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From Dia Mirza to Jasprit Bumrah, celebrity weddings in the time of Covid

The rich are following a template for their special day - an intimate ceremony, with fewer people and a keen eye for a touch of luxury in every aspect

Dia Mirza wedding
Actor Dia Mirza and businessman Vaibhav Rekhi’s wedding on February 15 had an ‘environmentally sustainable’ theme
Swapnil Joglekar New Delhi
7 min read Last Updated : May 07 2021 | 5:07 PM IST
On April 26, the day India recorded 323,023 new Covid cases, Phagwara in Punjab saw the private wedding ceremony of actor-comedian duo Sugandha Mishra and Sanket Bhosale. Mishra, dressed in a cream lehenga with heavy embroidery, entered in a chariot held aloft by men wear­ing masks. As she descended, the scene was engulfed in mystic fog and she tied the knot with Bhosale. In attendance were their close friends and family. Though she was later booked for allegedly flouting coronavirus norms at her wedding, the rich are following a template for their special day — an intimate ceremony, with fewer people and a keen eye for a touch of luxury in every aspect.
 
Take, for instance, Dia Mirza. The actor wanted her wedding with businessperson Vaibhav Rekhi on February 15 to be “environmentally sustainable” and, true to the theme, in a vintage Indian garden. So, that’s what Aash Studio’s Aashna Saran, who managed the wedding design and florals, did.
 
Mirza was pleased and later wrote on Instagram: “The garden where I have spent every morning for the past 19 years was an absolutely magical setting… for our simple and soulful ceremony!”
 
Celebrity weddings in the time of Covid have shrunk in size but not in grandeur. An elegant and personally curated ceremony that reflects their values in Instagram-worthy light is the flavour of the season.
 
“No one wants to pay a cel­e­brity a crore to perform for five minutes at their wedding anymore,” says Divinity Weddings’ Natasha Katgara Gocal, who planned Mirza’s wedding.
 
While RT-PCR tests and temperature checks for all have become common before entering the mandap, foreign wedding destinations such as Turkey and Italy have fallen out of favour. Due to uncertainties over air travel and the fear of quarantine, the well-heeled are choosing palatial properties in Rajasthan instead.
 
From the venue and bridal couture to jewellery and decor, Covid-19 has changed every­thing in the luxury wedding space. Pre-pandemic, India was a promising market for all luxury goods, pegged at $8 billion by a 2020 Statista report. But now, people are looking to spend more on top-shelf products, some of which can become a family heirloom.

Sari brand Kankatala ensures secured packaging for contactless delivery
Sari brand Kankatala, which is based out of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, has seen a strong response throughout the pandemic. “We shipped at least one sari costing more than Rs 1 lakh every day through our online portal,” says Anirudh Kankatala, director, Kankatala Sarees. “In South In­d­ia, it is essential that a bride wear a Kanchipuram. The qual­ity of a Kanchipuram sari sym­b­ol­ises the status of the family.”
 
Textile and apparel major Raymond, which caters to lux­ury clients through its brands like Made to Measure, saw its business in metro cities jump to 85 per cent of the pre-Covid level in November 2020 with the start of the wedding season. “Grooms are not shying away from highlighting their roots,” says Joe Kuruvilla, CEO, Raymond Lifestyle.
 
With the focus now entirely on the bride and the groom, what they wear has become even more important. Celebrity fashion designer Manish Malhotra, who designed actor Varun Dhawan’s sherwani for his January 24 wedding with bridal fashion designer Natasha Dalal, finds today’s couple astutely aware of what they want. “(Due to the pandemic) I found myself doing a lot of online consultations and I thoroughly loved the process,” Malhotra says.
 
Another big draw is India’s ever-grow­ing love for jewellery. India contributes 29 per cent to global jewellery con­sumption, according to the Indian Gems and Jewellery Industry Report 2021. Some of India’s biggest luxe jewellers saw most of the spending rout­ed away from the usual extra­va­gance of a 1,000-people wed­ding into buying gold jewellery.
 
Bloomberg calculations showed gold imports during the first three months of 2021 more than doubled over the same period last year. “People saw it as better value for their money,” says Rajiv Popley of Popley & Sons Jewellers, a Mumbai-based lifestyle and jewellery retailer.

A new addition to fashion accessories has been masks and mask chains. For Shobha Shringar Jewellers, which has its outlet in the swanky South Mumbai area, gold- or diamond-studded masks starting from Rs 2 lakh have been a big hit. Diamond necklaces, platinum bands and solitaire couple rings continue to be major sellers. While the jewellery market saw some upheaval, the luxury wedding space remained untouched with people spending between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 1 crore on ornaments, says Ishu Datwani, founder, Anmol Jewellers, a Mumbai-based luxury jewellery brand.
 
TV presenter Sanjana Ganesan wore an Anmol diamond necklace for her private reception after her March 15 wedding with cricketer Jasprit Bumrah. It was emblematic of a larger trend of intimate wedding ceremonies. You wouldn’t have a crane bring down a 10-kg cake anymore as people’s aesthetics have changed, say industry experts.
 
“People want to get into detailing. (They ask me) what fabric are you using? Are the flowers used grown sustain­ably? Earlier their concern was that the ceremony should be loud and happening,” says Priyanka Sharma, a wedding curator from Jaipur.

The booking window for events has shrunk too, from five-six months to just a month or two before the date. “Our guests are looking for more flexibility, from planning to accommodating last-minute changes,” says Chandra­she­khar Joshi, general manager at The Leela Palace Jaipur.
 
IHCL, one of the major play­ers in the hospitality seg­ment, has seen great demand for its regal properties such as Ram­bagh Palace (Jaipur), Umaid Bhawan Palace (Jodhpur) and Taj Lake Palace (Udaipur).
 
SaffronStays, which manages private vacation homes in India, has also seen its villas snapped up for cocktail parties, mehendi and haldi ceremonies. Many high-net-worth individuals are hosting weddings at their family mansions. The privacy and the space these places offer has been key, say experts.
 
Wedding websites with virtual rooms and RSVP mana­gers have also become more important in a changed world.
 
“We recently hosted a wedding in Hawaii where only the bride and groom were present in Maui with a local minis­ter. We assigned the 200 guests to four virtual rooms, each with its usher to help them with any issues, and manage event flow,” says Kanika Subbiah, founder of virtual wedding planning platform Weddingwishlist.com.
 
With people eager to know every detail about the celebrities getting married, it becomes important to decide what content goes out and how fast it does. It can be anything from a written message to a selfie-video from the bride and groom announcing their marriage to pictures of the event. All of this is carefully vetted and posted from their personal social media handle. Even at the venue, it is common for guests to mob celebrity couples for pictures. This becomes an even bigger concern when you factor in the pandemic.

Vikram Mehta, founder of Mpire Events, which managed the wedding of billiards player Pankaj Advani and celebrity makeup artist Saniya Shadadpuri in January, agrees. “At Pankaj’s wedding, we knew many people would be eager to meet him. So we had trained his shadow (personal concierge) to handle all of this. We had a few concierges specifically for some celebrity guests, too.”

The world is changing and so is what's considered the bare minimum in a plush setting. As their clients adapt to change and yet try to live it up, the luxury wedding industry is ready to deliver.



Topics :CoronavirusHealth crisisBollywoodCricketersLUXURYBollywood weddingsIndian weddings