Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
Bollywood

Finding Bollywood Stars' Roots In Peshawar

IANS, 18 Dec, 2014 01:19 PM
  • Finding Bollywood Stars' Roots In Peshawar
Celebrities from the Indian film world have condemned the recent bloodbath in Pakistan's Peshawar city, which has a strong connect to Bollywood. From Prithiviraj Kapoor to Dilip Kumar to Shah Rukh Khan -- they all have their roots in the city that is mourning the death of 148 people, mostly children, slaughtered by the Pakistani Taliban.
 
For years, Pakistan has loved the glitz and glamour of the Hindi film industry, but Bollywood's relationship with Peshawar as well as some other cities, is far more organic, given the fact that several of its noted icons hail from them.
 
Prithviraj Kapoor, considered a pioneer of Indian film and theatre world and whose family has continued to entertain global audiences through cinema till date, came to India from Peshawar, which houses the famous Kapoor haveli.
 
It is there that the actor Prithviraj's son Raj Kapoor, who went on to become of India's youngest and most successful actor-director, was born.
 
In the same neighbourhood in Peshawar, another Bollywood legend Dilip Kumar, born Yusuf Khan, came into the world and spent his early years. 
 
In his autobiography "Dilip Kumar - The Substance And The Shadow", the 92-year-old recounts: "We were living in undivided India at the time and there was a sizeable Hindu population and the menfolk as well as women mingled freely with Muslims in the market square, wishing each other and exchanging pleasantries ever so cheerfully.
 
 
"Aghaji (my father) had many Hindu friends, and one of them was Basheshwarnathji, who held an important job in the civil services. His elder son came to our house with him a few times and he stunned the ladies with his handsome appearances. That was Raj Kapoor's father Prithviraj Kapoor."
 
Film historian S.M.M. Ausaja says "the greatest of stars in Bollywood" have roots in what is now Pakistan.
 
"Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor are both Peshawari Pathans. Then, Dev Anand, who was born in a part of Gurdaspur now in Pakistan, studied at Lahore University. Rajesh Khanna's parents belonged to Burewala (of then Multan district) and Amitabh Bachchan's mother Teji Bachchan spent her early years at Lyallpur (now Faisalabad) and Lahore before marrying Dr. Harivansh Rai Bachchan," Ausaja told IANS.
 
"Shah Rukh Khan's paternal family also belongs to Peshawar. The Bollywood connect is too pronounced to be ignored," he said.
 
Bollywood arch villain Pran also started his career in the Lahore film industry before translocating to Bombay in wake of the Partition.
 
Past reports suggest that the homes of the three legends -- Dilip Kumar, Raj Kapoor and Shah Rukh Khan -- are just apart by a few minutes on foot in Peshawar.
 
SRK's father Taj Mohammad Mir was born and brought up in Peshawar, and they had a business in Qissa Khwani Bazaar, which is still a major market in Peshawar, the latter's close associate Trilochan Singh had once told IANS.
 
 
Just about a year back, the superstar had shared fond memories of visiting Peshawar as a teenager with his father, and had said that he harbours a hope to take his three children to visit his family's hometown.
 
During a conference here, Pakistan's former foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar had asked him about visiting her country and SRK responded: "I'd love to! My family is from Peshawar and few of them still live there. I would love to come to Peshawar and bring my children over because my father took me when I was 15 or 16.
 
"I still have some of the greatest memories of the time I spent with my father in Peshawar, Karachi and Lahore."
 
But once culturally rich city of Peshawar became a scene of shock and despair when a usual day at an army-run school turned gory with its floor and staircases strewn with the blood of innocent children, the walls left with bullet marks and the glass of the window panes broken -- much like the hopes of the several parents who lost their offspring in the massacre.
 
 
Hindi film celebrities outpoured their agony and disgust at the episode in the city, from where more names like Anil Kapoor's father and film producer Surinder Kapoor, Indian cinema's 'Venus' Madhubala, and Bollywood's 'Gabbar Singh' Amjad Khan, belong to.
 
Bollywood itself has had a lasting impact on the country.
 
"Indian films have a loyal following since the partition as most Hindi/Urdu films were made in India, specifically then Bombay. Lahore had a film industry too. Since most stars remained in Bombay, the fan following continued to thrive in Pakistan," veteran film writer-filmmaker-lyricist Amit Khanna, told IANS.
 
"Until recently, Pakistani films were terrible and illicit DVDs and TV channels ensured Bollywood popularity. For a few years now, about 25 Hindi films are released (there) every year. The market is growing and can fetch Rs.2 crore to Rs.3 crore for a big film," Khanna added.
 
 
Khanna, who worked closely with the legendary Dev Anand, told IANS that Dev Anand and his elder brother Chetan Anand studied in Government College, Lahore.
 
"Balraj Sahni, who hailed from Rawalpindi, and B.R. Chopra were also the alumni of the same college."

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun
Varun Dhawan took his film's co-producer Ekta Kapoor for a bike ride to promote their film "Main Tera Hero" Monday. But thanks to her fear of two-wheelers, she found the experience tough

First Look: Ekta Kapoor takes a bike ride with Varun

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers
Be it Hollywood or Bollywood, actresses put in everything to achieve success and stardom. But once they marry and have children, these glam girls prefer to be hands on mothers and say neither meaty roles nor red carpet perfect looks distract them from their domestic preoccupations.

Star Moms Who Shunned Showbiz To Play Perfect Homemakers

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'
Accomplished actor Irrfan Khan will spend the rest of this year living out of a suitcase as he will be shooting for two films - "Jurassic World" and "Piku". This week he leaves for the US to begin shooting for Colin Trevorrow-directed fourth part of the phenomenal "Jurassic Park" franchise. The film is to be shot in Hawaai and New Orleans.

Irrfan to shuttle between India-US for 'Jurassic World', 'Piku'

Curious Case: Bollywood's New 'I'll do What I Want' Woman

Curious Case: Bollywood's New 'I'll do What I Want' Woman
Here's a new colour -- the Kangana Ranaut of "Queen" and the Alia Bhatt of 'Highway' -- free-spirited and living life on their terms, much like young contemporary Indian women today. I'm loving it!

Curious Case: Bollywood's New 'I'll do What I Want' Woman

No one is your friend in Bollywood: Neha Sharma

No one is your friend in Bollywood: Neha Sharma
Neha Sharma, who started her career with southern films, has done a couple of Hindi movies but she still feels like an outsider in Bollywood and says "no one is your friend here".

No one is your friend in Bollywood: Neha Sharma

I want to be real, not act as a politician: Kirron Kher

I want to be real, not act as a politician: Kirron Kher
Known for her sophisticated and ornate taste in expensive saris and jewellery, Kirron Kher disregards the advice that she must dress simply during her rallies as a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) candidate for the Lok Sabha election from Chandigarh. She believes she doesn't need to "act" like a politician and that she'd rather be "real" to win votes.

I want to be real, not act as a politician: Kirron Kher