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Tracing The Evergreen Family Tree Of 'The Showman Of Indian Cinema' On Raj Kapoor's 101st Birth Anniversary
If you are an ardent movie buff then you know who is rightly known as the 'Showman of Indian cinema'. He was the tramp in a hat, the dreamer who kept falling and getting back up. Born on 14 December 1924, Raj Kapoor didn't wait decades to find his footing. He started young, took risks early, and by his twenties was already directing and producing his own films.
What worked in his favour was that his films spoke about money, love, pride, and mistakes - things people were actually dealing with. 'Awaara', 'Shree 420', 'Barsaat', 'Mera Naam Joker' weren't made to impress critics. They were made to connect. And they did. That connection didn't end with him. It turned into a family story that's still unfolding.
Before Raj Kapoor, There Was Prithviraj Kapoor
Raj Kapoor had acting in his genes. His father, Prithviraj Kapoor, was already a respected theatre and film actor. That environment shaped Raj and his brothers, Shammi Kapoor and Shashi Kapoor, both of whom went on to become major stars themselves. Each brother had a different style, but together they changed what leading men looked like on screen in their time.
Raj Kapoor At Home: His Immediate Family
Raj Kapoor married Krishna Malhotra in 1946. They had five children:
- Randhir Kapoor, who was an actor and director
- Ritu Nanda, who chose business over films
- Rishi Kapoor, an actor who grew from romantic leads to layered roles
- Rima Jain, who stayed away from cinema
- Rajiv Kapoor, who worked as an actor and producer
Not all of them chased fame, and not all of them stayed in films. But the surname followed them everywhere.
The Generation Most People Recognise
For many viewers today, the Kapoor story feels familiar because of this generation.
From Randhir Kapoor and Babita came:
- Karisma Kapoor, who entered films when it wasn't easy for women from film families
- Kareena Kapoor Khan, who grew with the industry rather than being stuck in one phase
From Rishi Kapoor and Neetu Singh:
- Ranbir Kapoor, whose career reflects both expectations and pressure
- Riddhima Kapoor Sahni, who built a life outside films
From Ritu Nanda:
- Nikhil Nanda, now connected to the Bachchan family
- Natasha Nanda, who stays away from the public eye
From Rima Jain:
- Armaan Jain and Aadar Jain, both visible in different spaces
The Youngest Kapoors You See Today
Some names feel familiar because you've seen them grow up in headlines and photos:
- Samaira and Kiaan (Karisma Kapoor's children)
- Taimur and Jehangir (Kareena Kapoor Khan's sons)
- Raha Kapoor (Ranbir Kapoor and Alia Bhatt's daughter)
- Samara Sahni (Riddhima's daughter)
- Rana Jain (Armaan Jain's son)
- Agastya Nanda, already an upcoming actor and Navya Naveli Nanda, an entrepreneur (Nikhil Nanda's children)
Whether they choose movies or something else, they're part of a long public family line.
On 14 December 2025, Raj Kapoor would have turned 101. His films may belong to another era, but the way they speak hasn't changed. And neither has the fact that one man's work ended up shaping not just movies, but an entire family's place in public life.



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