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Sanjay Dutt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian actor (born 1959)

Sanjay Dutt
Dutt in 2019
Born
Sanjay Balraj Dutt

(1959-07-29)29 July 1959 (age 66)
Other names
  • Sanju
  • Baba
EducationThe Lawrence School, Sanawar
Occupations
  • Actor
  • playback singer
  • film producer
Years active1981–present
WorksFull list
Spouses
Children3
Parents
FamilySeeDutt family
AwardsFull list
Signature

Sanjay Balraj Dutt (born 29 July 1959)[4] is anIndian actor, playback singer and film producer who works inHindi cinema in addition to a fewTelugu,Kannada,Tamil, andPunjabi films.[5][6] He acted inover 135 films. Known for his versatile screen presence and portrayal of both heroic and anti-heroic characters, Dutt wonseveral accolades including twoFilmfare Awards, threeScreen Awards and aGlobal Indian Film Award.[7]

Part of theDutt family, he is the son of actor-politiciansSunil Dutt andNargis. Dutt made his acting debut withRocky (1981), directed by his father.[8] A career slump followed, with major exceptions beingVidhaata (1982),Naam (1986) andThanedaar (1990).[9] He later established himself as a Major Superstar with films likeSaajan (1991) andSadak (1991) and continued to deliver hits, such asAdharm (1992),Gumrah (1993),Khalnayak (1993),Daag: The Fire (1999),Haseena Maan Jaayegi (1999),Vaastav: The Reality (1999),Jodi No. 1 (2001),Munna Bhai MBBS (2003) andLage Raho Munna Bhai (2006), the latter of which proved to be his biggest solo commercial success till date.[10][11] His critically acclaimed performance inVaastav won him theFilmfare Award for Best Actor.[12]

Since 2000, his other notable films include -Mission Kashmir (2000),Kurukshetra (2000),Kaante (2002),Munna Bhai M.B.B.S. (2003),Dus (2005),Shootout at Lokhandwala (2007),Dhamaal (2007),All the Best (2009),Double Dhamaal (2011),Agneepath (2012),Son of Sardaar (2012) andPK (2014). This was followed by a career downturn with the exceptions beingKannada filmK.G.F: Chapter 2 (2022) and theTamil filmLeo (2023), the former being the4th highest-grossing Indian film and the latter being the12th highest-grossing Indian film, both in which he played the main antagonist.

Dutt was arrested under theTADA and theArms Act in April 1993 and was convicted later for violation of Arms Act for possession of illegal weapons including AK-56 rifle(s) procured from other accused in the1993 Bombay bombings. He was sentenced to five years in prison. He was granted bail several times during his sentence which is why he only completed his five-year jail sentence in 2016.[13][14][15] Dutt's life receives considerable media coverage in India, and in 2018,Sanju, a biopic based on his life (which also saw a special appearance by him), starringRanbir Kapoor as Dutt, was released to positive reviews and emerged as one of thehighest-grossers of Indian cinema.[16]

Early life

[edit]

Sanjay Dutt was born inBombay,Bombay State (nowMumbai, Maharashtra), to parents who were notedHindi cinema actorsSunil Dutt andNargis Dutt.[17] He studied atThe Lawrence School, Sanawar, and thereafter atElphinstone College,Mumbai.[18]

Born to aHindu father and aMuslim mother, Dutt's paternal ancestry can be traced back to theRawalpindi Division of westernPunjab (present-dayPakistan); his paternal village beingKhurd inJhelum District.[19] He is the maternal grandson of music composerJaddanbai ofBenares.[20] and nephew of actorAnwar Hussain[21] Through his father, he belongs to theHussaini Brahmin community, which reveresImam Hussain and traditionally said to have participated in thebattle of Karbala, the community's fluid identity as half-Hindu and half-Muslim having made it vulnerable during the 1947partition of India riots.[22] Sanjay has two sisters,Priya Dutt and Namrata Dutt.[23][24]

