I am a fashion person, and fashion is not only about clothes -- it's about all kinds of change
I'm sporty, active, bubbly, I like to make people laugh. . . I'm the jokester. But I'm also very traditional.
When I work, I work. I don't think about anything else. I just wanna get the work done. And I'm a perfectionist.
I really idolize everything my sisters do,so I went into singing contests and won also. That's how I really got into singing.
They cannot imagine what I'll sound like. But always when I'm done singing, people are very surprised.
I was bred and raised in a multi-cultural music background.
I'm still a, you know, a silly girl. . . a big kid.
I spent many years laughing at Harry Secombe's singing until somebody told me that it wasn't a joke.
In India, [in] the great documents like [the] Upanishads in eighth century B. C. , you find some of the wisest [women] making great, learned speeches and then you worship them, but actually don't do very much about girls' education generally. So I think there has been a kind of dual presence of pain, respect, and saying you are great, etc. , but not providing the basic facilities that make women able to lead the kind of life that they would like to and that men easily do.
If you believe you can make a difference, then you will make a difference. Believe in yourself, your family and your community and you will win.
I have always loved fashion because it's a great way to express your mood. And I'm definitely a shoe lover. The right pair of shoes can change the feel of an outfit, and even change how a woman feels about herself. A woman can wear confidence on her feet with a high stiletto, or slip into weekend comfort with a soft ballet flat.