Salman Khan
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- In full:
- Abdul Rashid Salim Salman Khan
- Also known as:
- Bhai or Bhaijaan or Sallu
- Born:
- December 27, 1965, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India (age 58)
Salman Khan (born December 27, 1965, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India) is a Bollywood actor, dancer, film producer, and television presenter. Along with actors Shah Rukh Khan and Aamir Khan, Salman Khan is one of the three most popular Khans of Bollywood. Though not related, the three Khans achieved massive success and popularity in Bollywood between the late 1980s and the early 2000s. Salman Khan is also a philanthropist and heads the Being Human foundation. He has appeared in more than 100 movies and is popularly known as Bhai (Hindi: “Brother”), Bhaijaan (a respectful and affectionate address for “brother” in Urdu), and Sallu.
In 2017 Forbes magazine ranked Khan as the 9th highest-paid actor and 71st highest-paid celebrity in the world. He topped the Forbes India list of the richest Indian celebrities in 2017 and 2018 but fell to 3rd in 2019. As of 2024 Khan’s net worth exceeds $347 million.
Family
Khan’s great-grandfather moved from Afghanistan to Madhya Pradesh, India, in the 19th century. Khan was born to the well-known Bollywood screenwriter Salim Khan and his first wife, film producer Sushila Charak (also known as Salma Khan), and often recounts in interviews how, having a Muslim father, a Hindu mother, and a Christian stepmother (his father later married Helen, a Bollywood actress), his family observes a variety of different religious festivals with equal zeal, including Eid, Diwali, and Christmas. When asked during a court case to introduce himself and state his religion, he famously once said, “I am Salman Khan and I am an Indian.”
Salman Khan is the eldest of five siblings. Brothers Sohail Khan and Arbaaz Khan are also actors and producers, and sister Alvira Khan is a film producer and fashion designer, while Arpita Khan is an interior designer.
Career and movies
Khan worked as a model advertising products such Limca (a soft drink) before landing his first film role in Biwi Ho To Aisi in 1988. His breakout role was in the 1989 romantic film Maine Pyar Kiya, which led to a Filmfare Award for best male debut. Despite the acclaim he received for his role in that movie, his career coasted until the 1994 release of the film Hum Aapke Hain Koun..!, which reached blockbuster status that year. Khan capitalized on the film’s success to take a wide variety of new roles.
Khan experimented with several different genres in the 1990s and 2000s. He appeared in the slapstick comedies Andaz Apna Apna (1994) and No Entry (2005), the action films Karan Arjun (1995) and Race 3 (2018), and romances, such as Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (1998) (for which he won a Filmfare Award for best supporting actor), Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam (1999), and Tere Naam (2003). In 1999 three of Khan’s films ranked among Bollywood’s highest-grossing films of that year at the box office: Hum Saath-Saath Hain, Biwi No. 1, and Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam. The Indian box office lists Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994) and Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015) as all-time blockbusters.
Khan’s career was supercharged in 2009 by the record-breaking hit film Wanted, an action thriller which, though criticized for a weak plot and poor dialogue, provided Khan with a strong comeback from the lackluster box-office performances of his mid-2000s films. Khan next landed the starring role of a police officer in the beloved Dabangg action franchise, and his popularity became such that his presence in a film could guarantee a certain level of box office success. As his reputation in the film industry grew, in 2010 Khan also became the host of Bigg Boss, an Indian take on the popular reality show Big Brother, which he hosted for the next 13 seasons. He also hosted the second season of the show in the OTT format. Released in 2012 and 2017, Khan’s first two Tiger films, in which Khan plays an Indian intelligence officer, were very successful at the box office. Tiger Zinda Hai (2017) broke opening-weekend records and became one of the highest-grossing Hindi films of all time, going on to win best action movie at the Filmfare Awards. In 2018 Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015)—a movie in which Khan plays the role of Pawan Kumar, an Indian devotee of the Hindu deity Hanuman (also known as Bajrang Bali, giving the film its title), helping a little girl from Pakistan find her way back home—became the third highest-grossing Indian movie at the global box office. In fact, the movie was very popular in China, and its overseas earnings were higher than its domestic ticket sales. Some of Khan’s later movies—Race 3 (2018), Dabangg 3 (2019), and Radhe (2021)—have received negative reviews.
Court cases against Khan
In the 1990s and 2000s Khan gained a “bad boy” reputation in the Bollywood press. He was in multiple physical conflicts with paparazzi, leading to some publications refusing to photograph him in 2014. Khan has also been accused of two crimes for which he has been tried. The first case involved two 1998 hunting incidents during the filming of the movie Hum Saath Saath Hain. Khan was accused of killing two blackbucks (Antilope cervicapra) and an Indian gazelle (Gazella bennetti), locally known as chinkara. Both animals are protected species in India. The incidents eventually led to four different court cases: two of them were overturned on appeal in 2016; he was acquitted of one in 2017; and he was sentenced to five years in jail for another in 2018. Khan was released on bail within days while his appeals—still underway as of 2024—were ongoing.
Khan was found guilty in 2015 of a deadly hit-and-run accident. The case originated in a 2002 arrest when Khan was accused of having run over five people sleeping on a street in Mumbai, injuring four and killing one. In May of 2015 a court found Khan guilty of culpable homicide, including driving under the influence of alcohol, and sentenced him to five years in prison. Later that year the conviction was overturned on appeal because of insufficient evidence.
Health problems and other ventures
In 2011 Khan announced that he had been diagnosed with trigeminal neuralgia, a nerve condition that causes acute pain in the head and neck. Khan underwent surgery in Los Angeles and fully recovered from the condition. That same year he launched Salman Khan Films (SKF), his own production and distribution company. Khan has also been officially credited as a writer on a few films and reportedly has had uncredited writing roles on at least one other. Being Human, a charitable trust Khan founded in 2007, provides education and healthcare services to underprivileged people in India.