Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Arbaaz Khan filmography
Filmography article From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Arbaaz Khan is an Indian actor, director and producer who works mainly in Hindi cinema alongside few Urdu, Telugu and Malayalam language films.[1][2][3] Arbaaz Khan made his debut in the 1996 Hindi film Daraar as a psychotic wife-beater villain, for which he received Filmfare Award for Best Performance in a Negative Role. He has starred in many multi-starrer hit films such as Pyaar Kiya To Darna Kya (1998), for which he received a Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor nomination, and Garv: Pride and Honour (2004), where he acted opposite his own brother Salman Khan.

Following his success with the negative roles, he then played a villainous role in the 2003 film Qayamat: City Under Threat[a]. He also played several supporting roles in director Priyadarshan's comedy films Hulchul (2004), Malamaal Weekly (2006) and Bhagam Bhag (2006) alongside another supporting roles as a police officer (Constable Javed Shaikh) and a mobster (Moscow Chikna) in the 2007 multi-starrers Shootout at Lokhandwala and Fool and Final respectively.
He also made a cameo appearance, alongside his brother Sohail Khan, in the blockbuster Jaane Tu... Ya Jaane Na, starring Imran Khan and Genelia D'Souza. In 2009, he starred alongside Sohail in Kisaan and played a villain in Jai Veeru. Khan also appeared in the television serial Karishma - The Miracles of Destiny in 2003, and has appeared in many TV programs from time to time.[4]
He then made his Telugu debut by playing a negative role in the film Jai Chiranjeeva starring Chiranjeevi.
In 2010, Khan ventured into film production with the company named Arbaaz Khan Productions. His first film as a producer was Dabangg, which was released in September 2010. The film starred his brother Salman in the leading role as the cop-hero Chulbul Pandey, alongside Arbaaz as his younger brother Makkhanchand "Makkhi" Pandey.[b] His former wife Malaika Arora Khan was featured in the popular item number "Munni Badnaam".[5] The film became a blockbuster within the first week of its release and broke several box office records, becoming the second highest grossing Bollywood film of all time at the time of its release.[6] On 12 March 2011, while Khan was a special guest of Australia's Indian film festival, Bollywood & Beyond, he helped his former wife Malaika Arora lead a successful world record attempt in Melbourne. 1235 participants successfully performed a choreographed dance to "Munni Badnaam" from the Dabangg soundtrack.[7]
Khan made his directorial debut with the 2012 released sequel of Dabangg, Dabangg 2 which was a huge commercial success surpassing the first installment.[8]
Khan made his Malayalam cinema debut in Big Brother starring Mohanlal.[9]
In 2019, he had acted again the third installment of the Dabangg series,Dabangg 3 where he still played the role of producer but director was replaced by Prabhu Deva. The film was expected to become a blockbuster surpassing Dabangg 2, but grossed lower than it.[10][11]
Remove ads
Hindi language films
Remove ads
Telugu language films
Source[17]
Other language films
Television
Dubbing roles
References
Notes
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads