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.
Trader families that read the room first. Then judge the anchor.
Gujarati, Marwari, Jain. Three generations of mandi behind every family.
Turbhe sits next to the APMC market, and Turbhe weddings reflect that. The families here have spent two or three generations in the mandi. The bride’s mama probably owns a stall in the vegetable section. The groom’s grandfather runs a wholesale trade in dal or grain. The kaka who took the morning train from Ulhasnagar has been a family friend since 1985. This is a room that catches a fake Gujarati line in three seconds.
The Turbhe audience also expects scale. A 1500-guest banquet is normal here, sometimes more. But scale without warmth feels hollow, and Turbhe trader families notice the difference. Divya works in the working Gujarati an APMC mama actually uses, slides into Hindi and Marathi as the room shifts, and the elders catch the difference. The Marwari side gets their phrases too. The Jain side hears the silence and respect their rituals demand.
Venues here have their own personalities. The premium banquets near the APMC have parking issues that change baraat timing. The heritage Samaj halls in the trader belt have audio setups that need patience. The hotels along the Thane-Belapur stretch get warm in summer evenings. Divya has worked all of them enough to know which corner the bride’s mami will sit in.
There is one Turbhe-specific challenge most anchors do not plan for. The APMC truck traffic. Loading hours overlap with most baraat timings, and Turbhe Naka becomes one of the slowest junctions in the belt. The groom’s car can be stuck for an hour. Divya uses that hour without anyone in the audience realising it was a stall instead of a planned segment.
Captured Moments,
Timeless Memories
Events, photography & videography — every moment beautifully documented.
Three things this audience actually catches
Working Gujarati, not Bollywood Gujarati. Scale without screaming. Elder honour without theatre.
Gujarati that the APMC mama recognises
The Gujarati used at home in a trader family is not the Gujarati used in Hindi films. Divya works in the version the elders actually use, including the trader-side phrases that come from generations in the mandi.
A 1500-guest hall held without volume
Trader families catch when an anchor pushes the gain because they do not trust their own voice to carry. Divya holds a 1500-guest banquet without ever raising the volume past the point the elders find comfortable.
Elders honoured without making a show of it
Turbhe joint families have strict hierarchies. The wrong order on stage offends in ways that last. Divya pre-meets the family to map the hierarchy, then makes each elder’s moment land without ever announcing what she is doing.
Other areas in Navi 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 Turbhe families ask first
Direct answers. No marketing fluff.
Yes. Turbhe and the APMC vicinity have Gujarati and Marwari trading families that catch the difference between film Gujarati and the language spoken at home in three sentences. Divya works in the version the elders actually use, including the trader-side phrases that come from generations in the mandi. Call +91 9136323270.
Regular venues include the premium banquets near the APMC market, heritage Gujarati Samaj halls in and around the trader belt, Marwari community halls, Jain Sthanaks, the larger hotels along the Thane-Belapur stretch, and Sector 19 commercial-belt venues.
It happens often. The APMC trucks load and unload at hours that overlap with most baraat timings, and Turbhe Naka is one of the slowest junctions in Navi Mumbai during peak commercial hours. Divya keeps the seated guests engaged with Gujarati storytelling rounds and trader-side anecdotes, so the schedule slip never becomes the story.
Pricing depends on the function list and the venue size. A 1500-guest reception at an APMC vicinity banquet is priced differently from a Jain Sthanak ceremony for 300. Send the date, venue and function list to +91 9136323270 or [email protected] for a specific quote.
Three to four months in advance. Jain muhurats and Gujarati muhurat windows in November to February get blocked early. Heritage Samaj halls especially fill up four to five months out for prime dates.
Planning a wedding in Turbhe? Let’s talk.
Send Divya the date, the venue and a quick line about the function list. She will come back with how she would actually approach the evening for your family.