Veera Singh (2012)
  • Shivin Narang as Ranvijay "Ranvi" Singh – Ratan and Sampooran's son; Veera's half-brother; Gunjan's husband (2013–2015)[11]
    • Bhavesh Balchandani as Child Ranvijay Singh (2012–13)
  • Vishal Vashishtha as Baldev Singh – Balwant and Bansuri's son; Gunjan's brother; Veera's husband (2013–2015)
    • Devish Ahuja as Child Baldev Singh (2012–2013)
  • Farnaz Shetty as Gunjan Singh – Baldev's sister; Veera's best friend; Ranvijay's wife (2013–2015)
    • Spandan Chaturvedi / Kalyani Badeka / Arishfa Khan as Child Gunjan Singh (2012) / (2012–2013)

Recurring

[edit]
  • Sneha Wagh as Ratanjeet "Ratan" Singh – Sampooran's wife; Ranvijay's mother (2012–15)
  • Sudhanshu Pandey as Sampooran Singh – Ratan's husband; Ranvijay and Veera's father (2012–2013)
  • Shagufta Ali as Mrs. Singh – Sampooran's aunt; Ranvijay and Veera's grandaunt (2012–15)
  • Kapil Nirmal as Nihaal Singh – Sampooran's friend (2013–2014)
  • Aastha Chaudhary as Amrita Singh – Veera's mother (2012–2013)
  • Kulbir Badersonas as Amrita's mother; Veera's grandmother (2012)
  • Harsh Vashisht as Kartar Singh – Gurpreet's husband (2012–13)
  • Samikssha Batnagar as Gurpreet Singh – Kartar's wife (2012–13)
  • Yajuvendra Singh as Balwant Singh – Bansuri's husband; Baldev and Gunjan's father (2012–2015)
  • Vishavpreet Kaur as Bansuri Singh – Balwant's wife, Baldev and Gunjan's mother (2012–15)
  • Shazil Khan as Child Dalbeer (2012)
  • Jalina Thakur as Pooja Sharma (2012–13)
  • Daya Shankar Pandey as Surjeet Singh (2013–2014)
  • Ankit Bathla as Karan Khanna – Veera's friend/former love interest (2013–14)
  • Ankit Shah as Dalbeer Singh (2013–14)
  • Niilam Paanchal as Amrit Kaur (2014)
  • Priyamvada Kant as Simran Kaur, Baldev's ex-fiancée (2014)
  • Rumi Khan as Bakhtawar Singh (2014)
  • Ranveer Chahal as Music Engineer (2014)
  • Kanika Kotnala as Chanchali Singh (2014)
  • Gagan Anand as Billa Singh (2014–15)
  • Shaizal as Jaggi Singh, Ranvijay's friend (2014–15)
  • Prashant Chawla as Sahil, Nihal Singh's assistant in Poland (2014)
  • Rohit Bakshi as Reality Show Host (2014)
  • Vivek Dahiya as Inspector Rajveer Thakur, Veera's ex-fiancé (2014)[12]
  • Keerti Nagpure as Geet Singh, Manjeet's daughter-in-law (2015)
  • Vrudhi Jakra as Deepu Singh, Geet's daughter, Baldev and Gunjan's niece (2015)
  • Mayank Gandhi as Dilawar Singh (2015)
  • Chaitanya Choudhury as Professor Rahul (2015)
  • Usha Bachani as Manjeet Singh, Baldev and Gunjan's aunt (2015)
  • Aditya Deshmukh as Jhappi

Guest appearances

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

Before its premiere, it was titled as Sooli Upar Sej Piya Ki but was later changed to Ek Veer Ki Ardaas... Veera.[14][15] The series is based on the backdrop of Punjab which premiered on 29 October 2012 replacing the series Mann Ki Awaaz... Pratigya.[16][17] The title track of the series was composed and sung by composer Anand Raj Anand.[18]

Within three months after its premiere, Veera was supposed to take a ten-year leap in its storyline. However, with the popularity of the children leads Bhavesh Balchandani and Harshita Ojha playing Ranveer and Veera, the makers postpone the leap and continued the story with them because of which Rahul Sharma who was supposed to replace Balachandani as adult Ranveer went on to do the serial Ek Ghar Banaunga.[19]

In May 2013, the sequence of a tiger attacking the village was shot using a real tiger.[20]

In September 2014, Darshan Raval, the contestant of the reality singing show India's Raw Star of StarPlus lend over his voice for the sequence where character Ranveer played by Narang participates in a singing competition and the sequence was filmed at the sets of India's Raw Star in Filmcity.[21][22] The song sung by character Ranveer was penned by Shaarib Sabri and Toshi Sabri who also appeared as the judges of the show in the series.[23]