Sanjay's name was chosen by crowdsourcing via theUrdu language film magazineShama.[25] His mother died in 1981, shortly before his debut film's premiere; her death is cited as the instigator of his drug abuse.[26] Dutt made his acting debut at an early age, playing a childqawali singer in his father's filmReshma Aur Shera (1971).[27]

Career

[edit]

Breakthrough (1981–1989)

[edit]

Dutt made hisBollywood film debut with the moderately successfulRocky in 1981.[28] Dutt then went on to star inVidhaata, the highest-grossing Hindi film of 1982, along with film veteransDilip Kumar,Shammi Kapoor andSanjeev Kumar. He also starred in films likeMain Awara Hoon (1983)Zameen Aasmaan (1984). In 1985, he shotJaan Ki Baazi, his first film in two years.[29]

The filmNaam (1986) was a turning point in Dutt's career, it was a major critical and commercial success.[30][31][29] Dutt appeared in successful films throughout the 1980s such asImaandaar,Inaam Dus Hazaar (1987),Jeete Hain Shaan Se (1988),Mardon Wali Baat (1988),Ilaaka (1989),Hum Bhi Insaan Hain (1989),Kanoon Apna Apna (1989) andTaaqatwar (1989).[29]

His performances in bothKabzaa (1988) andJ. P. Dutta'sHathyar (1989) were both well received by critics, although both films only managed average collections at the box office.[32][33][34] In the late 1980s, he was seen in a number of multi-starrers alongside leading actors likeGovinda,Mithun,Dharmendra,Jackie Shroff andSunny Deol.[29]

Rise to prominence (1990–1993)

[edit]

His successes continued in the 1990s, with films that likeTejaa (1990),Khatarnaak (1990),Zahreelay, (1990)Thanedaar (1990),Khoon Ka Karz (1991),Yalgaar (1992),Gumrah (1993),Sahibaan (1993) andAatish: Feel the Fire (1994). He went on to star in some of the most era-defining Indian films of the early 1990s such asSadak (1991),Saajan (1991) andKhalnayak (1993), earning two nominations for theFilmfare Award for Best Actor for the latter two.[29]

The Hindu wrote that "Dutt's earlier films (likeNaam andSadak) got him a lot of favourable attention", and "Saajan established Dutt as the conventional soft hero."[31]Saajan was the highest-grossingBollywood film of 1991, andSadak was the fifth highest grosser of 1991.[35]Khalnayak became a blockbuster and was the second-highest grossing film of 1993.[36] This was followed by another box office successGumrah, this was Dutt's second consecutive hit that year.[37]

Arrest and later career (1993–1998)

[edit]

Bombay (now Mumbai) suffered a series ofserial bombings in 1993. Dutt was among several people associated with Bollywood who were accused of involvement. It was alleged that Dutt accepted delivery of weapons at his house fromAbu Salem and co-accused Riyaz Siddiqui, who had also been implicated in relation to the Mumbai blasts.[38] It was claimed that the weapons formed a part of a large consignment of arms connected to the terrorists.[39] Dutt, however, in his confession stated that he took only oneType-56 from the producers of his movieSanam, for his own family protection.[40] It has also been reported that Sanjay Dutt's fatherSunil Dutt's political rivalry caused Sanjay Dutt's conviction.[41] Dutt's first film after his 1993 arrest wasDaud (1997). It did average business at the box office despite getting a lot of publicity.[42] This was followed byDushman (1998) which did well financially.[43]

Resurgence (1999–2002)

[edit]

1999 was an excellent year for Dutt and one that is regarded as his comeback, with all of his five releases being among the highest-grossing films of that year. He began it by starring in theMahesh Bhatt-directed filmKartoos, followed byKhoobsurat,Haseena Maan Jaayegi,Daag: The Fire andVaastav: The Reality, for which he won many awards, including his first Filmfare Award for Best Actor.[44][45] His role in 2000'sMission Kashmir won him critical acclaim and a number of awards and nominations, including his fourth nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actor.[29] Dutt was also invited by thePresident of India toRashtrapati Bhavan for his performance in the film.[46]

As the decade went on, he continued to play lead roles in critical and commercial successes such asJodi No.1 (2001),Pitaah (2002) andKaante (2002), which earned him his first nomination for theFilmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor.

