Aamir Khan

Aamir Khan is an Indian film actor, director and producer. Khan worked in a number of critically and commercially successful films and has established himself as one of the leading actors of Hindi cinema. Most of his recent movies can be considered "Filmfare Bait" by most people.

Starting his career as a child actor in his uncle Nasir Hussain's film Yaadon Ki Baaraat (1973), Khan began his professional career eleven years later with the film, Holi (1984). He had his first commercial success with his cousin Mansoor Khan's film Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (1988), for which he won a Filmfare Best Male Debut Award. After seven previous nominations during the 1980s and 1990s, Khan received his first Filmfare Best Actor Award for his performance in the major grosser Raja Hindustani (1996).

In 2001, he made his debut as a film producer with the Academy Award-nominated Lagaan. Khan played the lead role in the film and earned his second Filmfare Best Actor Award for his performance. After a four-year break from acting, Khan made his comeback with Ketan Mehta's Mangal Pandey: The Rising (a 2005 film about the eponymous Sepoy whose actions helped spark the Indian rebellion of 1857), and later won a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Performance for his role in Rang De Basanti (the 2006 film about a British documentary filmmaker who is determined to make a film on Indian freedom fighters based on diary entries by her grandfather, a former officer of the British Army in India). In 2007, he made his directorial debut with Taare Zameen Par, for which he received a Filmfare Best Director Award. The film tells the story of eight year old Ishaan (Darsheel Safary) who suffers greatly until a teacher (Aamir Khan) identifies him as dyslexic. This was followed by Ghajini (2008), which became the highest-grossing Indian film of all-time, unadjusted for inflation. In that movie, he played against type as a rich businessman who suffers from anterograde amnesia following a violent encounter in which his love interest, model Kalpana, was killed. He tries to avenge the killing with the aid of Polaroid Instant camera photographs and permanent tattoos on his body. Sounds familiar?

Since then, every film Khan has starred in has became the new highest-grossing Indian film of all-time, or at least the highest-grossing Indian film of its year. His most notorious roles include the unconventional engineering student Ranchodas Chanchad in 3 Idiots, the titular alien of PK, and a former wrestler training his daughters to become wresting champions in the biopic Dangal.

Due to his popularity and star power, he is called one of the Three Kings Khans of Bollywood, along with Salman and Shah Rukh Khan.


 * Raja Hindustani (1996)
 * Lagaan (2001)
 * Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005)
 * Rang De Basanti (2006)
 * Taare Zameen Par (2007), his directorial debut
 * Ghajini (2008)
 * 3 Idiots (2010)
 * Dhoom 3 (2013)
 * PK (2014
 * Dangal (2016)


 * The Perfectionist: called as such in media.
 * Method Acting