
Acting
Happy Ranajit is a graduate of the National School of Drama. He is a well-known actor and director in Delhi theatre. He was critically acclaimed for his performances as Aurangzeb in Aurangzeb and Krishna in Maharathi. He has got the best actor award at Mahindra theatre awards 2010 for his performance in "Roop Aroop". He also won the best actor award at the international GATS theatre festival for the play Richard III at Beijing, China. He has received the Bismillah Khan Yuva Puraskar by SNA for acting for the year 2012. He has worked at the Kingdom of Dreams as an actor in the play "Zangoora" and had done 1000 shows for the same. He has performed as an actor in many international festivals like India by the Niles, Egypt. Namaste Russia, Moscow. Rafipeer theatre festival, Pakistan and GATS international theatre festival, Beijing, China. Apart from acting he also conducts acting workshops, writes and directs plays. His play straight proposal got selected for Bharat Rang Mahotsav 2015 and Mahindra theatre award 2015. He has written and directed the play "Humari adhuri kahani" produced by Mahesh Bhatt. He has also acted in films like B.A. Pass and Hansal Mehta`s Omerta.

The unstoppable force Ruslaan is coming to break free of the chains of conformity. With his gun and guitar, he's about to create a symphony of rebellion like no other.

A disgraced basketball coach is given the chance to coach a team of players who are intellectually disabled as part of community services. Gulshan has apprehensions at first and feels out of place but soon realizes they just might have what it takes to make it to the national championships.

Twinkle returns home for a surprise Diwali trip, but secrets and disagreements test her family's bonds in ways she never imagined.

A dramatization of the complex and dangerous life of Omar Sheikh. A convicted terrorist who many believe had financial connections to 9/11, Sheikh is widely known as the man responsible forthe 2002 kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

When Parima, a school teacher in Delhi, is gang-raped on her way home late at night after an office party, Raavi, a prosecution lawyer, fights tooth and nail to help her get justice. But when eighty sexual assault cases are reported in India every single day, regardless of age group, ethnicity, time, or place, and only four go to trial, what does justice really mean?
