Exotic fairy light garlands and Indian drummers in traditional tunics have brought Bollywood to
Britain with the world premiere of Bride and Prejudice, an adaptation of Jane Austen's classic tale.
Director Gurinder Chadha said the film gave Pride and Prejudice a modern twist in an Indian
setting.
"It's a very British Asian movie that incorporates India, England and America," said Chadha as a host of
stars arrived for the premiere.
"It is very true to Jane Austen and the spirit of the book, and I think if she came down and went to see
it in her local Odeon (cinema), she would like it," said Chadha.
Stars walked up a pink carpet, rather than the usual red, into the London Palladium, decorated in Indian
fabrics and fairy lights and abuzz with the sound of Indian drummers.
Like the novel, the film features a lower middle-class family's attempts to marry off its daughters to men
of a higher social standing.
But the film is a million miles away from the setting of Austen's classic - it is an all-singing, all-dancing
affair set in India, London and Los Angeles.
Heroine Elizabeth Bennett becomes Lalita Bakshi in the film, and is played by Aishwarya Rai, one of
Bollywood's most sought-after actresses.
Mr Darcy is played by Martin Henderson, a Los-Angeles based actor from New Zealand. The character
is brought up to date in the film - he is a wealthy heir to an American hotel chain. Bride and Prejudice
will be released in Britain on Oct 8.
Chadha's last movie Bend It Like Beckham - the story of an Indian girl born in England whose only
desire is to become a football star like David Beckham - was a huge surprise hit around the world and
launched the Hollywood career of Keira Knightley.