Casting

[edit]

In October 2013, it took a leap of 15 years where Shivin Narang and Digangana Suryavanshi replaced Balchandani and Ojha was adult Ranveer and Veera as the lead characters.[24][25] Post leap, Farnaaz Shetty and Vishal Vashishtha were also cast for the lead roles of adult Gunjan and Baldev paired opposite Narang and Suryavanshi whose childhood characters played by Arishfa Khan and Devish Ahuja were recurring roles.[26] Initially Narang rejected the role of Ranvijay when offered by the makers but later agreed for which he said, "I read about the show and realised that the storyline is very different. And my parents also forced me to accept the offer."[27] Vashishtha auditioned for both Ranveer and Baldev's characters, but got selected for the role of Baldev for which he initially was sceptical to accept the negative role while makers convinced him.[28][29]

In August 2013, Kapil Nirmal who entered the series in January 2013 quit the series with the end of his role.[30][31] However, in August 2014 he returned when makers approached him but soon in December 2014 he quit the series, unhappy with the shaping of his role and his character was killed.[32] Sneha Wagh who quit in January 2014 owing her marriage re-entered the series after the break in April 2014.[33]

Initially, Sana Saeed was roped for a guest role of a dancer in 2014. Unsatisfied with the charges demanded by Saeed, Kratika Sengar was cast by the makers.[34] Nisha Nagpal was supposed to play the role of Simran but could not when the makers of Masakali of Sahara One filed a complaint in CINTAA (Cine and TV Artistes’ Association) stating that she was in contact with them.[35] Thus, she was replaced overnight by Priyamvada Kant in December 2014.[35]

Cancellation

[edit]

The show which was to end in December 2014, received an extension of six to eight months and soon in January 2015 it was shifted from its night 10:30pm slot to the evening 5:00pm (IST) slot.[36][37] In September 2015, the series was confirmed going off air and ended on 10 August 2015.[38]

Filming

[edit]

Based on backdrop of Punjab, the series is mainly filmed in sets at Powai in Mumbai.[39] Besides some sequences were filmed at some parts of Punjab, Amritsar Golden Temple and villages surrounding it and Delhi.[40][41][42] In July 2014, a sequence was shot at Poland.[43][44]

Adaptations

[edit]

In 2014, the series was dubbed and aired on Zee Telugu in Telugu as Meena.[45] A dubbed version of the serial was telecast in Tamil as En Anbu Thangaikku on Vijay TV, but was discontinued after only 400 episodes were broadcast. A dubbed version of the serial was telecast in Malayalam as Manasaveera on Asianet.[46] The series was broadcast on Indonesia in ANTV in their native language.[47] Besides, it was dubbed and aired in 50 languages in different countries worldwide.[48] It remade into Star Maa as Telugu television series Rakhi Poornima. It also remade in Bengali as Rakhi Bandhan which aired on Star Jalsha.

Reception

[edit]

The first episode of the series garnered an average rating of 2.1 TVR.[49] However, it started to rise gradually. In March 2013, it garnered 3.1 TVR.[50] In week 15 of 2013, it was at fifth position while the following week it dropped to tenth position in Hindi GEC list with 2.1 TVR.[51][52] In first week of August 2013, it was at tenth position with 4933 TVT (Television Viewership in Thousands).[53] In week 50 of 2013, it was the tenth most watched Hindi GEC fiction with 2.8 TVR.[54]

