Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii - Concept

Concept

Take a happy family, add a couple of bahus(daughters-in-law), a gullible sister-in-law, a mother-in-law who feels threatened by one of her bahus and is manipulated by the other, and what you have is Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii, a story that could be true of any house.

Parvati is the oldest daughter-in-law of the Agarwal household and is married to Om. She is the perfect daughter-in-law; one who keeps everyone happy and strives to maintain harmony in the house. Om and Parvati are an ideal couple for whom family comes before all else and who have stuck by one other through all life's challenges; through poverty, sickness, deception and bitter tragedies.

Into this picture of bliss steps Pallavi, the woman engaged to Ajay, one of Om's younger brothers. Ajay has been having an affair with his boss's daughter. His boss threatens to ruin him if he does not marry his daughter. Ajay's engagement to Pallavi is broken off and Parvati suggests that Pallavi be married to Kamal, the next younger brother. The family is happy with this solution and agrees, but the marriage sows the seed of hatred in Pallavi's heart. She now has one mission in life: to destroy the Agarwals.

Pallavi's designs are aided by the insecurities of her mother-in-law and the gullible nature of her sister-in-law, Chhaaya, who is coping with a failed marriage. But Chhaya later gets wise to Pallavi's schemes. Will Pallavi succeed?

Read more about this topic:  Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii

Famous quotes containing the word concept:

    The nearer a conception comes towards finality, the nearer does the dynamic relation, out of which this concept has arisen, draw to a close. To know is to lose.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)

    The concept of a mental state is primarily the concept of a state of the person apt for bringing about a certain sort of behaviour.
    David Malet Armstrong (b. 1926)

    The latest creed that has to be believed
    And entered in our childish catechism
    Is that the All’s a concept self-conceived,
    Which is no more than good old Pantheism.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)