ᱵᱤᱠᱤ ᱠᱚᱣᱥᱚᱞ

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ᱣᱤᱠᱤᱯᱤᱰᱤᱭᱟ, ᱨᱟᱲᱟ ᱜᱮᱭᱟᱱ ᱯᱩᱛᱷᱤ ᱠᱷᱚᱱ

Vicky Kaushal
Kaushal at an event for Hindustan Times in 2019
ᱡᱟᱱᱟᱢ ᱧᱩᱛᱩᱢ ᱡᱟᱱᱟᱢ ᱢᱟᱹᱦᱤᱛ  ᱟᱨ  ᱡᱟᱱᱟᱢ ᱴᱷᱟᱶ᱑᱖ ᱢᱮ ᱑᱙᱘᱘ (1988-05-16) (᱓᱕ ᱥᱮᱨᱢᱟ)
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
ᱥᱮᱪᱮᱫRajiv Gandhi Institute of Technology
ᱠᱟᱹᱢᱤActor
ᱠᱟᱹᱢᱤ ᱚᱠᱛᱚ2012–present
ᱯᱮᱲᱟ ᱥᱟᱹᱜᱟᱹᱭᱟᱱᱠᱚSunny Kaushal (brother)

Vicky Kaushal (pronounced [ʋɪkkiː kɔːʃəl]; born 16 May 1988) is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films. He is the recipient of a National Film Award and a Filmfare Award, and has appeared in Forbes Indiaᱪᱷᱟᱸᱪ:'s Celebrity 100 list of 2019.

Born to the action director Sham Kaushal, Kaushal pursued an engineering degree from the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Technology. Aspiring to take up a career in film, he assisted Anurag Kashyap in the crime drama Gangs of Wasseypur (2012) and went on to play minor roles in two of Kashyap's productions. His first leading role was in the independent drama Masaan (2015), which earned him the IIFA and Screen Awards for Best Male Debut, following which he starred as an unhinged cop in Kashyap's psychological thriller Raman Raghav 2.0 (2016).

Kaushal rose to prominence in 2018 with supporting roles in Raazi and Sanju, two of the highest-grossing Hindi films of the year. For the latter, he won the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor. His 2018 projects also included starring roles in the Netflix films Love per Square Foot and Lust Stories. The following year, he played the lead role of a military officer in the commercially successful action film Uri: The Surgical Strike, winning the National Film Award for Best Actor.

Life and career[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Early life and work (1988–2016)[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Kaushal was born on 16 May 1988 in a chawl in suburban Mumbai to Sham Kaushal, a stuntman and subsequent action director in Hindi films.[᱑][᱒][᱓] His younger brother, Sunny, is also an actor.[᱔] His family is Punjabi.[᱕] Kaushal has described himself as a "regular kid who was interested in studying, playing cricket and watching movies".[᱒] His father was keen on his son having a stable career and Kaushal thus pursued an engineering degree in electronics and telecommunications from Mumbai's Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Technology.[᱖] During an industrial visit to an IT company, he realised that an office job would be unsuitable for him and he began aspiring to a career in film. He briefly took on an engineering job and began accompanying his father on film sets.[᱒][᱖] He studied acting at Kishore Namit Kapoor's academy and worked as an assistant director to Anurag Kashyap in the two-part crime drama Gangs of Wasseypur (2012).[᱖][᱗] Kaushal has described fond memories of working with Kashyap, whom he considers as his mentor.[᱘] He also began working on stage with his first acting job in Manav Kaul's production of Laal Pencil.[᱖] In film, Kaushal played minor roles in Kashyap's productions Luv Shuv Tey Chicken Khurana (2012) and Bombay Velvet (2015), and the experimental short film Geek Out (2013).[᱖][᱙]

Kaushal and Shweta Tripathi, his co-star in Masaan (2015)

Kaushal played his first leading role in the independent drama Masaan (2015) directed by Neeraj Ghaywan. Kaushal and Ghaywan were both assistants on Gangs of Wasseypur, and he was cast in the film after Rajkummar Rao backed out.[᱑᱐] To play a young man from a low socio-economic class yearning for a better life, Kaushal spent time in Benaras, where the film is set, and observed the mannerisms of local men.[᱑᱑] The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard segment at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, where it won two awards, including the FIPRESCI Prize.[᱑᱒] Masaan earned critical acclaim and The New York Times considered it to be a leading example of increased realism in Indian cinema.[᱑᱓][᱑᱔] Nikhil Taneja of HuffPost termed Kaushal's performance "poignant and memorable" and Anuj Kumar of The Hindu wrote that "he effortlessly conveys both the inferiority complex and the attitude of breaking through the caste cauldron".[᱑᱕][᱑᱖] His performance won him the IIFA and Screen Awards for Best Male Debut, and a nomination for the Asian Film Award for Best Newcomer, among other accolades.[᱑᱗][᱑᱘][᱑᱙]

