Hotel Kingston
Indian television series
Hotel Kingston | |
---|---|
The logo of the series | |
Starring | See Below |
Country of origin | India |
Original language | Hindi |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 51 |
Production | |
Production location | Mumbai |
Running time | 42 minutes |
Production company | Sagar Films |
Original release | |
Network | Star One |
Release | 11 November 2004 (2004-11-11) – 2 November 2005 (2005-11-02) |
Hotel Kingston is an Indian TV series which aired on Star One from 11 November 2004 to 2 November 2005. It was produced by Sagar Arts.[1]
Plot
Caught in the midst of Hotel Kingston are Shelly Sahay (Sonal Sehgal) and Vishwamitra "Vish" Kelkar (Amit Varma) - the ideal lovers. She the NRI and he the simple middle class guy. Their worlds come together to run the Hotel Kingston. Hate turns into liking and liking into love as these two find the perfect companions in each other.[2]
Cast
- Amit Varma as Vishwamitra "Vish" Kelkar
- Sonal Sehgal as Shelly Sahay
- Mouli Ganguly as Urvashi
- Mayank Anand as Niklesh "Nik" Mehra
- Abir Goswami as Sujeet
- Benjamin Gilani as Govind Sahay
- Mihir Mishra as Aryan
- Rakshanda Khan as Naina
- Keerti Gaekwad Kelkar
- Pariva Pranati
- Vinay Jain
- Kurush Deboo as Kidnapper
- Sujata Kumar as Devyani[3]
- Vinod Kapoor
- Bharat Arora
- Manav Gohil
- Vishal Singh
- Shilpa Shinde
- Namrata Thapa
- Tarun Khanna
- A. K. Hangal
- Raju Kher
- Sujata Thakkar
- Sunila Karambelkar
- Ajay Trehan
- Adarsh Gautam
- Roopa Divetia
- Mukesh Rawal
- Himani Shivpuri
- Amita Nangia
References
- ^ Hotel Kingston (Drama), Sonal Sehgal, Benjamin Gilani, Amit Verma, Sagar Arts, 11 November 2004, retrieved 20 July 2023
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Hotel Kingston (TV Series 2004–2005) - Plot - IMDb, retrieved 20 July 2023
- ^ "Sujata's victory over cancer..." The Times of India. 15 May 2011. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
- v
- t
- e
- Vikram Aur Betaal
- Ramayan
- Luv Kush
- Shri Krishna
- Alif Laila
- Aankhen
- Hatim
- Hello Dollie
- Hotel Kingston
- Dharti Ka Veer Yodha Prithviraj Chauhan
- Dharam Veer
- Arslaan
- Ramayan
- Mahima Shani Dev Ki
- Jo Ishq Ki Marzi Woh Rab Ki Marzi
- Chandragupta Maurya
- Jai Jai Jai Bajrang Bali
- Arzoo (1965)
- Aankhen (1968)
- Geet (1970)
- Lalkaar (1972)
- Jalte Badan (1973)
- Hamrahi (1974)
- Charas (1976)
- Ram Bharose (1977)
- Prem Bandhan (1979)
- Hum Tere Ashiq Hain (1979)
- Pyaara Dushman (1980)
- Arman (1981)
- Baghavat (1982)
- Romance (1983)
- Baadal (1983)
- Salma (1985)
- 1971 (2007)
This article about a television show originating in India is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e