Monday, 9 February 2015

This article is about an Indian performer. For other individuals named with comparable name, see Amir Khan (disambiguation).

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Aamir Khan

Aamir Khan

Khan at the trailer dispatch of Dhoom 3 in 2013

Conceived     Mohammed Aamir Hussain Khan

14 March 1965 (age 49)

Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Nationality     Indian

Occupation

Performer

maker

chief

screenwriter

TV moderator

social laborer

A long time dynamic     1984–present

Religion     Islam[1]

Spouse(s)

Reena Dutta (m. 1986; div. 2002)

Kiran Rao (m. 2005)

Kids     3

Folks     Tahir Hussain

Zeenat Hussain

Relatives     Faisal Khan (sibling)

Nikhat Khan (sister)

Nasir Hussain (uncle)

Imran Khan (nephew)

Grants     Full list

Aamir Khan (professed [ˈaːmɪr ˈxaːn]; conceived Mohammed Aamir Hussain Khan on 14 March 1965) is an Indian film performer, executive, maker and TV moderator. Through his effective vocation in Hindi movies, Khan has built himself as a standout amongst the most well known and compelling on-screen characters of Indian cinema.[2][3] He is the beneficiary of various grants, including four National Film Awards and seven Filmfare Awards. He was respected by the Government of India with the Padma Shri in 2003 and the Padma Bhushan in 2010.

Khan initially showed up on screen as a youngster performer in his uncle Nasir Hussain's film Yaadon Ki Baaraat (1973). His first gimmick film part accompanied the trial film Holi (1984), and he started a full-time acting vocation with a main part in the exceptionally fruitful terrible sentiment Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (1988). His execution in the film and in the thriller Raakh (1989) earned him a Special Jury Award at the National Film Award service. He built himself as a main performer of Hindi film in the 1990s by showing up in a few economically fruitful movies, including the sentimental show Dil (1990), the sentiment Raja Hindustani (1996), for which he won his first Filmfare Award for Best Actor, and the dramatization Sarfarosh (1999).[4][5] He was additionally noted for playing against sort in the basically acclaimed Canadian-Indian film Earth (1998).

In 2001, Khan began a creation organization, whose first discharge, Lagaan, was selected for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and earned him a National Film Award for Best Popular Film and two more Filmfare Awards (Best Actor and Best Film). After a four-year nonappearance from the screen, Khan kept on depicting driving parts, most outstandingly in the 2006 film industry hits Fanaa and Rang De Basanti. The accompanying year, he made his directorial introduction with Taare Zameen Par, a significant achievement that accumulated him the Filmfare Awards for Best Film and Best Director. Khan's most prominent business victories accompanied the thriller Ghajini (2008), the comic drama dramatization 3 Idiots (2009), the enterprise film Dhoom 3

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