Name : Salman Khan
Birth Day : 27th December, 1965
Father Name : Salim Khan
Salman Khan, is one of the Bollywood's very popular stars in Tinsel Ville, who, at 5'7" looks delightfully handsome and who actually comes from a family that already has acquintance of the industry with his father Salim Khan songs and script-writing the films for years.
Salman Khan, who is called "Salu" at home, is the eldest of three sons in the family with the younger bro "Arbazz" and the youngest bro "Sohail" in the departments of action and direction of films in the industry, correspondingly.
Comes an additional hit "Patthar Ke Pool" with Raveena Tandon but he was unexpectedly under the billows of shadow as a few films of his had flopped and failed at the box office and again Raj Shree comes to his save giving him a chance in HUM AAPKE HAIN KOUN. Later on, there was no looking back for him as he has risen to the prominence and the life in the industry has been a walk on the bed of roses.
He has in use the graduation when he got the FILM FARE's "Best Supporting Actor" for his role in "Kuch Kuch Hota Hain" which shows his development as an actor and his roles in "Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam" and "Jaanam Samjha Karo" are worth of approval.
While "Dulhan Hum Le Jayenge" and "Chal Mera Bhai" did pretty well at the box office, all eyes of the industry are set on his new make public "Har Dil Jo Pyar Karega" which is so regrettably not faring upto the anticipation. No doubt, Salman Khan is one of the best actors the industry has ever produced. He is one of the Bollywood's enormous actors.
He's Bollywood's innovative brat. The media hates him; but crowds go wild at the very talk about of his name. Girls swoon each time he flashes his bare trunk on screen (which is quite often). Gossip rags work in due course fishing out juicy tidbits from his personal life: a brawl here, an suspected affair there….
And Salman Khan keeps mum from side to side it all. The eldest son on writer Salim Khan (of Salim-Javed fame) claims he isn't here to please anyone, and doesn't care what the world thinks of him. He hates the press and loathes the idea of answering questions. But he's one of Hindi cinema's hottest selling stars, a safe bet on any day, both in India and abroad.
The subsequent year came 'Maine Pyaar Kiya', and his life misused forever. Sooraj Barjatya's syrupy legend turned Salman into a teen icon. Every producer with money in his pocket wanted to sign the star on the scattered line.
A decade later, there are die-hard loyalists who pledge by him despite his supposed mood swings. Be it Sooraj Barjatya, Sanjay Bhansali or even David Dhawan. In fact, Salman is the only star who has struck a successful relationship with the plump director apart from Govinda, his eternal favourite. Keep in mind the laugh-a-minute riot 'Judwaa' (1997)? Or for that substance 'Biwi No. 1', and their most recent, 'Dulhan Hum Le Jayenge' which has also serrated up a good opening.
Equally, Barjatya won't hear of signing anybody else as his film's hero. And although Madhuri Dixit walked off with all the accolades for her mesmeric attendance in 'Hum Aapke Hain Koun..!' (1994), it was to Salman's credit that he gracefully played second swindle and let her hog the show.
Almost immediately after playing the chocolate-boy hero in 'HAHK', Salman switched over to action-heavy flicks like Rakesh Roshan's 'Karan Arjun' and K K Singh's 'Veergati'. And slowly, the shirt started coming off more regularly.
So much so, many people consider it was Salman's pumped up body in the chart-topper "O, o jaane jaanaa" that helped brother Sohail's debut production 'Pyaar Kiya To Darna Kya' (1998), set the box-office on fire.
But when it comes to drama, he's been at his best with director Sanjay Bhansali. 'Khamoshi' (1996) brought Salman's acting abilities to the fore for the primary time. As the responsive music creator who loves Annie (Manisha Koirala), the offspring of deaf and dumb parents, he displayed a extraordinary degree of adulthood.
In the same way, his Sameer Rosselini in 'Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam' was a systematically charming character. Just before the release of this film, rumours of his hypothetical liaison with Aishwarya Rai started circulating in tinsel town. But neither of them was willing to talk about the issue; they still aren't.
After expenditure a few days in a local penitentiary, he was released, much to the ndustry's relief. For, at that time, the total worth of his films under structure was in the region of Rs. 100 crore!
All the way through it all, Salman kept his mouth shut and came back with a revenge scoring one hit after one more. Neither his rather tarnished standing, nor the bald patch at the back of his head made a dent in Salman's reputation. Obviously, nothing matters but the magic he continues to create on display.
And Salman Khan keeps mum from side to side it all. The eldest son on writer Salim Khan (of Salim-Javed fame) claims he isn't here to please anyone, and doesn't care what the world thinks of him. He hates the press and loathes the idea of answering questions. But he's one of Hindi cinema's hottest selling stars, a safe bet on any day, both in India and abroad.
The subsequent year came 'Maine Pyaar Kiya', and his life misused forever. Sooraj Barjatya's syrupy legend turned Salman into a teen icon. Every producer with money in his pocket wanted to sign the star on the scattered line.
A decade later, there are die-hard loyalists who pledge by him despite his supposed mood swings. Be it Sooraj Barjatya, Sanjay Bhansali or even David Dhawan. In fact, Salman is the only star who has struck a successful relationship with the plump director apart from Govinda, his eternal favourite. Keep in mind the laugh-a-minute riot 'Judwaa' (1997)? Or for that substance 'Biwi No. 1', and their most recent, 'Dulhan Hum Le Jayenge' which has also serrated up a good opening.
Equally, Barjatya won't hear of signing anybody else as his film's hero. And although Madhuri Dixit walked off with all the accolades for her mesmeric attendance in 'Hum Aapke Hain Koun..!' (1994), it was to Salman's credit that he gracefully played second swindle and let her hog the show.
Almost immediately after playing the chocolate-boy hero in 'HAHK', Salman switched over to action-heavy flicks like Rakesh Roshan's 'Karan Arjun' and K K Singh's 'Veergati'. And slowly, the shirt started coming off more regularly.
So much so, many people consider it was Salman's pumped up body in the chart-topper "O, o jaane jaanaa" that helped brother Sohail's debut production 'Pyaar Kiya To Darna Kya' (1998), set the box-office on fire.
But when it comes to drama, he's been at his best with director Sanjay Bhansali. 'Khamoshi' (1996) brought Salman's acting abilities to the fore for the primary time. As the responsive music creator who loves Annie (Manisha Koirala), the offspring of deaf and dumb parents, he displayed a extraordinary degree of adulthood.
In the same way, his Sameer Rosselini in 'Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam' was a systematically charming character. Just before the release of this film, rumours of his hypothetical liaison with Aishwarya Rai started circulating in tinsel town. But neither of them was willing to talk about the issue; they still aren't.
After expenditure a few days in a local penitentiary, he was released, much to the ndustry's relief. For, at that time, the total worth of his films under structure was in the region of Rs. 100 crore!
All the way through it all, Salman kept his mouth shut and came back with a revenge scoring one hit after one more. Neither his rather tarnished standing, nor the bald patch at the back of his head made a dent in Salman's reputation. Obviously, nothing matters but the magic he continues to create on display.
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