In first week of 2014, it garnered 2.4 TVR while in the week three and five it got 2.4 and 2.7 TVRs.[55][56][57]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Writing from Mr Right in the Spotlight". The New Indian Express.
  2. ^ "The ABC of making toddlers TV stars". The Times of India.
  3. ^ "Director Waseem Sabir quits Veera". The Times of India.
  4. ^ "Sneha can easily pull off a complex character: Yash". The Times of India.
  5. ^ ""Punjab is Veera and Veera is Punjab"". The Times of India.
  6. ^ "500 episodes on Star Plus Veera claims storyline maintained". Indian Television dot com. 22 August 2014.
  7. ^ "TV gets new lease of life". Hindustan Times. 29 October 2012.
  8. ^ "Veera to end next month. Is the Digangana-Farnaz catfight to blame?". Times of India.
  9. ^ "'Veera' filled a void in my life: Digangana". Business Standard India. 17 September 2014.
  10. ^ "Sneha Wagh doesn't want to mingle with the new cast of Veera". The Times of India.
  11. ^ "Ek Veer Ki Ardaas Veera: Ranvijay aka Shivin Narang to sing on India's Raw Star". 8 September 2014.
  12. ^ "OUT OF THE BOX: VIVEK DAHIYA". Verve Magazine. 6 April 2015.
  13. ^ "Singer Shibani Kashyap enters fiction space on TV". The Indian Express. 26 August 2014.
  14. ^ "Harsh Vashishth bags Sooli Upar Sej Piya Ki". The Times of India.
  15. ^ "Time for some magic". The Tribune.
  16. ^ "Pan Indian shows rule the small screen". The Times of India.
  17. ^ "Veera to grow 10:30 pm slot for Star Plus by 30%: Ormax study". Indian Television dot com.
  18. ^ "Soaps tune into original notes". The Times of India.
  19. ^ "It's leap time for 6 TV shows". The Times of India.
  20. ^ "Kapil Nirmal fights a tiger in 'Veera'". Daily News and Analysis.
  21. ^ "Reality show contestant sings for '...Veera'". Business Standard India. 18 September 2014.
  22. ^ "New raw star". Deccan Chronicle. 7 September 2014.
  23. ^ "Shaarib, Toshi's Pen A Special Song For 'Veera'". Mid Day. 25 September 2014.
  24. ^ "'Ek Veer Ki Ardaas... Veera' to take a time-leap of 15 years". Times of India.
  25. ^ "TV serial 'Ek Veer Ki Ardaas…Veera' completes two years". The Indian Express. 31 October 2014.
  26. ^ "A 15-year leap for Veera". The Indian Express. 8 November 2013.
  27. ^ "I had said no to 'Veera', recalls Shivin Narang". Business Standard India. 26 October 2014.
  28. ^ "Kolkata boy Vishal Vashishtha to play Baldev in Veera". The Times of India.
  29. ^ "Baldev of Veera was not keen to play a negative role". The Times of India.
  30. ^ "Kapil Nirmal enters as mystery man in 'Veera'". Daily Bhaskar.
  31. ^ "Kapil Nirmal aka Nihaal bids adieu to Veera". The Times of India.
  32. ^ "Kapil Nirmal quits 'Ek Veer Ki Ardaas – Veera' again". Times of India.
  33. ^ "Sneha Wagh returns to TV show after her wedding break". The Times of India.
  34. ^ "Kratika Sengar to do an item number!". The Times of India.
  35. ^ a b "Nisha Nagpal replaced by Priyamvada Kant in Veera". The Times of India.
  36. ^ "Time Slot Change For 'Ek Veer Ki Ardaas... Veera'?". Mid Day. 6 January 2015.
  37. ^ "Veera gets a new time slot". The Times of India.
  38. ^ "Digangana Suryavanshi aka Veera gets emotional as the show goes off air". India Today.
  39. ^ "Veera's producer Mukesh Mishra gets 7 years jail for raping actress". India Today.
  40. ^ "TV serial 'Veeran-Ek Veer Ki Ardas' cast in Amritsar for shooting". The Tribune.
  41. ^ "Star casts of Veera visits city". Hindustan Times. 2 April 2013.
  42. ^ "'Ek Veer Ki Ardaas...Veera' to be shot in Delhi". The Times of India.
  43. ^ "Ek Veer Ki Ardaas Veera: Romance & Drama engulfs to Veera and Baldev". The Times of India.
  44. ^ ""I had a once in a life time experience in Poland," shares Veera". Yahoo! News.
  45. ^ "Meena to be aired on Zee Telugu soon". The Times of India.
  46. ^ "En Anbu Thangaikku on Hotstar". Hotstar.
  47. ^ "Awww! WATCH: 'Ranvi' hugs CRYING 'Veera' in Indonesia; TV stars taking the country by storm on their visit!". ABP News. 7 May 2016.
  48. ^ "Shivin Narang is thrilled with the rerun of Veera being on air". The Times of India.
  49. ^ "TAM Results: Social drama tops TV charts". Hindustan Times. 26 December 2012.
  50. ^ "Kids rule the small screen, channels bank on them for high TRPs". India Today.
  51. ^ "टीवी रेटिंगः एक बार फिर टॉप 10 में आया 'सीआईडी'". Amar Ujala (in Hindi). Archived from the original on 21 August 2016.
  52. ^ "Qubool Hai climbs up the TRP chart". The Times of India.
  53. ^ "TRPs gone, TVT is the new trend". The Times of India.
  54. ^ "Seven out of top 10 fiction shows are on Star Plus". The Times of India.
  55. ^ "Star Plus's Diya Aur Bati Hum is leading the chart". Daily Bhaskar.
  56. ^ "TAM Ratings week 3: Colors continues running slow with third position". Daily Bhaskar.
  57. ^ "TAM Ratings Week 5: TV ratings prove that Diya Aur Bati Hum beats Comedy Nights With Kapil". Daily Bhaskar.
[edit]