Tag Archives: Shah Rukh Khan – Bollywood Actor

SRK’s unheard story: The Abdul Rahman & Hyderabad connection

NEW DELHI / Mumbai, MAHARASHTRA :

While Shah Rukh Khan talks a lot about his work, there are still some cool things about his life that many people might not know.

  Shah Rukh Khan (Instagram)

Hyderabad: 

Shah Rukh Khan, often called the Baadshah of Bollywood, has been a dominant figure in the film industry for many years, capturing hearts worldwide with his immense fan following. While he talks a lot about his work, there are still some cool things about his life that many people might not know.

One such lesser-known fact is about his childhood name and how he spent his early days in Hyderabad.

Shah Rukh Khan’s Name Was Abdul Rahman First!

During his appearance on The Anupam Kher’s Show—Kucch Bhi Ho Sakta Hai, Shah Rukh Khan shared a surprising detail about his childhood. King Khan disclosed that his Nani (maternal grandmother), had initially named him Abdul Rahman during his early years.

Shah Rukh Khan Childhood Pic (Image: X)

When asked by Anupam Kher if he knew anyone named Abdul Rahman, SRK replied, “Main jaanta kisi ko nahi hun lekin meri jo naani thi…aur unhone mera naam bachpan mein Abdul Rahman rakkha tha (I don’t know anyone but my maternal grandmother had named me Abdur Rehman in childhood).”

“Hann matlab kahi register nahi huwa lekin woh chahti thi ki mera naam Abdul Rahman rahe. Mujhe ajeeb sa laga abhi aap socho Baazigar starring Abdul Rahman in and as kuch jamta nahi. Shah Rukh Khan in and as Baazigar zada better sound karta hai (The name wasn’t registered anywhere but she wanted me to accept the name Abdul Rahman. I felt weird. Just imagine Baazigar starring Abdul Rahman in and as. It wouldn’t sound good. Shah Rukh Khan in and as Baazigar sounds better,)” he said.

Watch the video below.

source: youtube.com / The Anupam Kher Show | द अनुपम खेर शो | Shah Rukh Khan’s Work-Life Balance

‘Spent 4 years of my life in Tolichowki’

In a previous interview, SRK also mentioned being adopted by his grandmother due to the absence of a male child in the family at that time. He explained, “I was adopted by my grand mother because they did not had a boy in their family at that time. So, when I was born to my mother they adopted me. They used to live in Tolichowki, Hyderabad. I spent about 4 years of my life here. Then we shifted to Banglore. My mom was missing me so she took me back from her mother and we moved to Delhi. My mother’s house is in Hyderabad and my whole mother’s side of the family stays here.”

source: youtube.com / Shahrukh Khan Emotional Words About Hyderabad | Unseen Video | Manastars

SRK’s maternal roots in Hyderabad

Image Source: Twitter

Shah Rukh Khan was born on 2 November 1965 into a Muslim family in New Delhi. His mother Lateef Fatima Khan, who was a social worker, was born in Hyderabad and was the daughter of a senior government engineer. His father Meer Taj Mohammed Khan (a Pathan), was an Indian independence activist from Peshawar.

Image Source: Twitter

His Upcoming Projects

On the professional front, Shah Rukh Khan will start shooting for ‘King’ with Suhana Khan around the summer period. It is going to be directed by Sujoy Ghosh. After the wrap up, the actor will be all involved in Pathaan 2 and Tiger Vs Pathaan.

source: http://www.siasat.com / The Siasat Daily / Home> Entertainment> Bollywood / by Rasti Amena X / February 28th, 2024

The Hindu Lit for Life 2023 | In conversation with Shrayana Bhattacharya, author of Desperately Seeking Shah Rukh

NEW DELHI:

Shrayana Bhattacharya will speak at The Hindu Lit for Life in Chennai on February 25, 2023.

Shrayana Bhattacharya’s Desperately Seeking Shah Rukh: India’s Lonely Young Women and the Search for Intimacy and Independence is one of those interdisciplinary books that defy easy categorisation. 

