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Rani Mukerji is an Indian actress who has had commercial success in Bollywood films since the late 1990s. She comes from a family involved in the Hindi film industry. Some of her breakthrough roles include Kuch Kuch Hota Hai in 1998 and Saathiya in 2002. She is known for her versatility and has received multiple awards for her acting. The document provides details about her early life, background, career highlights and humanitarian work.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views2 pages

Typecasting

Rani Mukerji is an Indian actress who has had commercial success in Bollywood films since the late 1990s. She comes from a family involved in the Hindi film industry. Some of her breakthrough roles include Kuch Kuch Hota Hai in 1998 and Saathiya in 2002. She is known for her versatility and has received multiple awards for her acting. The document provides details about her early life, background, career highlights and humanitarian work.

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yeseki8683
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Rani Mukerji (pronounced [raːni mʊkʰərdʒi]; born 21 March 1978) is an Indian actress who works in Hindi films.

Noted for her


versatility, she is the recipient of multiple accolades, including eight Filmfare Awards. Mukerji has featured in listings of the lead-
ing and highest-paid actresses of the 2000s.[1][2]
Born into the Mukherjee-Samarth family, Mukerji dabbled with acting as a teenager by starring in her father Ram Mukherjee's
Bengali-language film Biyer Phool and in the social drama Raja Ki Aayegi Baaraat (both 1996). Mukerji had her first commercial
success with the action film Ghulam and breakthrough with the romance Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (both 1998). Following a brief set-
back, the year 2002 marked a turning point for her when she was cast by Yash Raj Films as the star of the drama Saathiya.
Mukerji established herself by starring in several commercially successful romantic films, including Chalte Chalte (2003), Hum
Tum (2004), Veer-Zaara (2004), and Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna (2006), and the crime comedy Bunty Aur Babli (2005). She also
gained praise for playing an abused wife in the political drama Yuva (2004) and a deaf and blind woman in the
drama Black (2005). Mukerji's collaborations with Yash Raj Films from 2007 and 2010 produced several unsuccessful films and
led critics to bemoan her choice of roles. This changed when she played a headstrong journalist in the biographical thriller No
One Killed Jessica (2011). Further success came with the thrillers Talaash (2012), Mardaani (2014) and Mardaani 2 (2019), the
comedy-drama Hichki (2018), which emerged as Mukerji's highest-grossing release, and the drama Mrs. Chatterjee vs Nor-
way (2023).
Mukerji is involved with humanitarian causes and is vocal about issues faced by women and children. She has participated in
concert tours and stage shows, and featured as a talent judge for the 2009 reality show Dance Premier League. Mukerji is mar-
ried to filmmaker Aditya Chopra, with whom she has a daughter.

Early life and background[edit]


See also: Mukherjee-Samarth family
Mukerji was born in Bombay (present-day Mumbai) on 21 March 1978.[3][4] Her father, Ram Mukherjee (born to the Mukherjee-
Samarth family), was a former film director and one of the founders of Filmalaya Studios. Her mother, Krishna Mukherjee, is a
former playback singer.[5][6] Her elder brother, Raja Mukherjee, is a film producer and director.[7] Her maternal aunt, Debashree
Roy, is a Bengali film actress and her paternal second cousin, Kajol, is a Hindi film actress and her contemporary.[8] Another pa-
ternal second cousin, Ayan Mukerji, is a scriptwriter and film director.[9] Despite her parents and most of her relatives being mem-
bers of the Indian film industry, Mukerji was uninterested in pursuing a career in film.[10] She said, "There were already too many
actresses at home and I wanted to be someone different".[11]
Mukerji received her education at Maneckji Cooper High School in Juhu and graduated with a degree in Home Sci-
ence from SNDT Women's University.[10][12] She is a trained Odissi dancer and began learning the dance form while in the tenth
grade.[13] As part of an annual tradition, the Mukherjee family celebrates the festival of Durga Puja in the suburban neighbour-
hood of Santacruz every year. Mukerji, a practising Hindu, takes part in the festivities with her entire family.[14][15]
In 1994, director Salim Khan approached Mukerji to play the lead female role in his directorial, Aa Gale Lag Jaa. Her father dis-
approved of a full-time career in film at such a young age, so she rejected the offer.[12] At age 18, following her mother's sugges-
tion that she pursue acting on an experimental basis, Mukerji accepted leading roles in the social drama Raja Ki Aayegi
Baaraat, Khan's second offer to her, and her father's Bengali film Biyer Phool, both of which were released on the same day in
October 1996.[4][16] Before she began work on Raja Ki Aayegi Baaraat, Mukerji trained at Roshan Taneja's acting institute.[17] She
portrayed a rape victim who is forced to marry her rapist in the film. Although the film was a commercial failure,[18] Mukerji's per-
formance earned her a special recognition trophy at the annual Screen Awards ceremony.[5] Following the film's poor showing at
the box office, Mukerji returned to college to complete her education. However, inspired by her cousin Kajol's success in Hindi
films, she decided to pursue a full-time career in films.[11]

Career[edit]
See also: Rani Mukerji filmography

Breakthrough and initial struggle (1998–2001)[edit]


In 1998, Mukerji starred opposite Aamir Khan in Vikram Bhatt's action film Ghulam, her first commercial success.[19] Though her
role in the film was brief, the song "Aati Kya Khandala" earned her public recognition.[20][21] Due to Mukerji's husky voice, Bhatt
had someone with a higher pitched voice dub her lines; Mukerji stated that it was done as her voice "did not suit the character".
[22][23]
In the same year, Karan Johar cast her opposite Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol in his directorial debut Kuch Kuch Hota Hai.
The role was originally written for Twinkle Khanna, but when she and several other leading ladies rejected it, Johar signed Muk-
erji on the insistence of Khan and the filmmaker Aditya Chopra.[24] She played Khan's character's love interest and later wife,
Tina who dies after giving birth to their daughter. Johar had originally intended to dub Mukerji's voice, but she improved her dic-
tion and eventually provided her own voice.[25] Reviewing the film for India Today, Nandita Chowdhury wrote that it was "the gor-
geous Rani who steals the show. Oozing oomph from every pore, she also proves herself an actress whose time has come".
[26]
Kuch Kuch Hota Hai proved a breakthrough for Mukerji;[27] it had earnings of over ₹1.03 billion (US$13 million) to emerge as
the year's top-grossing Hindi film,[28][29] and won eight Filmfare Awards, including Best Supporting Actress for Mukerji.[30] Following
this, she had starring roles in Mehndi (1998) and Hello Brother (1999), critical and commercial disappointments that failed to
propel her career forward.[31][32]
Mukerji at the audio release of Chori Chori Chupke Chupke in 2001
By 2000, Mukerji wanted to avoid typecasting as a "standard Hindi film heroine" and thus decided to portray more challenging
roles in addition to the archetypical glamorous lead.[33] In Badal and Bichhoo, two male-centric action dramas (both star-
ring Bobby Deol), she played roles that were met with little acclaim from critics.[34][35] A supporting role in Kamal Haasan's bilingual
film Hey Ram proved more rewarding. The film was a partly fictionalised account of Mahatma Gandhi's assassination and Muk-
erji played a Bengali school teacher who is raped and murdered during communal riots in Calcutta.[36] Having only portrayed
glamorous roles thus far, she was challenged by Haasan's insistence on realism and to appear on screen without wearing
make-up; she believed that the experience changed her approach to acting.[4] The controversial subject matter of Hey Ram led
to po

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