The 2015 Busan International Film Festival marked the release of the drama Zubaan, which Kaushal had filmed before Masaan.[᱕] His role was that of a grieving man who starts stammering after the death of his father. He worked with a speech therapist to learn stammering patterns and spent time with some of the doctor's patients. After completing work on the film, Kaushal found it difficult to distance from the character and began to stammer in real life.[᱑᱑] His performance led Justin Chang of Variety to label him as a "charismatic, naturally engaging talent".[᱒᱐] In Kashyap's psychological thriller Raman Raghav 2.0 (2016), Kaushal played a drug-addicted police officer in pursuit of the serial killer Raman Raghav (portrayed by Nawazuddin Siddiqui).[᱕] The troubled and unbalanced character had little in common with Kaushal's own personality, and to convince Kashyap to cast him, he lived in isolation for five days and kept repeating lines from the script.[᱘] Writing for Rediff.com, Aseem Chhabra found his performance "brave" and added, "If there is one big surprise in Raman Raghav 2.0, it is Vicky Kaushal’s star-making performance."[᱒᱑] Both Zubaan and Raman Raghav 2.0 failed to find a wide audience at the box office.[᱒᱒]

Breakthrough (2018–present)[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Kaushal at a promotional event for Raazi in 2018

Kaushal achieved his breakthrough in 2018.[᱒᱓] He was first seen as the male lead of the romantic comedy Love per Square Foot, India's first Netflix original film.[᱒᱔] Shweta Ramakrishnan of Firstpost considered the chemistry between Kaushal and his co-star Angira Dhar to be the film's highlight.[᱒᱕] He next featured in Meghna Gulzar's spy thriller Raazi (2018), based on Harinder Sikka's novel Calling Sehmat. Set during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, the film tells the real-life story of a young Indian girl from Kashmir (played by Alia Bhatt) who marries a Pakistani army officer (Kaushal) to spy for Indian intelligence. He was drawn to the humanity he found in the story and worked towards conveying both vulnerability and authoritative strength in his character.[᱒᱖] The film emerged as one of the highest-grossing Hindi films featuring a female protagonist and Meena Iyer of Daily News and Analysis commended Kaushal for being "the correct foil" to Bhatt's character.[᱒᱗][᱒᱘] His second Netflix production of the year was the anthology film Lust Stories. It consists of four short films dealing with female sexuality; Kaushal was seen in Karan Johar's segment as a newly married man who fails to recognise his wife's (played by Kiara Advani) sexual dissatisfaction.[᱒᱙]

Kaushal's most commercially successful release of 2018 came with Rajkumar Hirani's Sanju, a biopic of the troubled actor Sanjay Dutt, who was portrayed by Ranbir Kapoor in the film. Kaushal played his best friend Kamli, a fictionalised amalgamation of various real-life friends of Dutt.[᱓᱐] In preparation, he spent time with Paresh Ghelani, who served as the primary inspiration for the role.[᱓᱐] Rachit Gupta from The Times of India considered Kaushal's work to be "one of the finest performances in the film" and Samrudhi Ghosh of India Today wrote that he "holds his own against Ranbir’s superlative performance, and shines in the funny as well as emotional scenes".[᱓᱑][᱓᱒] Both Raazi and Sanju proved to be among the highest-grossing Hindi films of 2018, and with earnings of over Indian Rupee ₹5.79 ᱵᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ (US$᱘᱐.᱕᱗ ᱢᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ), the latter ranks among Indian cinema's biggest grossers.[᱓᱓][᱓᱔] In his final release of the year, Kaushal reunited with Kashyap for Manmarziyaan, a love triangle set in Punjab and co-starring Abhishek Bachchan and Taapsee Pannu.[᱓᱕] Anupama Chopra took note of how well he used silences to convey his character's pain and desire.[᱓᱖] For Sanju, Kaushal won the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor (tied with Gajraj Rao for Badhaai Ho).[᱓᱗]

In 2019, Kaushal starred as a military officer in Uri: The Surgical Strike, an action film based on the 2016 Uri attack, directed by Aditya Dhar and filmed in Serbia. To prepare, he gained muscle weight, practised a ketogenic diet, and underwent five months of military training and mixed martial arts sessions.[᱓᱘][᱓᱙] He injured his arm while filming an action sequence in it.[᱔᱐] Uday Bhatia of Mint found Kaushal to be a "fetching stoic lead" but bemoaned the lack of depth in his character.[᱔᱑] Rajeev Masand took note of the film's jingoism and criticised the over-the-top characterisations, but opined that Kaushal "brings both the bulked-up physicality and the sort of steely determination that the part requires".[᱔᱒] Uri earned Indian Rupee ₹2.4 ᱵᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ (US$᱓᱓.᱔ ᱢᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ) in India, and over Indian Rupee ₹3.5 ᱵᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ (US$᱔᱘.᱗ ᱢᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ) worldwide, making it the tenth highest-grossing Indian film domestically.[᱔᱓][᱔᱔] Kaushal was awarded with the National Film Award for Best Actor (shared with Ayushmann Khurrana for Andhadhun) and was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actor.[᱔᱕]

A year later, Kaushal starred in the horror film Bhoot – Part One: The Haunted Ship (2020), produced by Karan Johar.[᱔᱖] He suffered an accident during the filming of an action sequence when he fractured his cheekbone.[᱔᱗] Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV found Kaushal to be "earnest" in a film he considered to be a "horrific misfire".[᱔᱘]

Upcoming projects[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Kaushal will next portray the freedom fighter Udham Singh, who assassinated Michael O'Dwyer, in a biopic directed by Shoojit Sircar, after which he will star as the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb in Takht, a historical drama directed by Johar, which features an ensemble cast, including Ranveer Singh, Kareena Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, and Bhumi Pednekar.[᱔᱙][᱕᱐][᱕᱑] He has also committed to reunite with Dhar and Gulzar in an action film about the mythological character Ashwatthama and a biopic of the army officer Sam Manekshaw, respectively.[᱕᱒][᱕᱓]

In the media[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Kaushal topped The Times of Indiaᱪᱷᱟᱸᱪ:'s listing of the country's most desirable men of 2018.[᱕᱔] Forbes India featured him in their 30 Under 30 list of 2018.[᱕᱕] The following year, he appeared in the magazine's Celebrity 100 list, ranking 72nd with an estimated annual income of Indian Rupee ₹᱑᱐᱔.᱒ ᱢᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ (US$᱑.᱔᱕ ᱢᱤᱞᱤᱭᱚᱱ).[᱕᱖]

Kaushal also endorses several brands and products, including Havells, Reliance Trends, and Oppo, charging Indian Rupee ₹ᱠᱳᱴᱤ (US$᱒᱗᱘,᱒᱙᱒)ᱪᱷᱟᱸᱪ:MdashIndian Rupee ₹ᱠᱳᱴᱤ (US$᱔᱑᱗,᱔᱓᱘) annually per brand.[᱕᱗]

Kaushal contributed Indian Rupee ₹ to the PM CARES Fund and Maharashtra Chief Minister's Relief Fund due to COVID-19 pandemic in India.[᱕᱘]

Filmography[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Films[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Key
Films that have not yet been released Denotes films that have not yet been released
Year Film Role Notes
2012 Gangs of Wasseypur ᱪᱷᱟᱸᱪ:Mdash Assistant director
2012 Luv Shuv Tey Chicken Khurana Young Omi
2013 Geek Out Geek Short film
2015 Bombay Velvet Inspector Basil
2015 Masaan Deepak
2015 Zubaan Dilsher
2016 Raman Raghav 2.0 Raghav Singh
2018 Love per Square Foot Sanjay Chaturvedhi
2018 Raazi Iqbal Syed
2018 Lust Stories Paras Karan Johar's segment
2018 Sanju Kamlesh "Kamli" Kanhaiyalal Kapasi
2018 Manmarziyaan Vicky Sandhu Also playback singer for song "F For Fyaar"[᱕᱙]
2019 Uri: The Surgical Strike Major Vihaan Singh Shergill
2020 Bhoot – Part One: The Haunted Ship Prithvi
2021 Sardar Udham SinghFilms that have not yet been released Udham Singh Post-production[᱖᱐]

Television[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Year Title Role
2018 25th Screen Awards Co-host[᱖᱑]
2019 Zee Cine Awards 2019 Co-host[᱖᱒]
2019 64th Filmfare Awards Co-host[᱖᱓]

Music video[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Year Song Performer Ref
2019 "Pachtaoge" Arijit Singh [᱖᱔]

Awards and nominations[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

Kaushal receiving the National Film Award for Best Actor for Uri: The Surgical Strike in 2019
Year Film Award Category Result Ref.
2016 Masaan Zee Cine Award Best Male Debut Won [᱖᱕]
Screen Awards Best Male Debut Won [᱑᱗]
International Indian Film Academy Awards Star Debut of the Year – Male Won [᱑᱘]
Asian Film Awards Best Newcomer Nominated [᱑᱙]
Stardust Awards Best Acting Debut (Male) Nominated [᱖᱖]
2018 Manmarziyaan Screen Awards Best Actor Nominated [᱖᱗]
Raazi Best Supporting Actor Nominated
Sanju Nominated
Indian Film Festival of Melbourne Best Supporting Performance Won [᱖᱘]
2019 Zee Cine Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role – Male Won [᱖᱙]
Filmfare Awards Best Supporting Actor Won [᱓᱗]
International Indian Film Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Won [᱗᱐]
Uri: The Surgical Strike National Film Awards Best Actor Won [᱔᱕]
2020 Uri: The Surgical Strike Filmfare Award Best Actor Nominated

References[ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ | ᱯᱷᱮᱰᱟᱛ ᱥᱟᱯᱲᱟᱣ]

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