keira-knightley-cutting-down-workload-to-be-with-family

Keira Knightley 'cutting down workload' to be with family

Mumbai, May 27 (ANI) Keira Knightley has embarked on reducing her workload in order to spend some quality with her family, it has been revealed. The 29-year-old actress said that first a person becomes successful and then they want to take every opportunity they can, which made her realise that her whole life-work balance was very little life and a whole lot of work, a leading daily reported. There comes a moment in life when people want to redress their life and that is why she is now trying to re-adjust her life-work balance in favour of more life and less work, she added. She admits that she had worked virtually non-stop for a period of five or six years and that began to wear her down so now she plans to do two films a year although of course it depends on what's available. Knightley feels very fortunate for the fame she has earned and now she has learnt how to keep her private life separate from her professional life. May 27, 2014
want-to-balance-masala-films-with-good-roles-says-sonakshi-sinha

Want to balance masala films with good roles, says Sonakshi Sinha

New Delhi, May 27 (ANI): Bollywood diva Sonakshi Sinha says she wants to balance big budget entertainers with performance-oriented movies like 'Lootera'. "I want to do more 'Lootera' like films. I do want to do more films like that but a perfect script like that come rarely. I am choosy. I have to feel very instinctively about a film. If it does not feel right from the bottom of my heart, I will not take it," she said. "Masala entertainers are kind of films which I personally like to watch and like being a part of. I think I am aiming at maintaining a balance between the two," she added. May 27, 2014
A customer hands a bundle of Indian Rupee currency notes to a teller at a financial institution in Mumbai (Reuters)

State Banks to Seek Market Funds on Modi Growth Hopes

State banks plan to tap capital markets for billions of dollars after a new government takes office, executives and bankers say, betting on a revival in credit demand and giving them a chance to shore up battered balance sheets. May 16, 2014