Amy Thanawala, erstwhile assistant to Sanjay Leela Bhansali (Khamoshi) and John Mathew Mathan (Sarfarosh) makes her directorial debut with Suno Na, being made under the banner of Cinema-Kollage. The film is now complete and is being readied for an early release. The film revolves around an unwed mother. Spurned by her lover, she takes an extreme step and decides to commit suicide. However, wisdom prevails on her that she should not kill an innocent unborn and she decides to move to a city, find work, give birth to the child and start a new life. The film takes a humourous turn when the mother and the child in the womb start talking to each other; and even sing a duet. The child wants to know many things, including about her father. The story also revolves around three men who come in her life during these nine months. Tara Sharma plays the leading role in the film; this is her first film after her marriage.
Shilpa Shetty is amused at the so-called 'biography', which writer Julie Aspinall has released in her name. “Recently, a fan in London came up to me and asked me to sign a book. It was a biography on me.
That’s how I first came to know about it. I turned to my friend, who was with me and asked, 'Has someone really written a book on me?” The book which released in the UK is now also available in India. Shilpa however says, “The author has never met me. I don't know who she is. She knows me only from what she has seen of me in Big Brother. That’s not the way to write a biography, is it? Shilpa further adds, “I haven't achieved anything that warrants an autobiography.
May be, when I'm 50, I'd be ambitious enough to put my story down on paper. Right now, I'm too busy living my life to brood about it.”