Wedding Anchor & Host — Every Function Covered
Every wedding function hosted with the right energy, warmth and preparation for your family.
Mehendi & Haldi Anchor & Host
The first family gathering of the wedding. Divya keeps the energy warm and personal without over-producing it. Close family, real moments, and a tone that carries through to the rest of the wedding.
Sangeet Night Anchor & Host
High energy, both families involved, performances and games running together. Divya is at her best here. She reads when to push the energy and when to pull it back, and she has turned one-sided shows into full family face-offs.
Wedding Ceremony Anchor & Host
From the baraat entry to the varmala, every moment announced at the right time with the right weight. Rituals held with respect, not rushed. If the baraat runs late, the crowd never knows.
Wedding Reception Anchor & Host
Large guest lists, mixed crowds, tight timelines. Divya manages the full reception flow — couple entry, family introductions, speeches, performances and the first dance — without anything running over or feeling rushed.
Engagement Anchor & Host
The first time both families are in the same room. Divya sets a tone that carries through to the wedding itself. Warm, personal, and never formal for the sake of it. The right start makes everything else easier.
Destination Wedding Anchor & Host
Goa, Udaipur, Karjat, Lonavala. Divya travels across India for destination weddings. Travel and accommodation are discussed transparently at booking. Destination weddings are among her most requested bookings every year.
Events That
Tell a Story
A glimpse into the stages Divya has hosted across 7+ years.
Mumbai’s oldest Catholic neighbourhood, still living in its own dialect.
East Indian Catholic, Konkani Maharashtrian and Muslim families, with weddings that run on community time rather than venue time.
Mahim is one of Mumbai’s oldest neighbourhoods, and most of its weddings are still rooted in the communities that have lived here for generations. The East Indians, Mumbai’s indigenous Catholic community, are the most distinctive presence, with traditions that pre-date the Goan and Mangalorean Christian communities by centuries. They speak East Indian Marathi, a Konkani-Marathi dialect that is different enough from standard Marathi that the grandmothers’ blessings need a clean translation for outside-community in-laws.
The hosting has to acknowledge this register. Divya works in Hindi and English with East Indian Marathi and standard Marathi cut in where each generation needs it. The grandmothers get their dialect. The Maharashtrian cousins from Dadar get clean standard Marathi. The newer in-laws who speak only English get the translation without ever feeling talked down to. Nothing in the evening reads as a generic Catholic wedding template.
Mahim weddings also run on community time, not venue time. The Mass at St. Michael’s or a nearby church takes the time it needs. The Roce the night before runs as long as the songs run. The reception waits until the family is ready to walk in. Divya works inside that rhythm rather than against it, and the banquet captain knows by the second function that the timeline will land where it lands.
Captured Moments,
Timeless Memories
Events, photography & videography — every moment beautifully documented.
Three things that matter for this crowd
Mahim families have been hosting weddings inside their own community for generations. The bar is being treated as insiders, not visitors.
East Indian community fluency
Roce, Umbracha Paani, the Konkani-Marathi dialect songs. Divya knows these by name and treats them with the seriousness the community gives them, not as exotic Catholic-wedding decor for a banquet template.
Cross-community translation that respects both sides
East Indian Marathi for the grandmothers, standard Marathi for the Dadar-side in-laws, Hindi for the Konkani Muslim family friends, English for the cousins from abroad. The translation rides under the original voice rather than replacing it.
Community-time, not banquet-time
Mahim weddings finish when they finish. Divya works inside the rhythm rather than imposing a hotel run-sheet on a gaothan ceremony. The family does not have to defend the timeline.
Other areas in Mumbai we host weddings in
Anchor & Host Pricing Packages
Pricing that's easy to understand. Every package comes with a script written specifically for your family, your crowd and your day — nothing recycled, nothing generic.
These are starting ranges. The final number depends on the venue, number of functions and what the event needs. Reach out on +91 9136323270 or at [email protected] and we'll come back with an exact quote same day.
Questions Mahim families ask first
Straight answers. No dodging the details.
Yes. The East Indians are Mumbai’s indigenous Catholic community, with traditions that are distinct from Goan or Mangalorean Catholic weddings. The Umbracha Paani, the traditional Roce, the Konkani-Marathi dialect songs sung by grandmothers. Divya knows these rituals by name and treats them with the seriousness the community gives them. Call +91 9136323270 to discuss.
The St. Michael’s Church area community halls, the East Indian heritage homes and gaothans across Mahim, the Mahim Bay-facing lawns, and the larger banquet venues along Cadell Road that host Mahim and Dadar weddings together.
Yes. A Mahim wedding can have East Indian Konkani-Marathi, standard Marathi, Hindi, English and occasionally Konkani Urdu in the same evening. Divya switches cleanly, addresses each generation in the language they prefer, and never makes anyone feel like the translation is for them.
It depends on the community, the venue and the number of functions. An East Indian Roce at the family home is staged differently from a 400-guest reception at a Cadell Road banquet. Call +91 9136323270 or email [email protected] for a quote tailored to your wedding.
Mahim community venues and the St. Michael’s area halls fill up three to five months out. Catholic wedding season around Christmas and Easter goes faster. Lock Divya in alongside the venue, with a 50% advance.
Planning a wedding in Mahim? Let’s talk.
Send Divya the date, the venue, and what kind of wedding it is. She’ll come back with exactly how she would run it for your family.