Munna Bhai and supporting roles (2003–2014)

[edit]

He played the lead role in the National Award-winning filmMunna Bhai M.B.B.S. (2003),[47] which garnered him several awards, including his firstFilmfare Award for Best Comedian.[29] At the box office,Munna Bhai M.B.B.S. achieved a silver jubilee status (25-week run) being one of only eight films to have achieved this status since the year 2000. In its 26th week of release, the film could still be found playing on 257 screens throughout India.[48][49] Later successes came withMusafir (2004),Plan (2004),Parineeta (2005), which earned him his second nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor, andDus (2005). He also won critical acclaim for his performances inShabd (2005) andZinda (2006).[29]

The sequel ofMunna Bhai M.B.B.S.,Lage Raho Munna Bhai was released on 1 September 2006,[50] for which Dutt received a number of awards, along with an award from the Prime MinisterManmohan Singh for his work in theMunna Bhai series.[51]NDTV India counted the characterMunna Bhai as one of top 20 fictional characters in Bollywood.[52] Dutt earned his fifth nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film.

In January 2008, the Indian film Institute Filmfare listed 12 films featuring Dutt in its list of the top 100 highest-grossing movies of all time. In its May 2013 edition "100 years of Indian cinema",Filmfare listed three films featuring Dutt in its top 20 list of highest-grossing Hindi films of all time, adjusted for inflation these films wereLage Raho Munna Bhai,Khalnayak andSaajan.[53] Later, Dutt starred in other successful movies likeDhamaal (2007),Shootout at Lokhandwala (2007),All the Best (2009),Double Dhamaal (2011),Son of Sardaar (2012)Agneepath (2012) andPK (2014).[54]

Expansion into South Indian films (2016–present)

[edit]

Vidhu Vinod Chopra on 29 September 2016 announced that the third part of Munna Bhai series, starring Dutt in the title role, would begin soon.[55] However, as of 2024, production on the film has still not commenced.[56]

In 2017, Dutt appeared as the lead inBhoomi, directed byOmung Kumar.[57] In 2018, he starred inSaheb, Biwi Aur Gangster 3.[58][59] On 29 June 2018, his biopicSanju released in which he made a special appearance.[60] He then produced and starred inPrassthanam, which released on 20 September 2019.[61]

Due to theCOVID pandemic, Dutt then had fourOTT releases. First wasSadak 2, a sequel to his 1991 filmSadak, co starringAlia Bhatt andAditya Roy Kapur. The trailer for the film became the most disliked trailer of all time, with fans critical of nepotism following the death ofSushant Singh Rajput.[62] The film was universally panned and some claimed it to be one of the worst films in Dutt's career.[63] Then cameNetflix releaseTorbaaz, an action thriller set inAfghanistan. His 2021 releaseBhuj: The Pride of India, which featured an ensemble cast consisting ofAjay Devgn,Sonakshi Sinha andNora Fatehi, also received negative reviews.[64] However, in 2022, Dutt appeared inToolsidas Junior, a sports drama which won theNational Film Award for Best Feature Film in Hindi.[citation needed]

Also in 2022, Dutt made his debut inKannada cinema as Adheera, the main antagonist inK.G.F: Chapter 2, the sequel to the blockbuster Kannada film,K.G.F: Chapter 1. The movie was a financial success and became the third highest grossing Indian film.[citation needed] However, his other 2022 theatrical releases were financial flops - the period epicShamshera, directed byKaran Malhotra and starringRanbir Kapoor, in which he again played a key antagonist, andSamrat Prithviraj alongsideAkshay Kumar.[citation needed]

In 2023, Dutt performed a cameo inShah Rukh Khan starrerJawan and played a key antagonist inLokesh Kanagaraj'sLeo (2023) alongsideVijay, making his debut inTamil cinema.[65] Both were huge financial successes. In 2024, he reunited withRaveena Tandon in the digital filmGhudchadi and made hisTelugu cinema debut withPuri Jagannadh'sDouble iSmart, which was a box office debacle.[citation needed] He appeared inHousefull 5 in 2025 as Chief Inspector Baba. The film was a commercial success. In the same year, he starred in Baaghi 4 alongside Tiger Shroff, playing the main antagonist. Critics noted that Dutt's role was too brief for him to make an impact. The film was poorly received and underperformed commercially.

