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.
Sus is half farmland
and half IT manager. The anchor has to handle both.
A copy-paste wedding script gets caught in the first ten minutes.
The grandparents bought their plots in Sus when it was farmland off Pashan Road. The grandchildren work at Hinjewadi Phase 3 or moved to Pune from Mumbai for the lifestyle. The anchor has to speak to a Marathi-speaking patil family and a Bandra-educated cousin in the same sentence sometimes. A host who only does Hindi-English weddings gets exposed the moment a maternal uncle asks for a Marathi welcome speech.
Sus resorts also have their own quirks. Open-roof banquets, wind that comes off the hills after sunset, and sound that goes thin during the cocktail hour. Divya does the walk-through before the guests arrive and marks her positions for soft moments versus the loud ones. It is not the glamorous part of the job. It is the part that decides whether the varmala lines can actually be heard.
The other Sus thing is the cocktail-to-pheras shift. The bar shuts, the lawn dims, and in twenty minutes you are sitting cross-legged in front of a homa. Without an anchor managing those twenty minutes carefully, half the guests miss the start of the ceremony because they are still finishing their drinks. Divya plans that window with more attention than the rest of the day combined.
Captured Moments,
Timeless Memories
Events, photography & videography — every moment beautifully documented.
Three reasons
this neighbourhood keeps calling back.
No fluff. Just the parts that matter.
Real Marathi, not phonetic Marathi
Divya does not read transliterated Marathi off cue cards. The pronunciation is correct, the phrasing is warm rather than newsroom formal, and the elders can hear the difference inside the first thirty seconds.
She handles the gaps you did not plan for
Bride still in hair and makeup. DJ’s laptop crashing. A cousin’s choreography falling apart on stage. Divya keeps the room engaged for the eight minutes you needed to fix the problem, and your guests do not notice there was one.
A long brief, not a quick form
Before every Sus booking, Divya calls the couple. How you met. The story of the proposal the parents do not know yet. Which uncle should not be given the mic. Forty minutes of questions. The script is built from those answers.
Areas across Pune
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.
What Sus couples
actually ask us first
Straight answers. No hedging.
Yes. Divya has worked the boutique resorts past Sus gaothan and the hill-facing lawns toward the Pashan side. Open-sky setups mean wind on the mic and uneven sound, so the sangeet stage and pheras mandap are positioned with the DJ before guests start arriving.
Sus weddings almost always look like this. Divya runs sacred moments in pure Marathi for the parents and grandparents. Sangeet hosting, cousin introductions, and reception flow happen in English with Hindi where needed. The register shifts paragraph by paragraph, not word by word.
Yes. Cold weather and a corporate crowd is a typical Sus combination. Divya does not push people on stage. She runs a couple of low-pressure games during the cocktail hour, the room loosens up naturally, and by the second sangeet song the floor takes care of itself.
Not if the gaps are planned. Divya treats the travel window as part of the script: which song the band plays as guests arrive, how the bride and groom are received at the new venue, how the photo line is paced. The transition feels intentional rather than rushed.
For peak season in Pune, two to three months ahead. November to February dates fill faster, especially Tulja and Margashirsh weekends. A short call confirms availability and a 50% advance holds the date.
Ready to book a wedding anchor in Sus?
Let’s talk.
Tell Divya the date, the venue, and what kind of wedding it is. She will come back with how she would approach the day for your family specifically.