What Is Anita Kanwar - The Lead Actress Of Buniyaad Upto?

With the return of ‘Buniyaad' to national television, the majority of the Buniyaad cast is still with us, with the exception of the show's leading lady Anita Kanwar, who has vanished from the face of showbusiness.
 
What Is Anita Kanwar - The Lead Actress Of Buniyaad Upto?

With Buniyaad making a triumphant return to national television, interest in the film's cast has been reignited once more. Unlike Ramanand Sagar's Ramayan, which lost many of its actors and technicians, the Buniyaad cast is still around. Except for the show's leading lady, Anita Kanwar, who has vanished from the spotlight. As the rustic matriarch Lajwanti, aka Lajjoji in Buniyaad, Anita was a hit. Kanwar, on the other hand, was tired of playing the sugar-sweet Mom to actors her own age after a year in the role.

In 1986, During an interview she said, “I appreciate you taking the time to comment on my job. However, carrying it around has become a huge burden. Everywhere I go, I am referred to as Lajjoji. My true name has been forgotten! They've also forgotten that I'm not the 70-year-old lady from Buniyaad. I'm a girl who enjoys having a good time. I enjoy doing the typical things that girls my age enjoy.”

While Buniyaad was airing, she played Rajesh Khanna's vampish daughter-in-law Mohan Kumar's Amrit, just to crack the matriarchal picture. It was a small part with no nuances. Anita, on the other hand, relished the opportunity to be evil. She had chuckled, "Can you imagine what Lajjo would think of this awful woman who throws her father-in-law out of his house?" I decided that it was a defiant act. Her fans, on the other hand, were disappointed.

Anita left acting and vanished in Gurgaon, near Delhi, rather than embrace matriarchal positions. Five years later, she made a comeback in the series Saboot, in which she played a detective. She explained that she only accepted the role because it would take her as far away from Buniyaad as possible. Saboot was a flop. Anita Kanwar was never heard from again.

What happened to her? Must she, like the rest of the godforsaken locked-down humanity, keep an eye on Buniyaad? And, if she does, does she regard her incurably sweet character with more fondness than she did when Lajjoji was every Indian man's ideal mother?