Dutt is next set to appear in,Dhurandhar,The Raja Saab,Baap,KD - The Devil, an untitled film withArshad Warsi, and his productionThe Virgin Tree. He will also star in the big-budget international filmThe Good Maharaja.

Off-screen work

[edit]

Hosting

[edit]

Dutt co-hosted thefifth season of the Indian reality showBigg Boss along withSalman Khan. The show aired onColors television from 2 October 2011 to 7 January 2012.[66] Dutt later said it was Khan who persuaded him to co-host the show.[67]

Personal life

[edit]
Dutt with his wifeManyata in 2011

Relationships

[edit]

In the early 1980, Dutt had a relationship with his co-star from his first film,Tina Munim.[68] After this relationship ended, Dutt married actressRicha Sharma in 1987.[69] She died of a brain tumour in 1996. The couple have a daughter[70] born in 1988, who lives in the United States with her maternal grandparents.[71]

Dutt's second marriage was to air-hostess-turned-modelRhea Pillai on 14 February 1998.[72] The divorce finalised in 2008. Dutt marriedManyata (born Dilnawaz Sheikh)[73] first registered inGoa in 2008 and then, in aHindu ceremony inMumbai, after two years of dating.[74] On 21 October 2010, he became a father to twins, a boy and a girl.[75]

Religion

[edit]

Earlier, Dutt used to identify withIslam and woreQur'anic verses around his neck, which Mahesh Bhatt attributed to his mother's family. Dutt also often frequented his maternal uncle's house and thus, his Muslim cousins.[76] When the police interrogated him following the1992-1993 Mumbai riots about an assault rifle he conceded getting fromAnees Ibrahim, the brother ofDawood Ibrahim, he responded that "because I have Muslim blood in my veins, I could not bear what was happening in the city."[77]

In the more recent years, Dutt has connected more withHinduism and became a devotee ofShiva.[78] In January 2024, he performed thepind daan, a Hindu ritual that involves paying homage to ancestors, for his deceased parents.[4]

Health issues

[edit]

Sanjay Dutt was diagnosed with stage 4lung cancer. He took treatment in Mumbai[79] and now has recovered from lung cancer.[80]

Controversies

[edit]

1993 Bombay bombings case

[edit]

During the investigations of thebombings in 1993 inMumbai, then known as Bombay, Dutt was among several people associated with Bollywood who were accused of involvement. It was alleged that Dutt accepted a delivery of weapons at his house fromAbu Salem and co-accused Riyaz Siddiqui, who had also been implicated in relation to the Bombay blasts.[38] It was claimed that the weapons formed a part of a large consignment of arms connected to the terrorists.[39] Dutt, however, in his confession stated that he took only oneType-56 from the producers of his movieSanam, for his own family protection.[40] It has also been reported that Sanjay Dutt's fatherSunil Dutt's political rivalry caused Sanjay Dutt's conviction.[41]

On 19 April 1993, after initial reporting by Baljeet Parmar on Dutt's possession of the AK-56, he was arrested under the provisions of theTerrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA).[81][39][82][83] Dutt was granted bail by theSupreme Court of India on 5 May 1993; however, on 4 July 1994 his bail was cancelled and he was re-arrested. On 16 October 1995 he was granted bail.[84] Abdul Qayyum Abdul Karim Shaikh, who was thought to be a close aide of the terrorists' ringleader,Dawood Ibrahim, was arrested.[85] Dutt had given Qayuum's name to the police when confessing to arms possession, saying that in September 1992 he had bought apistol from Qayuum inDubai.[86] His arrest coincided with the release of his film,Khalnayak, in which he played a wanted criminal. The film's major success was in part due to Dutt's off-screen legal controversy.