It is primarily a book about Indian women, their aspirations, their systemically undervalued labour, and the other socio-economic inequities they continue to be subjected to. The narrative just happens to be strung together by Shah Rukh Khan fandom. Like the projectionist of yore bounced images off a wall for our viewing pleasure, these women project their hopes and desires onto their favourite star’s movies.

As the author, who will be a part of  The Hindu Lit for Life in Chennai on February 25, says in the preface, “My primary interest is to shed light on the trajectories of a few Indian women as they travelled from the 1990s into the 2020s with a film star for companionship. These journeys are as far from feminist principles as Shah Rukh’s films are. Their politics may not live up to progressive ideals. But the messy beliefs on display serve as important guides to understand the lived experiences of Indian women without active Twitter handles, those considered too ordinary to find mention in the news.”

The book has recently been translated to Hindi as well. “I remember when the book was first released in November 2022, the way it was discussed was quite funny,” says Bhattacharya, an economist with the World Bank. “The people who’ve blurbed the book are well-known economists. Despite that, some people thought the book was erotic fan fiction. Perhaps because they saw Shah Rukh’s name on the cover? It took them a while to register that the book is actually about gender and economics, and that the actor is an entry point, a research method.”

Channelling SRK’s fandom

The ‘research method’ bit was especially important because it became a way for Bhattacharya to connect with the young women (especially those belonging to villages or really small towns) she was interviewing. Also, the author feels, her own status as a single woman, living alone and earning her own money, became a point of connection for some. But the one thing that was a constant was the instant likeability of the Shah Rukh fandom. With time and patience and slow, unhurried engagement, she began to win them over.

Shahrukh Khan fan club members at a theatre in Guwahati on the day of the release of ‘Pathaan’, January 25, 2023. | Photo Credit: PTI

“These women connected with me because I could speak the language of Shah Rukh Khan,” Bhattacharya says. “I am a believer in slow, laboured, gradual engagement. And I’m very clear about the fact that this is how I want to write my next book as well. I want it to be longitudinal. When I met these women, it was for a research project but I wasn’t tied to a deadline and that difference in approach is significant.”

What of the man himself, then? With Pathaan, Khan has just scored the biggest hit of his career. His fan clubs have never been more vocal and there’s every chance that his next film,  Jawan, which sees him teaming up with Tamil stalwarts Vijay Sethupathi and Nayanthara, will be an even bigger success. According to Bhattacharya, most of the fan videos shot around  Pathaan feature mostly men, and when she watched the movie herself at a 7 a.m. show in Saket, the hall had “maybe five or six women”.

The matinee idol

“I just want to clarify that there’s a large — though not as vocal — Shah Rukh fan base among women and while they’re happy at his success, they also hope he will do a romantic film again soon. Someone recently told me that Shah Rukh’s scenes with Dimple Kapadia are how you know he’s an irrepressible matinee idol — no man in the Indian defence establishment would have been okay with a woman wielding that much power!”

Significantly,  Pathaan also shows the superstar acknowledging his age and the fact that younger, perhaps hungrier competitors are circling the throne. However, as the post-credits scene with Salman Khan makes it clear, the King is in no mood to slow down just yet.

“I particularly enjoyed the little hat-tips to middle age in  Pathaan,” Bhattacharya says. “The coffees and the back pain and the painkillers. I’ve always said that Shah Rukh Khan exists to make South Asian men feel bad about themselves and even at 58 or 60, he will continue to do that.”

The writer and journalist is working on his first book of non-fiction.

The Hindu Lit for Life 2023 is, Powered by Life Insurance Corporation of India, Jewellery Partner: joyalukkas, Banking Partner : Indian Bank Associate Partners: Nitte Meenakshi Institute of technology, Hindustan Group of Institutions , State Bank of India & VFS Global Realty Partner: Casagrand, Knowledge Partner: SSVM Institutions Bookstore Partner: Higginbothams & Gift Partner : Anand Prakash

Registration link : bit.ly/THLFL23

Click here to register for The Hindu Lit For Life.

source: http://thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Books / by Aditya Mani Jha / February 17th, 2023