Trailer drops for Oprah Winfrey’s interview with Prince Harry, Meghan Markle
Updated 01 March 2021
Arab News
DUBAI: Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey released the trailer for her eagerly anticipated interview with Britain’s Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle on Monday.
This will be the couple’s first major interview since they stepped back from their royal duties in January 2020.
In the short clip, Winfrey told the viewers: “There’s no subject that’s off limits.”
“My biggest concern was history repeating itself,” Prince Harry said in the clip.
“I am just really relieved and happy to be sitting here, talking to you, with my wife by my side, because I can’t imagine what it must have been like for her going through this process by herself all those years ago because it has been unbelievably tough for the two of us,” he explained, referring to his mother Princess Diana.
Alia Bhatt, Sigourney Weaver talk love for authenticity, strong women
Updated 10 December 2025
Shyama Krishna Kumar
JEDDAH: On the seventh day of the ongoing Red Sea International Film Festival, two actresses — set apart by geography and time — spoke of their love for telling authentic stories and depicting strong women.
Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt and Hollywood great Sigourney Weaver, on their respective In Conversation panels, reflected on their varied careers and the choices that led them to enduring success.
From a teenager stepping onto her first film set to a respected actress in her early thirties, Bhatt’s journey is a testament to the power of curiosity and instinct.
Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt. (Getty Images)
“When I started out, I was ... maybe 17, 18,” she said. “I was way more enthusiastic and full of beans, trying really hard because I was just starting out.”
Her approach has evolved, but the core remains unchanged. “I’m still enthusiastic, still full of beans, but the approach is more silent. It comes with a little more sense of intent,” she said.
“I approach my work truly through pure instinct. The way I choose a part is like, ‘Oh, I've done this. Now I want to do this.’”
This approach, she said, led her to take creative risks — from “Highway” to “Udta Punjab” to Gangubai Kathiawadi” — always seeking variety.
Turning producer with Eternal Sunshine Productions was a natural progression of that curiosity. “I have a real strong passion for stories, so I like to get into it.
“And I like to think, ‘Okay, this has this potential, or this has that potential,’ and either I’m in it or I’m not, but I like to assess the initial stages of a story which is just a synopsis or first draft on paper.”
Hollywood heavyweight Sigourney Weaver. (Getty Images)
Weaver said she never set out to become an action hero. Initially shy and unsure, she was drawn not to specific roles but compelling stories.
When “Alien” came along, she approached the script with an open mind, unaware she was about to redefine female characters in science fiction.
“We were just trying to make a good, small movie,” she recalled. “The writers had cleverly crafted a script with a mixed-gender crew of “dirty space truckers,” deliberately subverting expectations by making the young woman the survivor and hero.
Weaver did not see it as a feminist statement at the time, but as a natural storytelling choice. Her character, Ellen Ripley, represented the idea that women could be self-reliant.
“She reminds us all that we can rely on ourselves and we don’t need a man to fly in and save us,” said Weaver.