LIVEWIRE: COMING OF AGE?
It was a star-studded show. A very star-studded one. So glitzy that I predict that, when the 18th Lux Style Awards (LSAs) are aired on TV, the ratings are likely to shoot sky-high. The LSAs may be about celebrating style and entertainment, and recognising talent, but they are also very much about putting out an entertaining show for TV that generates plenty of accolades and goodwill for the title sponsor. The recently-concluded event will, in all probability, be able to accomplish this last mission.
The LSA red carpet was quite literally littered with stars and the cameras couldn’t stop clicking. Meera — on a post-Baaji high — was followed by Shabnam, Nadeem Baig, Mohammad Qavi Khan, Maya Ali, Mahira Khan, Iqra Aziz, Sheheryar Munawar, Bilal Ashraf, Emmad Irfani, Imran Ashraf Awan, Ali Safina, Yasir Hussain, Fahad Mustafa, Ahmed Ali Butt, Aijazz Aslam, Mehwish Hayat, Zara Noor Abbas, Saba Qamar, Faysal Qureshi, Mawra Hocane and Atif Aslam, among others.
One did still notice how some LSA mainstays were ostensibly missing, such as Humayun Saeed, Adnan Siddiqui, Reema, Ahad Raza Mir and Sajal Aly. Also skipping out on the ceremony was a large chunk of the fashion fraternity — suspiciously, the ones who didn’t win simply weren’t there! — and the nominees who had backed out from the awards on the basis that it had slotted an alleged harasser, Ali Zafar, in the Best Actor nominations.
Regardless, the LSAs hauled in a guest list that glittered with show business’ Gen-X, along with a smattering of longstanding power-players. Whisk them all together in a single production, get some of them to sing, dance, present an award or make just any inane commentary (more on that later), and you get a top-of-the-charts show.
The Lux Style Awards have always been applauded and critiqued simultaneously as the country’s longest-standing entertainment-based awards ceremony. At their 18th incarnation, this is both the show’s blessing and its burden
Coming back to the LSAs’ other aims and objectives mentioned earlier, these are harder to achieve. We live in contentious times, where awards results are always challenged, goodwill is often rare to find and everyone is eager to tweet their disapproval. Then again, the LSAs have always been applauded and critiqued simultaneously. As the country’s longest-standing entertainment-based awards ceremony, this is the show’s blessing and burden.