Kareena Kapoor Khan wears the superstar tag lightly but her successful career is testimony to her versatility and talent. As the actor-producer completes 23 years in the film industry, she's raring to go and do what she does best—create magic once the camera rolls
Kareena Kapoor Khan gives a sheepish smile to her stylist as he catches her pouting while taking a few top-angle selfies. Dressed in a grey pant-suit, the actor has only minutes ago completed a photo shoot with Forbes India at Mehboob Studios in Bandra, Mumbai, and is waiting to record a video interview when she tries to capture herself in all her glory. Her obsession with the camera is an open secret, and something that she admits to with a lot of pride. And that the camera has loved her back in equal measure is evident from the fact that the 43-year-old completed 23 years in the Indian film industry in 2023—a year in which she made her streaming debut with Jaane Jaan and turned producer with The Buckingham Murders.
One of the most glamorous and accomplished stars of her time, Kapoor Khan has been a crowd-puller who’s held her own amid raging competition since making her acting debut with Refugee in 2000. She attributes it to her single-minded focus and dedication to her craft. “I love acting… that’s my top priority, playing different parts. I have wanted to do it since I was a child. I get attracted to just being in front of the camera. It’s something that I will always do with passion because I enjoy doing it,” she says.
Born to actors Randhir Kapoor and Babita, whose elder daughter Karisma was a superstar in the 1990s, it was inevitable that Kapoor Khan would veer towards becoming a screen icon, much like many of her relatives in the Kapoor family—considered the first family of Indian cinema. It was easier said than done though. “The pressures were extremely mammoth,” she concedes. “There was pressure to carve a place for myself so that people know that I am talented as well, and I am also a part of this legacy.”
The doubts about her talent, if any, were dispelled when she got widespread acclaim for her performance in Refugee. “She’s a born star, a complete natural,” says JP Dutta, who directed the film.
Kapoor Khan has enjoyed enviable stardom throughout her career. The image of a diva stuck to her early on because of her much-loved portrayal of the full-of-herself Poo in Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham (2001). And the superstar tag has been synonymous with her, especially after playing the carefree and boisterous Geet in Jab We Met (2007). The artiste, though, insists that such assumptions about her are far from reality. “I have never felt as anything of that sort because I have always looked at myself as an actor who’s wanted to do something different constantly. Otherwise it would have been impossible to survive 23 years with each decade having a dash of new actors, new talent,” she emphasises.