On 31 July 2007, Dutt was cleared of the charges relating to the Mumbai blast; however, the TADA court sentenced Dutt to six years'rigorous imprisonment under Arms act for illegal possession of weapons.[39][87] According toThe Guardian, "The actor claimed he feared for his life after the notorious 'Black Friday' bombings, which were allegedly staged by Mumbai's Muslim-dominated mafia in retaliation for deadly Hindu-Muslim clashes a few months earlier. But the judge rejected this defence and also refused bail."[87] Dutt was returned to at theArthur Road Jail and soon after moved to theYerawada Central Jail inPune.[39][88] Dutt appealed against the sentence[89] and was granted interim bail on 20 August 2007 until such time as the TADA court provided him with a copy of its judgement.[90] On 22 October 2007 Dutt was back in jail but again applied for bail. On 27 November 2007, Dutt was granted bail by the Supreme Court.[91] On 21 March 2013 the Supreme Court upheld the verdict but shortened the sentence to five years' imprisonment. Dutt was given a month to surrender before the authorities.[92]

Dutt has said that "I am not a politician but I belong to a political family."[93] He was persuaded by a close friend to contest the2009 Lok Sabha elections as a candidate for theSamajwadi Party, but withdrew when the court refused to suspend his conviction.[94] He was then appointed General Secretary of the Samajwadi Party, leaving that post in December 2010.[95] In March 2013 the Supreme Court upheld Dutt's five-year sentence, 18 months of which he already spent in jail during the trial.[96] He was given four weeks to surrender to the authorities, the court having refused to release him on probation due to the severity of the offence.[97]

On 10 May, the Supreme Court rejected Dutt'sreview petition for the reconsideration of his conviction and asked him to surrender on the stipulated date.[98][99] on 14 May, Dutt withdrew the mercy plea and surrendered to the Mumbai Police on 16 May 2013.[100][101] Just before the surrender, the Mumbai jail authority got an anonymous letter threatening Dutt's life. Dutt filed an appeal to allow him to surrender before entering Yerwada Central Jail. Later, Dutt withdrew this request too.[102] He was paroled from 21 December 2013. The parole was extended three times until March 2014, raising concern in Bombay High Court and a proposal from theGovernment of Maharashtra to amend the law of parole. He returned to Yerwada Central Jail after his parole ended.[103] Dutt was out on a two weeks' furlough granted by the Yerwada Central Jail authorities on 24 December.[104] He was subsequently incarcerated inYerwada Central Jail, to complete his jail term.[105] He was released from there on 25 February 2016 after serving his sentence.[106]

Filmography

[edit]
Main article:Sanjay Dutt filmography

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Main article:List of awards and nominations received by Sanjay Dutt

Legacy

[edit]

Dutt is regarded as one of the most popular actors of Indian cinema.[107] Known for his versatile roles, style and intensity, he has often portrayed flawed heroes on screen which brought him commercial success as well as accolades.[108][109]

One of the most successful actors of the 1990s and 2000s, Dutt appeared inBox Office India's "Top Actors" list three times from 1991 to 1993. He topped the list twice in 1992 and 1993.[10]

In 2022, he placed inOutlook India's "75 Best Bollywood Actors" list.[110]

In popular culture

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
This articleneeds more completecitations forverification. Please helpadd missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable.(August 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
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  61. ^"Prasthanam Teaser: Sanjay Dutt Takes No Prisoners as Politician in War of Legacy". 29 July 2019.Archived from the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved27 August 2019.
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  65. ^"Sanjay Dutt to make Tamil debut opposite Vijay in Thalapathy 67, reveals he was convinced with just one line concept".Daily News and Analysis. 31 January 2023.Archived from the original on 1 February 2023. Retrieved3 February 2023.
  66. ^"Sanjay Dutt, Salman to host Bigg Boss 5 together".Mi Day.Archived from the original on 23 January 2013. Retrieved16 May 2013.
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