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Paying Guest is an Indian TV Series released in 1985 on Doordarshan by Rajshri Productions. It revolves around the lives of Krishnakant Trivedi and his wife Sharda, who are staying in an old bungalow of suburban Bombay. Their children are grown up and settled abroad. To fight their loneliness in their old age, they plan to keep some paying guests.
An incompetent lawyer Ramesh keeps on getting evicted as a tenant due his to failure to pay rent.He then dons the guise of an old man to gain entry in a house as a tenant and falls for the landlord's daughter Shanti (), whose best friend Chanchal (Shubha Khote) marries a famous barrister Dayal (Gajanan Jagirdar) for money and who is of her father's age.
Paying Guests is a 2009 Indian Hindi-language comedy drama film starring Ashish Chaudhary, Shreyas Talpade, Javed Jaffrey, Vatsal Seth, Celina Jaitly, Neha Dhupia, Riya Sen, Sayali Bhagat and Johnny Lever.
Gissing was commissioned to write The Paying Guest by Cassell, as part of their Pocket Library series. [2] Gissing wrote the manuscript in the first half of July 1895. [3] It was one of three one-volume works by Gissing published in 1895, the other two being Eve's Ransom and Sleeping Fires; the latter of these was published in Unwin's Autonym Library series.
The Paying Guests is a 2014 novel by Welsh author Sarah Waters.It was shortlisted for the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction [1] and named "Fiction Book of the Year" by The Sunday Times who said that "this novel magnificently confirms Sarah Waters' status as an unsurpassed fictional recorder of vanished eras and hidden lives."
Paying Guests is a 1929 comedy novel by the British writer E. F. Benson, best known as the author of the Mapp and Lucia series. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The story takes place at Wentworth, a boarding house in the fictional resort town of Bolton Spa.
Wikipedia articles normally include plot spoilers, as explained in the spoiler guideline. A plot summary should cover the complete story, including all major plot points, significant twists, and the ending. Avoid using "teaser-style" descriptions designed to withhold key encyclopedic details, for example "In the end the family makes a shocking ...
I would argue that the amount of plot summary of a work as a whole relative to the amount of coverage the work has gotten should be kept in mind: A work that has may be 3 reliable sources that cover it (sufficient for notability) should not have pages and pages of primary information. But in just the concise plot summary, that's not a problem.